Indian (GRI), WW1-ReIssue 1966, SMLE No.1 Mk III*, .303, Matching Numbers, Deactivated

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*Indian (GRI), WW1-ReIssue 1966, SMLE No.1 Mk III*, .303, Matching Numbers, Deactivated*

A charismatic and unusually well-documented WW1 SMLE No.1 Mk III* that almost certainly passed through Indian military service and received a full mid-century Ishapore refurbishment and re-issue. While heavy polishing has reduced the clarity of some early wrist markings, the rifle retains enough “ghosts” of the original British-pattern layout to suggest it may have begun life as a WW1 British production rifle before being transferred overseas. What is absolutely clear is its long, traceable life in Indian hands. Throughout the rifle, numerous broad-arrow military ownership and inspection stamps remain visible, characteristic of a rifle that passed repeatedly through official British and Indian armoury systems.

The rifle’s continuity is exceptional: the early wartime serial 45209 L survives in multiple locations beneath later work, with the Indian refurbishment number Z07869 neatly applied over the top. This dual-numbering appears consistently on the barrel reinforce, rear sight base, nosecap, and even the magazine, where several earlier numbers have been professionally struck out before Z07869 was applied. This uniform renumbering shows the components were deliberately kept together as a matched set throughout the Indian overhaul programme.

The barrel reinforce/knox form carries an unmistakable Crown over GRI, confirming Indian Government ownership, along with the classic crossed-flags over P military proof. The right-hand wrist shows the ghost of an earlier Crown and “No” from pre-refurbishment markings, now largely polished away during Indian FTR work. The left wrist bears the refurbishment-applied “No1 Mk III*” stamp, placed vertically in Indian style, together with a clear “P” and 1966 re-issue date, demonstrating that the rifle remained in active service well into the Cold War.

The woodwork reinforces this story. The butt shows an S ^ A stamp and a circular Indian depot roundel with a broad arrow at its centre and surrounding letters (readable as T D / E W), characteristic of Indian district workshop inspections. The fore-end and trigger bear additional small Indian armoury stamps. Most telling is the presence of the Ishapore transverse reinforcement screw in the right wrist — a strengthening feature uniquely associated with Indian arsenal repairs and never found on British-maintained rifles.

Taken together, these features present a compelling and unusually complete picture of a rifle that almost certainly originated in British pattern, spent many years in Indian military service, underwent a structured mid-century rebuild in which its components remained together, and was ultimately retired and formally deactivated in the UK. A wonderfully characterful and fully traceable example of the SMLE’s long Commonwealth service life.

Markings:
Knox Form / Barrel Reinforce: - Crown over G R I; Crossed-flags over P (military proof); Original serial 45209 L (barred out); Re-numbered Z07869 and Relieved flat stamped P
Receiver (LHS): “No1 Mk III*” (FTR-era application, vertical); “P”; Reissue date 1966
Rear Sight Base: Original 45209 L (barred out); Re-numbered Z07869; Inspector’s mark D (possibly TD); Ramp graduated to 2000 yards
Bolt: Z11658 (FTR replacement); Crossed-flags viewer’s mark; “M”, “U”, “A22” inspection marks
Nosecap: Z07869; Lowercase c inspector mark under nose
Wood / Stock: STA stamp; Circular Indian depot cartouche (letters consistent with T D / E W around a broad arrow)
Magazine: Earlier numbers scored out; Re-numbered Z07869; Additional inspection stamps: O, D, broad arrow style marks, and 4 on the heel

Historical Note:
Adopted by the British Army in 1904, the SMLE No.1 Mk III became the backbone of Commonwealth infantry service. India quickly followed suit, and by 1909 the Rifle Factory Ishapore was manufacturing and refurbishing SMLEs using British machinery and standards. Production surged in WW2, exceeding 600,000 rifles, and Ishapore continued to service and re-issue British-made rifles long after the war.

This example is a classic survivor of that system: born in the First World War, taken into Indian service (hence the GRI knox form), later given a full refurbishment with new serial number Z07869 across its components, and finally re-issued in 1966. Few rifles express the Commonwealth service life as clearly through their markings.

*Condition*
A clean, honest service rifle with strong and legible refurbishment markings. Wood shows handling marks, dents and rack wear but remains solid with correct fit. Metalwork shows signs of polishing on the wrist virtually obscuring the marks on the RHS. Bolt cycles; trigger not working. Magazine properly matched. Very clear proof of continuous military use. Please see photographs as part of the condition report.

RQMEOOXIOO_4249219200

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