Sorry for a silly question but what is SRS? I see guys are checking to see what is known about their rifles. Mine is serial # 234398 and I guess if I could get any info on it, that would be cool. Where is this SRS? Thank you
Sorry for a silly question but what is SRS? I see guys are checking to see what is known about their rifles. Mine is serial # 234398 and I guess if I could get any info on it, that would be cool. Where is this SRS? Thank you
SRS=Springfield Research Service
They once published books and had an internet site which gave serial numbers of guns that they found referances to in Govn. records. Some of these went back to the civil war. It was not the habit of our armed forces to keep detailed records of such info, however info will show up in various records. For a fee you could get copy of the full record that mentions your gun. The books and site just told you they had something and gave a 'hint' as to what it was. But you must remember that any info that shows up is just a "snap-shot in time", not a complete record of the gun.
That has all changed, you now have to be a member to get any info at all. Many people have the books (I recently sold mine) and will answer such requests.
Last edited by dave; 12-19-2013 at 09:52.
Oh Wow. That would be fun to get that info. Like everything now one must pay the fiddler
http://springfieldresearchservice.com/
here is a link,-
There is no isting for 234398. The closest is 234391. Issued in 1898. All on either side of it were issued to the same unit for the Spanish war.
Tom, Thank you for that information. I find it so facinating. Mine was most likely to be in that same bunch issued to that unit. Wow. Do you know what unit it was? Thank you Thank you
20th. Kansas. Only Kansas unit to go overseas.
Ummm - Tom didn't give his usual caveat, leaving me to dispense the potentially sad news. Contrary to what one might think, just because a number is "close" does NOT mean that a common usage was "most likely", or indeed, even likely at all. In fact the more numbers there are in the cluster, the more likely that it would have been listed IF it had been there. SA did not assemble, pack, ship, or issue, arms in rigid sequence. Numerous chest packing lists have been audited, showing spans of several thousand within the 20 rifles. Bottom line - in tracking serial numbers, only exact references count - beyond that, it is all "maybe". Very sorry to rain on the parade.
Hey Dick, I kinda wondered about just what you explained. The other question is, with each model did it have their own serial numbers or did the numbers just keep going on. Don't know if that made a bit of sence. My rifle, an 1873 model, made in 1884, with serial # 234398, was there a model 188? that had that number too?