News

From the American Rifleman archives, NRA member writes Dope Bag noting trouble with sourcing a proper-length bayonet to display with a personal World War II M1 Garand rifle.
However, what made the M1 such a powerful and timeless weapon was its high rate of fire over similar weapons fielded by other armies of its day for the M1 was the world’s first semi-automatic ...
Anyone interested in guns has, at a minimum, seen the M1 Carbine movies, but most don’t know it was the most prolific American rifle of WWII — even more so than the Garand.
The M1 Carbine was the most prolific American small arm of WWII—even more so than the Garand. Here's everything you want to know about it.
When the U.S. Army sought a sniping rifle based on the M1 Garand at the end of World War II, the M1C, with its offset scope, was delivered in small numbers. Never the best solution, the M1C ...
The M1 remained in service through the end of the war and even through the Korean War in 1950–53. The Garand soldiered on through the 1950s when the deployment of the Soviet AK-47 assault rifle ...
The M1 carbine was developed to replace the larger, heavier M1 Garand semiautomatic rifle, which was produced in large numbers at the Springfield Armory, and in smaller numbers at Winchester.
MKS Supply, LLC announces that production of the original Inland brand M1 Carbine is again underway and the iconic .30 caliber, World War II-era M1 Carbine will be marketed exclusively ...