English advertisement asking for guns, 1940

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  • Rick the Librarian
    Super Moderator
    • Aug 2009
    • 6700

    #1

    English advertisement asking for guns, 1940

    Having a "discussion" with an anti-gun English friend of mine and I recall that the British placed advertisements in U.S. gun publications in 1940, asking Americans to send over their guns to help defend England against German attack. Does anyone know where one can see a picture of one of those ads? I thought there was one in Brophy's M1903 book, but can't seem to find it.

    TIA.
    "We make men without chests and expect from them virtue and enterprise. We laugh at honor and are shocked to find traitors in our midst."
    --C.S. Lewis
  • BEAR
    Senior Member
    • Sep 2009
    • 436

    #2
    Hey Rick,
    I don't have their advert from after Dunkirk but I do have a copy of a newspaper article from 1946.

    BEARScan.jpg

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    • BEAR
      Senior Member
      • Sep 2009
      • 436

      #3
      Is this what you are looking for:
      send-gun-to-british-home.jpg

      BEAR

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      • blackhawknj
        Senior Member
        • Aug 2011
        • 3754

        #4
        Needless to say those guns were never returned, and the Brits weren't allowed to keep them.
        I read an account in a book If Britain Had Fallen, told of a repair company of the British Army, had to hand over their rifles for use elsewhere, the lieutenant had to hand over his revolver. They were told, if the Germans attack use your wrenches (spanners in King's English).
        Last edited by blackhawknj; 02-28-2018, 08:36.

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        • Rick the Librarian
          Super Moderator
          • Aug 2009
          • 6700

          #5
          Originally posted by BEAR
          Is this what you are looking for:
          [ATTACH=CONFIG]43117[/ATTACH]

          BEAR
          Yes, that's it ... thanks much!!
          "We make men without chests and expect from them virtue and enterprise. We laugh at honor and are shocked to find traitors in our midst."
          --C.S. Lewis

          Comment

          • Clark Howard
            Senior Member
            • Sep 2009
            • 2105

            #6
            Britain's dilemma in 1940 perfectly illuminates the old saying, "When you need a gun, nothing else will do." Regards, Clark

            Comment

            • togor
              Banned
              • Nov 2009
              • 17610

              #7
              I wonder as to the size of the total haul in binoculars.

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              • leftyo

                #8
                Originally posted by togor
                I wonder as to the size of the total haul in binoculars.
                i saw somewhere once that the amount of binoculars from ladies opera glasses to actual field binoculars was a huge number. unlike the guns, many of the binoculars were actually returned after the war.

                Comment

                • dave
                  Senior Member
                  • Aug 2009
                  • 6778

                  #9
                  Originally posted by blackhawknj
                  Needless to say those guns were never returned, and the Brits weren't allowed to keep them.
                  I read an account in a book If Britain Had Fallen, told of a repair company of the British Army, had to hand over their rifles for use elsewhere, the lieutenant had to hand over his revolver. They were told, if the Germans attack use your wrenches (spanners in King's English).
                  While it is true they 'were never returned', they were released/sold to the general public. This was way before strict gun laws came into being in England. The Brit. military is not subject to English proof laws, so the guns were not proofed until they were released for sale. Some, no doubt, never were sold to the public but went straight to export. Many .22 trainers were sold to the Brit. public and perhaps other types also. I am speaking of Lend Lease guns, the agreement was 'return or destroy'. They did neither, they sold them. As for the guns in the ads, they were given by individuals, probably in the hundred thousands. How would they ever keep track of every one and who it belonged to? I know of one that was returned to the owner, a 1903 which had a brass plaque on the butt which listed the matches won with the rifle. I think it belonged to a US Army officer.
                  You can never go home again.

                  Comment

                  • noslack327
                    Senior Member
                    • Aug 2009
                    • 582

                    #10
                    As I once read the British Government asked for help from the NRA in getting sporting weapons to be used by the home guard.

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                    • dave
                      Senior Member
                      • Aug 2009
                      • 6778

                      #11
                      Originally posted by noslack327
                      As I once read the British Government asked for help from the NRA in getting sporting weapons to be used by the home guard.
                      Don't know if 'they asked for help' but the ads did run in the NRA Rifleman magazine of Nov. 1940. Copy is on inside front cover of a 1992 NRA printed publication called " The American Rifleman Goes To War" (Soft cover, 204 pages)
                      You can never go home again.

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                      • blackhawknj
                        Senior Member
                        • Aug 2011
                        • 3754

                        #12
                        Major John Hession was the shooter who sent his rifle over. IIRC it was clearly marked and returned to him after the war.

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                        • dave
                          Senior Member
                          • Aug 2009
                          • 6778

                          #13
                          Yes , the brass plate also had his name on it. I think a picture of it is in a book or was in the Rifleman mag. I remember seeing it some where!
                          You can never go home again.

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                          • Johnny P
                            Senior Member
                            • Aug 2009
                            • 6259

                            #14
                            Every Thursday we'll share an article from the American Rifleman archives. In 1940, 75 years ago, the British stood alone against Hitler’s war machine. In its plea to assist our friends across the Atlantic Ocean, the American Committee for the Defense of British Homes ran this notice in the November 1940 issue.

                            Comment

                            • blackhawknj
                              Senior Member
                              • Aug 2011
                              • 3754

                              #15
                              I recall seeing a small bit in issue of the Rifleman, quoted one NRA member saying, after a Labour Government announcement that all those small arms must turned with the implication that they would be destroyed, that the next time they needed help....

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