US M1 GARAND BAYONET AND SCABBARD BY U.F.H.
US M1 GARAND 10" BAYONET & SCABBARD U.F.H. ORIGINAL
An original WWII US M1 10” Garand bayonet manufactured by U.F.H. with US and Ordnance military flaming cannonball. With a black molded plastic handle. The scabbard is the correct M7 (briefly termed the M3A1). Scabbard also has the US and Ordnance military flaming cannonball marking. On underside of the lip of the scabbard marked with R.E.P.
Marked U.F. H. U.S. made by the Union Fork and Hoe Company of Columbus, Ohio. This is the most common length for M1 Garand bayonets in WWII but one of the less common manufacturers.
There are 3 versions of the UFH bayonet, 16", 10" and the 16" shortened to 10".
In 1943, U.S. Army decided to shorten the M1905 bayonet's blade to 10 inches (25.4 cm). Production of this new bayonet, designated the M1, began at five manufacturers by April 1943.
In 1943 most of the M1905 bayonets already in service were recalled, their blades were cut down, and they were reissued; roughly 1 million bayonets underwent this process. The first shortened bayonets were delivered in September 1943, and deliveries continued at a rate of 40-50,000 per month until August 1945.
All ten-inch bladed bayonets, whether new production M1 or cut-down M1905, were officially referred to as M1 bayonets, and the Army made no distinction between the two when issuing them.
The later version of the M1905 bayonet with plastic grips is sometimes referred to as the "M1942" by collectors and historians, but this designation was never used by the Army.
American Fork and Hoe manufactured 350,000 new shortened M1 bayonnets during 1944 – 1945.
SKU | O1419 |
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Weight | 0.701000 |