BT&BCO marked M1907 leather sling

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  • RCS
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2009
    • 2180

    #1

    BT&BCO marked M1907 leather sling

    I have a M1907 leather sling with brass hooks and large stamped BT&BCO now is
    this a WW1 sling or pre WW2 sling ?

    most WW1 M1907 slings also have the date and inspectors initalsdscn1349_0011.jpgdscn1348_0010.jpg
  • Johnny P
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2009
    • 6258

    #2
    To the best of my knowledge there were no Model 1907 slings manufactured between 1918 and 1942. Such huge quantities were ordered and delivered for WWI that they continued to be used right up until WWII.

    I have an as unissued Model 1903 Springfield that was a NRA/DCM Sales rifle from June of 1936 that has a like new condition Model 1907 sling dated 1918.

    I also have a B.T. & B. CO. sling that does not appear to have a date stamp or inspector initials.

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    • clintonhater
      Senior Member
      • Nov 2015
      • 5220

      #3
      Originally posted by RCS
      most WW1 M1907 slings also have the date and inspectors initals
      Most is quite right, but most isn't all; in the rush to take the peacetime Army to a war footing, would a batch of undated (for whatever reason), but otherwise perfectly acceptable slings be rejected? The urgency of wartime conditions usually creates a tolerance for exceptions to normal protocol.

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      • Tom Doniphon
        Senior Member
        • Aug 2009
        • 526

        #4
        BT&B CO. is Belber Trunk & Bag Co. of Philadelphia, Pa. who was a WWI manufacturer of leather sling parts. BT&B CO is one of several leather manufacturers listed in the House of Representatives War Expenditures Hearings that were held after WWI in 1921.
        Last edited by Tom Doniphon; 09-05-2020, 09:12.

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        • Hecklerusp45
          Senior Member
          • Apr 2010
          • 1174

          #5
          M1907 Sling maker

          I have a M1907 sling that appears to be marked OS with 1917 under the OS. Any idea who made that one?
          "In God We Trust"

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          • Johnny P
            Senior Member
            • Aug 2009
            • 6258

            #6
            Originally posted by clintonhater
            Most is quite right, but most isn't all; in the rush to take the peacetime Army to a war footing, would a batch of undated (for whatever reason), but otherwise perfectly acceptable slings be rejected? The urgency of wartime conditions usually creates a tolerance for exceptions to normal protocol.
            By the time they got WW1 production rolling, the war was over. Something like 2.2 million Model 1911 pistols were on order with several new contractors, but with war's end the contracts were cancelled before any were delivered.

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