The 11/11 holiday got me thinking about a WWI vet that I want to introduce you guys to: my great-grandfather's M1903 rifle that he brought back from France in late 1919, after finishing a 1 year tour of duty with the YMCA doing war relief work. My great-grandfather passed away about 10 years before I was born, so I never got to ask him about the rifle. The oral family history with the rifle, however, is that it was "picked up off of the battlefield in France after WWI". As the documents I show indicate, at one point my great-grandfather was involved in "battlefield salvage" so I guess this duty may have been how he acquired the M1903 rifle and the other war souvenirs I will show you. I know that he toured the former battlefields, as one of these excursions is depicted in some photos I will show later in the thread.
After starting to put this thread together I relized that I have never taken any good photos of the M1903 rifle outdoors in natural light. Thus, I snapped a couple of shots indoors tonight to try to give some idea of what the rifle looks like. I will work to supplement with good photos at a later date.
Anyway, here are my great uncle and I with the rifle about 2 years ago, when he was 95 years old. It was his father that brought the rifle home from France after WWI. My great uncle was born in 1913, so he was about 5 years old when his dad left home to join the YMCA for war relief work in France c. 1918-1919. Apparently my great-grandfather really wanted to get over to France to see what things looked like after the Great War, as he left his law practice and wife and 2 small children at home while he went off for what was apparently quite an adventure for him.
After starting to put this thread together I relized that I have never taken any good photos of the M1903 rifle outdoors in natural light. Thus, I snapped a couple of shots indoors tonight to try to give some idea of what the rifle looks like. I will work to supplement with good photos at a later date.
Anyway, here are my great uncle and I with the rifle about 2 years ago, when he was 95 years old. It was his father that brought the rifle home from France after WWI. My great uncle was born in 1913, so he was about 5 years old when his dad left home to join the YMCA for war relief work in France c. 1918-1919. Apparently my great-grandfather really wanted to get over to France to see what things looked like after the Great War, as he left his law practice and wife and 2 small children at home while he went off for what was apparently quite an adventure for him.
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