"...the overall condition trump..." Does to most collectors. The stamps do tell the life/service story of that rifle though. They also mean the thing has been rebuilt by professionals vs some guy.
"...FJA is an original manufacturers stamping..." Inspector not the maker. Lt. Col. Frank J. Atwood to be specific. He only worked at Remington inspecting new rifles though.
Rummage around here. https://m1903.com/
FA 37 may be collector stuff. Depends mostly on the head stamp, but if it's still in the original boxes it'll have collector interest. The head stamp should tell you what variation of ammo it was. It is not .30 M2 though. It'll be either M1906 or .30 M1. No such thing as M2 in 1937. No non-corrosive primer ammo until 1952.
"...FJA is an original manufacturers stamping..." Inspector not the maker. Lt. Col. Frank J. Atwood to be specific. He only worked at Remington inspecting new rifles though.
Rummage around here. https://m1903.com/
FA 37 may be collector stuff. Depends mostly on the head stamp, but if it's still in the original boxes it'll have collector interest. The head stamp should tell you what variation of ammo it was. It is not .30 M2 though. It'll be either M1906 or .30 M1. No such thing as M2 in 1937. No non-corrosive primer ammo until 1952.

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