The 330 Eagle head is the "proof mark". It just means the stock was accepted by Remington. There was no "firing proof P" during WW1.
This stock has no dings or anything. Does anyone know what it might be worth?
I would say north of $ 200.....regards...alex
Those are "surplus" stocks.
I believe they were made for replacement and not used.
Gun Parts sold them. I bought 3 or 4 of them years back.
Very nice stuff!
Nice Remington stock....They were available years ago but have dried up. Gun parts had stock and a ton of handguards.. I squirreled away 5 complete sets. I would say the stock would be worth $300 or so especially to a guy restoring a Rem 1917.
They will also fit Pattern 14 Enfields, my P14 is wearing a M1917 stock.
The eagle head stamp shown was an acceptance mark rather than a proof mark. The proof mark was added to the wood after the rifle had been proof fired.
This shows the circle P proof mark on a Model 1917 stock.
I bought a '17 from a gun store in the late '80s for $150. It was in a cardboard drum. I think they came from Canada. It had a stock like yours on it. Not sanded or finished. I was able to sand and finish with BLO and it looks great.
Fred Pillot
Captain
San Jose Zouaves
1876