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The Guns That Won WWII - M1 Garand Rifle from WWII

Currency:USD Category:Hunting Start Price:200.00 USD Estimated At:NA
The Guns That Won WWII - M1 Garand Rifle from WWII
CURRENT BID
200.00USDby OttoSavage
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250.00 x 1 unit = 250.00USDApplicable fees & taxes are added at checkout.
[?]Live Online Auction Starts In 2025 Apr 12 @ 20:15 (UTC-05:00 : EST/CDT)
The story of this rifle: It was issued to, loved by, hated by, and carried by young soldiers who were far from home and loved ones, doing a job they most likely would rather not be doing, in a place they would most likely rather not be. This one was made by Winchester in September, 1943. This rifle was rained on, snowed on, been hot in the sun and hot from firing. It may have been in Pacific battles at Iwo Jima, Okinawa, Tarawa. Perhaps the campaign in Italy at Anzio or Monte Cassino. Maybe it saw action in Normandy on D-Day, and through the Battle of the Bulge. It should be wearing a blue hat that says “WWII Veteran” and tottering around a VA hospital, or better yet bellied up to the bar at the VFW where younger M16s and M4s buy it drinks and listen to its stories. This is a piece of American history in .30-06 caliber. As General George S. Patton wrote in January, 1945: “In my opinion, the M1 Rifle is the greatest battle implement ever devised.” The winner of this rifle will have the opportunity to attend a CMP Service Rifle Clinic as a guest at the Aurora Sportsmen’s Club (offered on April 27, June 22, September 28 and October 26, 2025). The winner will also have the opportunity to attend an M1 cleaning clinic in January, 2026, as a guest at ASC. Included with this rifle: the custom walnut display stand with special M1 Garand medallion insert, a proper bayonet, two 8-round clips, a sling, and a WWII cleaning rod.
This rifle is donated in memory of U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Leon Rimkus, Jr., 943rd FABn, who served from 1940 through 1945. He fought in the European theater with Patton’s Third Army, from Utah Beach through France, Belgium and Germany. Value: Priceless.
We thank Dale and Marla Rimkus and the Aurora Sportsman's Club for this special 100% donation.