Beginning in August of 1943 Col. George A Woody became the Commanding Officer of Springfield Armory, and the stocks of the Springfield M1 Rifle had the acceptance stamp SA/GAW. While in that capacity Col. Woody became ill and died in November of 1944. Brig. Gen. Norman F. Ramsey had been appointed Commanding Officer of Springfield Armory in October of 1944 to replace the ill Col. Woody.
For some reason the SA/GAW acceptance stamp of Col. Woody was used up into 1945 production before it was replaced with Gen. Ramsey's SA/NFR stamp. By the time the SA/NFR cartouche was put into use, M1 Rifle production was being scaled back slightly. December 1944 production ended at approximately serial number 3.36 million, and production ended in June of 1945 at just over serial number 3.87 million with cleanup running to almost 3.89 million.
Where there were approximately 2 million M1 Rifles with the SA/GAW acceptance mark, those with the SA/NFR acceptance mark probably total no more then 350 to 400 thousand.
For some reason the SA/GAW acceptance stamp of Col. Woody was used up into 1945 production before it was replaced with Gen. Ramsey's SA/NFR stamp. By the time the SA/NFR cartouche was put into use, M1 Rifle production was being scaled back slightly. December 1944 production ended at approximately serial number 3.36 million, and production ended in June of 1945 at just over serial number 3.87 million with cleanup running to almost 3.89 million.
Where there were approximately 2 million M1 Rifles with the SA/GAW acceptance mark, those with the SA/NFR acceptance mark probably total no more then 350 to 400 thousand.
Comment