what, if any marks did confederate armories put on confederate made bayonets? I just got a hold of an original '42 bayonet, but it doesn't have the US stamp on the blade, it looks more like a rough "P". does anyone have any ideas?
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Re: confederate bayonet markings
Ian,
It's possible that you have a foreign bayonet. France and Belgium both made bayonets that are nearly identical to the US M1842. I have a bayonet with some strange markings I've been told may be Belgian (see a picture at http://www.mindspring.com/~breagan88...rkings%202.JPG).
Markings aside, it's virtually identical to a US-marked M1842 bayonet I own. You can see the two compared at http://www.mindspring.com/~breagan88...rison%201a.JPG. If my bayonet isn't American, it's actually a much closer facsimile than the current repros.
I'm no expert on CS bayonets, but they are very rare, and I'm not aware of any that are marked.Bill Reagan
23rd Reg't
Va. Vol. Infy.
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Re: confederate bayonet markings
Not many people know this but the Confederate Gov't was the first to pioneer importing products from third world countries to save a buck. Could it be the "P" stands for an early Pakistani import???? :D[COLOR=Indigo][SIZE=2][FONT=Book Antiqua]Sgt.R.C.Tarbox
6thNHVI
Bully Sixth
"Don't you run till you see the Sixth New Hampshire run; but when you see that regi-ment retreating, you may do likewise." (officer of a Regiment fighting with the Sixth at Bull Run)
{History of the Sixth New Hampshire Regiment in the War for the Union
Captain Lyman Jackman}[/FONT][/SIZE][/COLOR]
[FONT=Book Antiqua][SIZE=2][COLOR=SlateGray]5th VA. Company D
Southern Guard[/COLOR][/SIZE][/FONT]
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Re: confederate bayonet markings
I dug a .69 socket bayonet on Rocky Face Ridge several years ago that appeared to have a palmetto and letter "p" stamped on the blade. I was told by a relic dealer that it was a Palmetto Arsenal and very valuable so naturaly I packed it up and lost it.Marlin Teat
[I]“The initial or easy tendency in looking at history is to see it through hindsight. In doing that, we remove the fact that living historical actors at that time…didn’t yet know what was going to happen. We cannot understand the decisions they made unless we understand how they perceived the world they were living in and the choices they were facing.”[/I]-Christopher Browning
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