The British used the No. 4 Mk. I Lee-Enfield as their standard rifle was in .303" and it was also the standard rifle for Canadian soliders from 1943 onwards.
The Canadian made No. 4 Mk. I* rifle was made at Longbranch. It is correct for their battles in Sicily (1943), Italy (1943-1945), Normandy (1944), Belgium, Netherlands (1944-1945), Germany (1945).
The "ENGLAND" stamp is believed to represent "country of origin" so it apperars that your rifle was used by the British before being sold surplus. The ENGLAND marking often appears on F-S Fighting Knives (commando knives) that were imported into the USA. Theis marking was added after WWII.
Most of these rifles were replaced in the late 1950s by 7.62mm NATO L1A1 SLR (Self-Loading Rifle, a British version of the FN FAL) or in Canada the FN C1 and C1A1versions.
The Stevens-Savage company did make some Lee-Enfield No. 4 Mk. I rifles for the British. These have the "US PROPERTY" marking on the left side.
The Lee-Enfield No. 4 was an excellent rifle and some are still in use in Canada by the Canadian Rangers (a home guard-guerrilla type outift in Canada's North), although the rifles are due to be replaced I believe.
Some were made in .22" calibre for training. e.g. the Canadian C No. 7 Mk. I
Some were converted to 7.62mm NATO (.308 Winchester) in later years e.g. for target shooting.
The rifle in the photo has damage to the wood showing and the rerar sight looks like it might be damaged.
Colin in Canada
The Canadian made No. 4 Mk. I* rifle was made at Longbranch. It is correct for their battles in Sicily (1943), Italy (1943-1945), Normandy (1944), Belgium, Netherlands (1944-1945), Germany (1945).
The "ENGLAND" stamp is believed to represent "country of origin" so it apperars that your rifle was used by the British before being sold surplus. The ENGLAND marking often appears on F-S Fighting Knives (commando knives) that were imported into the USA. Theis marking was added after WWII.
Most of these rifles were replaced in the late 1950s by 7.62mm NATO L1A1 SLR (Self-Loading Rifle, a British version of the FN FAL) or in Canada the FN C1 and C1A1versions.
The Stevens-Savage company did make some Lee-Enfield No. 4 Mk. I rifles for the British. These have the "US PROPERTY" marking on the left side.
The Lee-Enfield No. 4 was an excellent rifle and some are still in use in Canada by the Canadian Rangers (a home guard-guerrilla type outift in Canada's North), although the rifles are due to be replaced I believe.
Some were made in .22" calibre for training. e.g. the Canadian C No. 7 Mk. I
Some were converted to 7.62mm NATO (.308 Winchester) in later years e.g. for target shooting.
The rifle in the photo has damage to the wood showing and the rerar sight looks like it might be damaged.
Colin in Canada
Originally posted by Pretorian81
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