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M1 Garand: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:M1 Garand.jpg|thumb|right|500px|M1 Garand semiautomatic Rifle with leather M1917 sling - .30-06]]
[[Image:M1 Garand.jpg|thumb|right|450px|M1 Garand with leather M1917 sling - .30-06]]
[[Image:M1CSniper.jpg|thumb|right|500px|M1C Sniper Variant with M82 scope - .30-06.]]
[[Image:M1CSniper.jpg|thumb|right|450px|M1C with M82 scope - .30-06]]
[[Image:M1DGarand.jpg|thumb|right|500px|M1D Sniper Variant with M84 scope - .30-06. Note the different type of scope mount. The flash suppressor is an option on both models; an earlier conical flash hider also exists.]]
[[Image:M1C M84 scope.jpg|thumb|right|450px|M1C with M84 scope - .30-06]]
[[Image:Tanker Garand.jpg|thumb|right|500px|T26 Tanker Garand carbine - .30-06]]
[[Image:M1DGarand.jpg|thumb|right|450px|M1D with M84 scope - .30-06. Note the different type of scope mount. The T-37 flash suppressor is an option on both models; an earlier conical flash hider also exists.]]
[[Image:Garand T20.jpg|thumb|right|500px|Springfield T20E2: select-fire Garand with 20-round detachable [[Browning Automatic Rifle]] magazine, a forerunner to the [[M14 Rifle]]  - .30-06]]
 
The '''M1 Garand''' was the standard rifle of the United States military during the Second World War and the first semi-automatic rifle to be issued as a primary arm by a major armed force, officially replacing the bolt-action [[Springfield M1903]] as the US Army's standard rifle in 1936.
The '''M1 Garand''' was the standard rifle of the United States military during the Second World War and the first semi-automatic rifle to be issued as a primary arm by a major armed force, officially replacing the bolt-action [[Springfield M1903]] as the US Army's standard rifle in 1936.


The Garand features a distinctive loading method where the entire 8-round en-bloc clip is inserted into the action, automatically ejecting when expended and locking the bolt open for a rapid reload. The sharp closing of the bolt when a clip was inserted could result in the bolt slamming shut on the operator's thumb, resulting in a condition given names such as "rifleman's thumb" or "Garand thumb."  
The Garand features a distinctive loading method where the entire 8-round en-bloc clip is inserted into the action, automatically ejecting when expended and locking the bolt open for a rapid reload. The sharp closing of the bolt when a clip was inserted could result in the bolt slamming shut on the operator's thumb, resulting in a condition given names such as "rifleman's thumb" or "Garand thumb." In videogames, the Garand is often depicted as impossible to reload without expending the entire clip; this is not strictly true, as it is possible to eject a partially fired clip by pressing the clip latch button and operating the action, though this requires the use of both hands. Soldiers were drilled to fully expend a clip rather than attempt this in combat.


Much is made of the "ping" sound that occurred when the metal clip landed on a hard surface, but this "disadvantage" imagines that wars are fought as one-on-one duels in perfect silence, and was seldom a factor in reality. In videogames, the Garand is often depicted as impossible to reload without expending the entire clip; this is not strictly true, as it is possible to eject a partially fired clip by pressing the clip latch button and operating the action, though this requires the use of both hands. Soldiers were drilled to fully expend a clip rather than attempt this in combat.
Much is made of the "ping" sound that occurred when the metal clip ejects or lands on a hard surface, but this "disadvantage" imagines that wars are fought as one-on-one duels in perfect silence, and was seldom a factor in reality. A survey of users during the Korean War found a small number concerned over the possibility, but far more deemed it a helpful reminder of needing to reload than a potential hazard.


The Garand served in both theaters in WW2 and remained the standard US rifle in the Korean War, being replaced by the select-fire [[M14 Rifle]] in 1957, though Garands remained in service until the seventies. The M14 is essentially a Garand redesigned for fully automatic operation and use of a detachable magazine. The sniper variants, M1C and M1D, saw relatively limited service in the Korean and Vietnam Wars. The Garand is popular today, because of its design and how it arguably won World War II for the allies, leading General George S. Patton to name the M1 Garand the "greatest battle implement ever devised".
The Garand served in both theaters in WWII and remained the standard US rifle in the Korean War, being replaced by the select-fire [[M14 Rifle]] in 1957, though Garands remained in service until the seventies. After WW2, many European countries made use of the Garand during the early days of NATO, both by rearming themselves with US Surplus/Aid and some Italian production. The M14 and [[Beretta BM59]] are essentially Garands redesigned for select-fire operation and use of a detachable magazine.


==Specifications==
There were also 2 sniper variants of the M1 Garand rifle being the '''M1C''' (formerly M1E7, introduced in June 1944) and '''M1D''' (formerly M1E8, introduced in September 1944). The only difference between the 2 models was the mounting system for the telescopic sights, with the first needing to be installed during a rifle's construction and the second requiring only a barrel swap. The M1C could mount the M73, M81, M82 and M84 scopes using a Griffin & Howe mount affixed to the left side of the received, whereas the M1D could mount the M82 and M84 scopes in a Springfield Armory mount attached to the rear of the barrel (for proper identification use the following method: M1C has 2 mounting rings for the sight, M1D has only a single ring). Both served in WW2 and saw relatively limited service in the Korean and Vietnam Wars. The relative inaccuracy of the M1 as an early semi-auto and difficulties with the production of the scoped variants made the sniper variants relatively rare.
(1936 – 1963)


* '''Type:''' Battle Rifle
At the end of WW2 there were some trials with a shortened M1 Garand carbine version called the '''T26 Tanker Garand''' in the Philippines. Although the weapon has never been officially adopted by the US Forces, there are commercial versions available on the market. After NATO's adoption of 7.62x51mm NATO, many M1s were converted to use the new ammo (either by a total rebarreling or less reliable barrel sleeve) and produced in the caliber to start.


* '''Caliber:''' .30-06 Springfield, 7.62x51mm NATO
The Garand is popular today, because of its design, effectiveness and historical presence. The rifle's legacy is significant enough that original spec M2 Ball (required to run the rifle reliably without modification) is still produced in significant numbers. General George S. Patton described the Garand as "the greatest battle implement ever devised".
 
__TOC__
* '''Weight:''' {{convert|lbs|9.5}} - {{convert|lbs|11.6}}
 
* '''Length:''' {{convert|in|43.5}}
 
* '''Barrel length:''' {{convert|in|24}}
 
* '''Muzzle velocity:''' 2,800 ft/s (853 m/s)
 
* '''Capacity:''' 8-round "en bloc" clip
 
* '''Fire Modes:''' Semi-Auto


=M1 Garand=
==Specifications==
(1936 – 1963)
*'''Type:''' Battle Rifle
*'''Caliber:''' .30-06 Springfield, 7.62x51mm NATO
*'''Weight:''' {{convert|lbs|9.5}} - {{convert|lbs|11.6}}
*'''Length:''' {{convert|in|43.5}}
*'''Barrel length:''' {{convert|in|24}}
*'''Muzzle velocity:''' 2,800 ft/s (853 m/s)
*'''Capacity:''' 8-round "en bloc" clip
*'''Fire Modes:''' Semi-Auto
-----
-----
{{Gun Title}}


==M1 Garand==
===Film===
'''The M1 Garand rifle has been seen in the following films, television series, and video games used by the following actors:'''
 
=== Film ===
 
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%"
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%"
|-bgcolor=#D0E7FF
|-bgcolor=#D0E7FF
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="200"|'''Title'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="200"|'''Title'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="150"|'''Actor'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="150"|'''Actor'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="200"|'''Character'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="260"|'''Character'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="350"|'''Note'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="350"|'''Note'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="50"|'''Date'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="50"|'''Date'''
|-
| ''[[Wake Island]]''|| || US troops || || 1942
|-
|-
| ''[[Gung Ho! (1943)|Gung Ho!]]'' ||  || Marine Raiders ||  || 1943
| ''[[Gung Ho! (1943)|Gung Ho!]]'' ||  || Marine Raiders ||  || 1943
Line 51: Line 47:
| rowspan=2 | ''[[A Walk In The Sun]]'' || [[Norman Lloyd]] || Private Archimbeau ||  || rowspan=2 | 1945
| rowspan=2 | ''[[A Walk In The Sun]]'' || [[Norman Lloyd]] || Private Archimbeau ||  || rowspan=2 | 1945
|-
|-
| [[John Ireland]] || Pfc. Windy Craven  ||
| [[John Ireland]] || PFC Windy Craven  ||
|-
|-
| ''[[The Story of G.I. Joe]]'' || Various actors || Various characters ||  || 1945
| ''[[The Story of G.I. Joe]]'' || Various actors || Various characters ||  || 1945
Line 71: Line 67:
| || US Marines || w/ M7 bayonet  
| || US Marines || w/ M7 bayonet  
|-
|-
| ''[[The Third Man]]'' ||  || US troops ||  || 1949
|-
| rowspan=6 |''[[Breakthrough]]'' || [[Dick Wesson]] || Pvt. Sammy Hansen || rowspan=6 | || rowspan=6 | 1950
|-
| [[Frank Lovejoy]] || Sgt. Bell
|-
| [[Paul Picerni]] || Pvt. Edward P. Rojeck
|-
| [[Richard Monahan]] || Pvt. 'Four-Eff' Nelson
|-
| [[Edward Norris]] || Sgt. Roy Henderson
|-
| || US soldiers
|-
|-
| ''[[The Steel Helmet]]'' || [[Gene Evans]] || Sgt. Zack || ||1951
| ''[[The Steel Helmet]]'' || [[Gene Evans]] || Sgt. Zack || ||1951
Line 88: Line 97:
| Ken K. Okamoto || Kaz ||
| Ken K. Okamoto || Kaz ||
|-
|-
| Henry Oyasato || SSG Ohhara ||
| [[Henry Oyasato]] || SSG Ohhara ||
|-
|-
| Harry Hamada || Masami ||
| [[Harry Hamada]] || Masami ||
|-
|-
| George Tanaguchi || Ohhara's brother || Uncredited
| George Tanaguchi || Ohhara's brother || Uncredited
Line 107: Line 116:
|-
|-
| || US Marines || w/ M7 bayonet
| || US Marines || w/ M7 bayonet
|-
| ''[[Decision Before Dawn]]'' || [[George Tyne]] || Sgt. Griffin || || 1951
|-
|-
| rowspan=2 | ''[[Retreat, Hell!]]'' || [[Russ Tamblyn]] || Jimmy McDermid ||  || rowspan=2 | 1952
| rowspan=2 | ''[[Retreat, Hell!]]'' || [[Russ Tamblyn]] || Jimmy McDermid ||  || rowspan=2 | 1952
|-
|-
| Various actors || U.S. Marines || Featured with and without M1 bayonet and [[M7 rifle grenade]] launcher
| Various actors || US Marines || Featured with and without M1 bayonet and [[M7 rifle grenade]] launcher
|-
| ''[[Battle Circus]]'' || || US Army soldiers || || 1953
|-
| ''[[War of the Worlds, The (1953)|The War of the Worlds]]'' ||  || US Army soldiers and Marines ||  ||1953
|-
|-
| ''[[Battle Circus]]'' || || U.S. Army soldiers || || 1953
| ''[[The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms]]'' || || National Guard soldiers and NYPD officers || || 1953
|-
|-
| [[War of the Worlds, The (1953)|The War of the Worlds]] || || U.S. Army soldiers and Marines || ||1953
| ''[[Godzilla (1954)|Godzilla]]''|| ||Japanese Ground Self-Defense Forces soldiers ||||1954
|-
|-
| ''[[Godzilla (1954)|Godzilla]]''|| ||Japanese Defense Forces||||1954
| ''[[White Christmas]]'' || || US Army soldiers || || 1954
|-
|-
| ''[[White Christmas]]'' || || U.S. Army soldiers || || 1954
|''[[Them!]]''||||US Army soldiers||||1954
|-  
|-  
| ''[[Beachhead]]'' || [[Tony Curtis]] || Burke || || 1954
|-
| rowspan=4 | ''[[To Hell and Back]]'' || [[Audie Murphy]] || Himself ||  || rowspan=4 | 1955
| rowspan=4 | ''[[To Hell and Back]]'' || [[Audie Murphy]] || Himself ||  || rowspan=4 | 1955
|-
|-
Line 128: Line 145:
| Various || Various characters ||
| Various || Various characters ||
|-
|-
| ''[[Battle Cry]]'' || Various || U.S. Marines ||  || 1955
| ''[[Battle Cry]]'' || Various || US Marines ||  || 1955
|-
| ''[[It Came from Beneath the Sea]]'' || Various || US Navy sailors ||  || 1955
|-
|-
| ''[[It Came from Beneath the Sea]]'' || Various || U.S. Navy sailors ||  || 1955
| ''[[Earth vs. the Flying Saucers]]'' || Various || US Army soldiers ||  || 1956
|-
|-
| ''[[Earth vs. the Flying Saucers]]'' || Various || U.S. Army soldiers ||  || 1956
| ''[[Between Heaven and Hell]]'' || || National Guardsmen ||  || 1956
|-
|-
| ''[[Between Heaven and Hell]]'' || || National Guards ||  || 1956
| ''[[Attack]]'' || [[Buddy Ebsen]] || Tolliver ||  || 1956
|-
|-
| ''[[20 Million Miles to Earth]]'' || Various || U.S. Marines and Italian soldiers ||  || 1957
| ''[[20 Million Miles to Earth]]'' || Various || US Marines and Italian soldiers ||  || 1957
|-
|-
| ''[[Darby's Rangers]]''||[[Murray Hamilton]]||Cpl. Rollo Burns|| ||1958
| ''[[Men in War]]'' || [[Vic Morrow]] || Cpl. James Zwickley || || 1957
|-
|-
| ''[[Darby's Rangers]]'' || Various actors || U.S. Army soldiers || || 1958
| ''[[Invasion of the Saucer Men]]'' || || US Air Force guards || || 1957
|-
|-
| rowspan=2 | ''[[Young Lions, The|The Young Lions]]'' || Various actors || U.S. Army soldiers ||  || rowspan=2 | 1958
|rowspan=2| ''[[Darby's Rangers]]''||[[Murray Hamilton]]||Sgt. Sims Delancey || ||rowspan=2|1958
|-
|Various actors || US Army soldiers ||
|-
| rowspan=3| ''[[The Young Lions]]'' || Various actors || US Army soldiers ||  || rowspan=3 | 1958
|-
|-
| [[Dean Martin]] || Michael Whiteacre ||
| [[Dean Martin]] || Michael Whiteacre ||
|-
|-
| rowspan=2 | ''[[Pork Chop Hill]]'' ||  || U.S. Army soldiers ||  || rowspan=2 | 1959
|[[Montgomery Clift]] ||Noah Ackerman ||
|-
| ''[[When Hell Broke Loose]]'' || [[Charles Bronson]] || Steve Boland ||  || 1958
|-
| ''[[Black Battalion, The (Cerný prapor)|The Black Battalion (Cerný prapor)]]'' || || French Foreign Legion || || 1958
|-
| rowspan=2 | ''[[Pork Chop Hill]]'' ||  || US Army soldiers ||  || rowspan=2 | 1959
|-
|-
| [[Woody Strode]] || Pvt. Franklin ||
| [[Woody Strode]] || Pvt. Franklin ||
|-
|-
| [[Hell to Eternity]] |||| US Marines|||| 1960
| ''[[Hell to Eternity]]'' |||| US Marines|||| 1960
|-
| ''[[G.I. Blues]]'' || [[Arch Johnson]] || MSG McGraw || Only on promotion still || 1960
|-
| ''[[Reptilicus]]'' || || Danish soldiers || || 1961
|-
|-
| [[Lonely Are the Brave]]||[[Bill Bixby]]||Helicopter crewmember||||1962
| ''[[Lonely Are the Brave]]''||[[Bill Bixby]]||Helicopter crewmember||||1962
|-
|-
| [[Merrill's Marauders]] || [[Peter Brown]] || Bullseye ||||1962
| ''[[Merrill's Marauders]]'' || [[Peter Brown]] || Bullseye ||||1962
|-
|-
| rowspan=6 | ''[[Hell Is for Heroes]]'' || [[James Coburn]] || Cpl. Henshaw ||  || rowspan=6 | 1962
| rowspan=6 | ''[[Hell Is for Heroes]]'' || [[James Coburn]] || Cpl. Henshaw ||  || rowspan=6 | 1962
Line 169: Line 202:
|-
|-
| ''[[The Black Seagull (Chyornaya chayka)]]'' || || Cuban soldiers || || 1962
| ''[[The Black Seagull (Chyornaya chayka)]]'' || || Cuban soldiers || || 1962
|-
| ''[[Manchurian Candidate, The]]'' || || US Army honor guard || || 1962
|-
|-
| rowspan=2 | ''[[The Longest Day]]'' || [[John Wayne]] || Lt. Col. Benjamin Vandervoort ||  || rowspan=2 | 1963
| rowspan=2 | ''[[The Longest Day]]'' || [[John Wayne]] || Lt. Col. Benjamin Vandervoort ||  || rowspan=2 | 1963
Line 174: Line 209:
| Various actors || US Army soldiers ||
| Various actors || US Army soldiers ||
|-
|-
| rowspan=2 | ''[[Battle of the Bulge]]'' || [[George Montgomery]] || Sgt. Duquesne || possibly a M1C or D Garand || rowspan=2 | 1965
| ''[[Dr. Strangelove]]'' ||  || US forces || || 1964
|-
| ''[[Thin Red Line, The (1964)|The Thin Red Line]]'' || [[Jack Warden]] ||1st Sgt. Welsh|| || 1964
|-
|-
| Various actors || U.S. Army soldiers || Featured with and without [[M7 rifle grenade]] launcher
| ''[[The Man from U.N.C.L.E. - Season 1]]''|| Unknown THRUSH agent |||| Used with [[M7 Rifle Grenade Launcher]] || 1964
|-
|-
| [[Help!]] || Various actors || Cult member and Bahamian police || || 1965
| ''[[Seven Days in May]]'' || [[Martin Balsam]] ||Paul Girard|| || 1964
|-
|-
| ''[[None But the Brave]]'' || || U.S. Marines || || 1965
| ''[[I Am Cuba (Soy Cuba)]]'' || || Cuban government soldiers and guerrillas || || 1964
|-
|-
| [[Cast a Giant Shadow]]|| ||U.S. Army|| ||1966
| ''[[Kissin' Cousins]]'' || || US Army soldiers || With M1 bayonets || 1964
|-
|-
| [[Battle of Algiers, The|The Battle of Algiers]] || || French soldiers || || 1966
| rowspan=2 | ''[[Battle of the Bulge]]'' || [[George Montgomery]] || Sgt. Duquesne || M1C Garand || rowspan=2 | 1965
|-
| Various actors || US Army soldiers || Featured with and without [[M7 rifle grenade]] launcher
|-
| ''[[Help!]]'' || Various actors || Cult member and Bahamian police || || 1965
|-
| ''[[None But the Brave]]'' ||  || US Marines || || 1965
|-
| ''[[Cast a Giant Shadow]]''|| ||US Army|| ||1966
|-
| ''[[Battle of Algiers, The|The Battle of Algiers]]'' || || French soldiers || || 1966
|-
|-
| ''[[Poppies Are Also Flowers]]'' || || Brigands, Colonel Salem's men || || 1966
| ''[[Poppies Are Also Flowers]]'' || || Brigands, Colonel Salem's men || || 1966
|-
|-
| ''[[Is Paris Burning?]]'' || || US Army and Free French Forces soldiers || || 1966
| ''[[Is Paris Burning?]]'' || || US Army and Free French Forces soldiers || || 1966
|-
| rowspan=3| ''[[What Did You Do in the War, Daddy?]]'' || [[Carroll O'Connor]] || Gen. Bolt || || rowspan=3| 1966
|-
| [[Art Lewis]] || Needleman || with and without M1 bayonet
|-
| || US Army soldiers || with and without M1 bayonet
|-
| ''[[Beach Red ]]'' || || Marines || || 1967
|-
| ''[[The Born Losers]]'' || [[Tom Laughlin]] || Billy Jack || || 1967
|-
| ''[[The President's Analyst]]'' || || US Marines || white parade slings || 1967
|-
|-
| rowspan=2 | ''[[The Devil's Brigade]]'' || [[Andrew Prine]] || Private Theodore Ransom ||  || rowspan=2 | 1968
| rowspan=2 | ''[[The Devil's Brigade]]'' || [[Andrew Prine]] || Private Theodore Ransom ||  || rowspan=2 | 1968
Line 204: Line 263:
| ''[[OSS 117 - Double Agent (Niente rose per OSS 117)]]'' ||  || Tuaregs guard ||  || 1968
| ''[[OSS 117 - Double Agent (Niente rose per OSS 117)]]'' ||  || Tuaregs guard ||  || 1968
|-
|-
| ''[[The Bridge at Remagen]]'' || Various actors || U.S. Army soldiers ||  || 1969
| ''[[Anzio]]'' || [[Giancarlo Giannini]]  || Private Cellini||  || 1968
|-
| ''[[If....]]'' ||  || Combined Cadet Force||  || 1968
|-
|''[[Che!]]''||[[Omar Sharif]]||Che Guevara||||1969
|-
| ''[[The Bridge at Remagen]]'' || Various actors || US Army soldiers ||  || 1969
|-
|rowspan=2| ''[[100 Rifles]]'' || [[Michael Forest]] || Humara ||  ||rowspan=2| 1969
|-
| || Mexican soldiers ||
|-
| ''[[Castle Keep]]'' || [[Al Freeman Jr.]] || Private Allistair Piersall Benjamin ||  || 1969
|-
| [[Kelly's Heroes]] || [[Gene Collins]] || Pvt. Babra|| || 1970
|-
|-
| ''[[100 Rifles]]'' || [[Michael Forest]] || Humara || || 1969
| ''[[Patton]]'' || || American soldiers|| || 1970
|-
|-
| ''[[100 Rifles]]'' ||  || Mexican soldiers || || 1969
| ''[[Catch-22]]'' ||  || American honor guard|| || 1970
|-
|-
| ''[[Godzilla vs. Gigan]]'' || || JSDF personnel || || 1972
| ''[[Joe]]'' || [[Peter Boyle]] || Joe Curran || || 1970
|-
| ''[[The Omega Man]]'' ||  || || || 1971
|-
| ''[[Godzilla vs. Gigan]]'' || || JGSDF personnel || || 1972
|-
|-
| ''[[Savage Sisters]]'' || Various actors || Philippine soldiers, guerrillas ||  || 1974
| ''[[Savage Sisters]]'' || Various actors || Philippine soldiers, guerrillas ||  || 1974
Line 216: Line 293:
| ''[[Cleopatra Jones and the Casino of Gold]]'' ||  || Thugs ||  || 1975
| ''[[Cleopatra Jones and the Casino of Gold]]'' ||  || Thugs ||  || 1975
|-
|-
| [[Jaws]] || [[Roy Scheider]] || Police chief Martin Brody || || 1975
|rowspan=2| ''[[Jaws]]'' || [[Roy Scheider]] || Police chief Martin Brody || ||rowspan=2| 1975
|-
|-
| [[Jaws]] || [[Robert Shaw]] || Quint || || 1975
|[[Robert Shaw]] || Quint ||
|-
|-
| rowspan=2 | ''[[Muthers, The|The Muthers]]'' || [[Rocco Montalban]] || Rocco ||  || rowspan=2 | 1976
| rowspan=2 | ''[[The Muthers]]'' || [[Rocco Montalban]] || Rocco ||  || rowspan=2 | 1976
|-
|-
| Various actors || Pirates, Camp guards ||
| Various actors || Pirates, Camp guards ||
Line 227: Line 304:
|-
|-
| ''[[Drummer-Crab (Le Crabe-Tambour)]]'' || || French soldiers, Viet Minh fighters || || 1977
| ''[[Drummer-Crab (Le Crabe-Tambour)]]'' || || French soldiers, Viet Minh fighters || || 1977
|-
| ''[[A Bridge Too Far]]'' || [[Ryan O'Neal]]|| Brigadier General James Gavin  || || 1977
|-
| ''[[Death Force]]'' ||  || Soldiers ||  || 1978
|-
|-
| ''[[Go Tell the Spartans]]'' ||  || South Vietnamese troops ||  || 1978
| ''[[Go Tell the Spartans]]'' ||  || South Vietnamese troops ||  || 1978
|-
|-
| ''[[The Outsider (1980)|The Outsider (1980)]]'' || [[Niall O'Brien]] || Emmet Donovan ||  || 1980
| ''[[National Lampoon's Animal House]]'' ||  || ROTC cadets ||  || 1978
|-
| ''[[Convoy Busters (Un poliziotto scomodo)]]'' ||  ||  carabiniers and policemen|| || 1978
|-
| ''[[The Inglorious Bastards]]'' ||  ||  French Resistance member|| || 1978
|-
| ''[[The Olsen Gang Goes to War]]'' || || Danish Royal Guards || || 1978
|-
| ''[[The Outsider (1980)|The Outsider]]'' || [[Niall O'Brien]] || Emmet Donovan ||  || 1980
|-
|-
| rowspan=3 | ''[[The Big Red One]]'' || [[Mark Hamill]] || Griff ||  || rowspan=3 | 1980
| rowspan=3 | ''[[The Big Red One]]'' || [[Mark Hamill]] || Griff ||  || rowspan=3 | 1980
Line 241: Line 330:
|-
|-
| ''[[Enter the Ninja]]'' || || A guard || || 1981
| ''[[Enter the Ninja]]'' || || A guard || || 1981
|-
| ''[[Stripes]]'' || || recruits || || 1981
|-
|-
| ''[[Border, The (1982)|The Border (1982)]]'' ||  || Honor Guard Detail ||  || 1982
| ''[[Border, The (1982)|The Border (1982)]]'' ||  || Honor Guard Detail ||  || 1982
|-
| ''[[Year of Living Dangerously, The]]'' ||  || US Marine guards || || 1982
|-
|-
| ''[[Uncommon Valor]]'' || [[Gene Hackman]] || Col. Rhodes || || 1983
| ''[[Uncommon Valor]]'' || [[Gene Hackman]] || Col. Rhodes || || 1983
|-
|-
| ''[[Code Name: Wild Geese]]'' || [[Manfred Lehmann]] || Klein || With sniper scope and fake suppressor || 1984
| ''[[Code Name: Wild Geese]]'' || [[Manfred Lehmann]] || Klein || M1D with M84 scope and fake suppressor || 1984
|-
| ''[[Ninja III: The Domination]]'' || || Phoenix PD officers || || 1984
|-
| ''[[A Soldier's Story]]'' || || soldiers|| || 1984
|-
| ''[[Volunteers]]'' || || US Marines || on TV news show || 1985
|-
|-
| ''[[Nadine]]'' || [[Gary Grubbs]] || Cecil || || 1987
| ''[[Nadine]]'' || [[Gary Grubbs]] || Cecil || || 1987
|-
| ''[[Extreme Prejudice]]'' ||  ||one of Cash's men ||semiautomatic Rifle with leather M1917 sling || 1987
|-
| ''[[Six Against the Rock]]'' ||  ||US Marines |||| 1987
|-
| ''[[Empire of the Sun]]'' ||  ||US Soldiers |||| 1987
|-
| ''[[Equalizer 2000]]'' || || Rebels || || 1987
|-
| ''[[The Deer Hunter]]'' || [[Matthew Broderick]] || Eugene Morris Jerome || || 1988
|-
| ''[[Biloxi Blues ]]'' || [[Matthew Broderick]] || Eugene Morris Jerome || || 1988
|-
| ''[[Hell Comes to Frogtown]]'' || || Borger guards || || 1988
|-
| ''[[Return of the Killer Tomatoes]]'' || || US Army soldiers || || 1988
|-
| ''[[RoboCop 2]]'' ||  || |||| 1990
|-
| ''[[Born on the Fourth of July]]'' ||  || || veterans || 1989
|-
| ''[[Air America ]]'' ||  ||soldiers of Laotian General Soong |||| 1990
|-
|-
| ''[[Cape Fear]]'' || Various actors || US Army soldiers on an allegorical car ||  || 1991
| ''[[Cape Fear]]'' || Various actors || US Army soldiers on an allegorical car ||  || 1991
|-
|''[[Diên Biên Phú]]''||||Viet Minh||||1992
|-
|-
| rowspan=3 | ''[[A Midnight Clear]]'' || [[Gary Sinise]] || Vance 'Mother' Wilkins ||  || rowspan=3 | 1992
| rowspan=3 | ''[[A Midnight Clear]]'' || [[Gary Sinise]] || Vance 'Mother' Wilkins ||  || rowspan=3 | 1992
Line 260: Line 383:
| ''[[Forrest Gump]]'' || Various actors || Alabama National Guardsmen ||  || 1994
| ''[[Forrest Gump]]'' || Various actors || Alabama National Guardsmen ||  || 1994
|-
|-
| ''[[Mulholland Falls]]'' || Various actors || L.A.P.D. honor guard ||  || 1996
| ''[[Clear and Present Danger]]'' ||  || Air Force Honor Guard ||  || 1994
|-
| ''[[Mulholland Falls]]'' || Various actors || LAPD honor guard ||  || 1996
|-
| ''[[Life Is Beautiful]]'' ||  || American soldiers ||  || 1996
|-
|-
| ''[[Life Is Beautiful]]'' ||  || American Soldiers ||  || 1996
| ''[[ The English Patient]]'' ||  || American soldiers ||  || 1996
|-
|-
| rowspan=7 | ''[[Saving Private Ryan]]'' || Various actors || U.S. Army soldiers ||  || rowspan=7 | 1998
| rowspan=7 | ''[[Saving Private Ryan]]'' || [[Nathan Fillion]] || Pvt. James Frederick "Minnesota" Ryan ||  || rowspan=7 | 1998
|-
|-
| [[Adam Goldberg]] || Pvt. Stanley Mellish ||
| [[Adam Goldberg]] || Pvt. Stanley Mellish ||
Line 286: Line 413:
| [[Ben Chaplin]] || Pvt. Bell ||
| [[Ben Chaplin]] || Pvt. Bell ||
|-
|-
| Various actors || U.S. Army soldiers ||
| Various actors || US Army soldiers ||
|-
|rowspan=3|''[[When Trumpets Fade]] || [[Zak Orth]] || Pvt. Sanderson || ||rowspan=3|1998
|-
|[[Dylan Bruno]]||Sgt. Talbot||
|-
|[[Martin Donovan]] ||  Capt. Pritchett ||
|-
| ''[[Blues Brothers 2000]]'' || ||  Militiaman ||  || 1998
|-
|-
| ''[[The Matrix]]'' ||  || Seen in the Virtual Armory behind Trinity ||  || 1999
| ''[[The Matrix]]'' ||  || Seen in the Virtual Armory behind Trinity ||  || 1999
|-
|-
| ''[[Pearl Harbor]]'' || Newsreel footage || U.S. military personnel ||  || 2001
| ''[[Harsh Realm]]'' || [[Brad Greenquist]] || Captain Wolfe || M1-D Sniper Variant with M84 scope || 1999
|-
| ''[[American Beauty]]'' ||  ||  ||  || 1999
|-
| ''[[X-Men]]'' ||  || US Marine Honor Guard||  || 2000
|-
| ''[[Stacy: Attack of the Schoolgirl Zombies]]'' ||  ||  || archive footage || 2001
|-
| ''[[Pearl Harbor]]'' || Newsreel footage || US military personnel ||  || 2001
|-
|-
| ''[[A Beautiful Mind]]'' || || U.S. Soldiers || || 2001
| ''[[A Beautiful Mind]]'' || || US soldiers || || 2001
|-
|rowspan=2|''[[Windtalkers]]'' || [[Martin Henderson]] || Private Nellie || ||rowspan=2|2002
|-
|[[Mark Ruffalo]]||Private Pappas||
|-
| ''[[The Quiet American]]'' || || Gen. The's soldiers || || 2002
|-
| ''[[Secondhand Lions]]'' || ||  || || 2003
|-
| ''[[Saints and Soldiers]]'' || [[Corbin Allred]] || Cpl. Nathan 'Deacon' Greer ||  || 2003
|-
| ''[[Deacons for Defense]]'' ||  || some Deacons || || 2003
|-
|-
| ''[[Hellboy]]'' || [[Angus MacInnes]] || Sgt. Whitman ||  || 2004
| ''[[Hellboy]]'' || [[Angus MacInnes]] || Sgt. Whitman ||  || 2004
|-
| ''[[Tae Guk Gi: The Brotherhood of War]]'' ||  || South Korean soldier ||  || 2004
|-
| ''[[Siamese Outlaws]]'' ||  || Polices||  || 2004
|-
| ''[[The Notebook]]'' ||  || soldiers||  || 2004
|-
|-
| rowspan=3 | ''[[The Great Raid]]'' || [[Craig McLachlan]] || Lt. Riley ||  || rowspan=3 | 2005
| rowspan=3 | ''[[The Great Raid]]'' || [[Craig McLachlan]] || Lt. Riley ||  || rowspan=3 | 2005
Line 300: Line 461:
| [[Sam Worthington]] || PFC Lucas ||
| [[Sam Worthington]] || PFC Lucas ||
|-
|-
| Various actors || U.S. Rangers and some Filipino resistance || one seen with [[M7 rifle grenade]] launcher
| Various actors || US Rangers and some Filipino resistance || one seen with [[M7 rifle grenade]] launcher
|-
| ''[[Thank You For Smoking]]'' || || || || 2005
|-
|-
| rowspan=3 | ''[[Days of Glory (2006)|Days of Glory]]'' || [[Bernard Blancan]] || Sergent Roger Martinez ||  || rowspan=3 | 2006
| rowspan=3 | ''[[Days of Glory (2006)|Days of Glory]]'' || [[Bernard Blancan]] || Sergent Roger Martinez ||  || rowspan=3 | 2006
Line 318: Line 481:
| [[Paul Walker]] || Sergeant Hank Hansen ||
| [[Paul Walker]] || Sergeant Hank Hansen ||
|-
|-
| Various actors || U.S. Marines ||
| Various actors || US Marines ||
|-
| ''[[Home of the Brave]]'' || || honor guard || || 2006
|-
| ''[[Letters from Iwo Jima]]'' || || US Marines || || 2006
|-
| ''[[The Good Shepherd ]]'' || || Soldiers in the unnamed Central American country || || 2006
|-
|''[[Philosophy of a Knife]]''||||American soldiers||archive footage||2008
|-
|-
| rowspan=2 | ''[[Bridge, The (2008)|The Bridge]]'' || [[Lars Steinhöfel]] || Walter Forst || with M7 bayonet || rowspan=2 | 2008
| rowspan=2 | ''[[Bridge, The (2008)|The Bridge]]'' || [[Lars Steinhöfel]] || Walter Forst || with M7 bayonet || rowspan=2 | 2008
Line 342: Line 513:
| Various actors || US Army soldiers ||
| Various actors || US Army soldiers ||
|-  
|-  
| [[Brother's War]] || Various actors || U.S. Army soldiers ||  || 2009
| ''[[Street Kings]]'' || || LAPD honor guard||  || 2008
|-
| ''[[Che Part One: Argentine]]'' ||[[Benicio del Toro]] || Che Guevara||  || 2008
|-
| ''[[Miracle at St. Anna]]'' ||[[Omar Benson Miller]] || Private First Class Samuel Train||  || 2008
|-
| ''[[An American Carol]]'' || || ||  || 2008
|-
| ''[[Brother's War]]'' || Various actors || US Army soldiers ||  || 2009
|-
|-
| rowspan=5 | ''[[Red and White (Merah Putih)]]'' || [[Darius Sinathryah]] || Marius ||  || rowspan=5 | 2009
| rowspan=5 | ''[[Red and White (Merah Putih)]]'' || [[Darius Sinathryah]] || Marius ||  || rowspan=5 | 2009
Line 402: Line 581:
| Various || US Army soldiers ||
| Various || US Army soldiers ||
|-
|-
| ''[[Red Tails]]'' || || American troops || || 2012
|rowspan=2|''[[Red Tails]]'' || || American troops || ||rowspan=2|2012
|-  
|-  
| ''[[Red Tails]]'' ||  || German troops || || 2012
||| German troops ||
|-  
|-  
| ''[[Cockneys vs. Zombies]]'' ||  || ||  || 2012
| ''[[Cockneys vs. Zombies]]'' ||  || ||  || 2012
|-  
|-  
| ''[[Emperor]]'' ||  || American soldiers ||  || 2013
|-
| ''[[Machete Kills]]'' ||  || || On gun wall || 2013
| ''[[Machete Kills]]'' ||  || || On gun wall || 2013
|-
|-
| ''[[Fury (2014)|Fury]]''||||U.S. Army soldiers||||2014
| ''[[Pacific Rim]]'' ||  || ||  || 2013
|-
| ''[[Diplomacy]]'' || || US Army soldiers || || 2014
|-
| ''[[Fury (2014)|Fury]]''||||US Army soldiers||||2014
|-
| ''[[Captain America: The Winter Soldier ]]'' || [[Chris Evans]] || Steve Rogers || || 2014
|-
| ''[[The Monuments Men]]'' || || US troops || || 2014
|-
| ''[[Far from Men]]'' || || Algerian rebels || || 2014
|-
| ''[[Muppets Most Wanted]]'' || || Actors || || 2014
|-
| ''[[Bridge of Spies]]'' || || US Army snipers || M1D with M84 sniper variant || 2015
|-
| ''[[Mr. Holmes]]'' || || US Army soldiers || || 2015
|-
| ''[[War Pigs]]'' || || US Army soldiers || || 2015
|-
| ''[[Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk ]]'' || || honor guard ||  || 2016
|-
|rowspan=11|''[[Hacksaw Ridge]]'' || [[Andrew Garfield]] || Desmond Doss || ||rowspan=11|2016
|-
|[[Vince Vaughn]] || Sergeant Howell ||
|-
|[[Ben O'Toole]] || Corporal Jessop ||
|-
|[[Richard Pyros]] || Randall "Teach" Fuller ||
|-
|[[Luke Bracey]] || Smitty Ryker ||
|-
|[[Luke Pegler]] || Milt "Hollywood" Zane ||
|-
|[[Firass Dirani]] || Vito Rinnelli ||
|-
|[[Ben Mingay]] || Grease Nolan ||
|-
|[[Goran D. Kleut]] || Andy "Ghoul" Walker ||
|-
|[[Nico Cortez]] || Wal Kirzinski ||
|-
| || US Army soldiers ||
|-
| ''[[Neruda]] ''|| || Chilean soldiers || || 2016
|-
| ''[[Memorial Day]]'' || [[Aaron Courteau]] || Frankie Califano ||  || 2016
|-
|''[[Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk]]''||||honor guard||||2016
|-
|''[[Daylight's End]]''|||| Survivors||||2016
|-
|rowspan=2|''[[Free Fire]]''||[[Patrick Bergin]]||Howie||||rowspan=2|2017
|-
|[[Babou Ceesay]]||Martin||
|-
|''[[Detroit (2017)|Detroit]]''||||Michigan Army National Guard||||2017
|-
|''[[Overlord]]''||[[Jovan Adepo]]||PFC Boyce||||2018
|-
|''[[A War Within]]''|| Sebastian Jessen || Esben || ||2018
|-
| rowspan=2|''[[Daughter of the Wolf]]'' || Joshua Murdoch || Phillip || rowspan=2| || rowspan=2|2019
|-
| [[Gina Carano]] || Clair Hamilton
|-
|''[[Battle of Jangsari, The]]''|| ||South Korean Army, Student-soldiers||||2019
|-
| ''[[To Paris! (Na Parizh)]]'' || || A US Army soldier || Possibly a replica || 2019
|-
|''[[Secret in the Mountain]]''|| || US Army soldiers || || 2019
|-
|''[[Jojo Rabbit]]''||||U.S. Army||||2019
|-
|''[[Rambo: Last Blood]]''||[[Sylvester Stallone]]||John Rambo||||2019
|-
|''[[Black Widow (2021)|Black Widow]]''||||Soldier on parade || ||2021
|-
|-
|}
|}


=== Television ===
===Television===
 
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%"
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%"
|-bgcolor=#D0E7FF
|-bgcolor=#D0E7FF
Line 421: Line 677:
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="170"|'''Actor'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="170"|'''Actor'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="200"|'''Character'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="200"|'''Character'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="225"|'''Note / Episode'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="275"|'''Note / Episode'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="75"|'''Air Date'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="75"|'''Air Date'''
|-
|-
| ''[[Combat!]]'' || [[Dick Peabody]] || Little John || || 1962-1967
|rowspan=3|''[[Combat!]]'' || [[Dick Peabody]] || Little John || ||rowspan=3|1962-1967
|-
|[[Pierre Jalbert]] || Caje ||
|-
|Various actors || US Army soldiers ||
|-
| rowspan=9| ''[[McHale's Navy]]'' || || Navy Shore Patrol, Marines || || 1962-1965
|-
| [[Ernest Borgnine]] || Lt. Cmdr. Quinton Mchale || "The Balloon Goes Up" (S2E18) || 1964
|-
|-
| ''[[Combat!]]'' || [[Pierre Jalbert]] || Caje || || 1962-1967
| [[Tim Conway]] || Ensign Charles Parker || "Lester the Skipper" (S3E2) || 1964
|-
|-
| ''[[Combat!]]'' || Various actors || U.S. Army soldiers || || 1962-1967
| [[Gary Vinson]] || George "Christy" Christopher || rowspan=3| "McHale's Floating Laundromat" (S3E20), "The Seven Faces of Ensign Parker" (S3E23) || rowspan=3|1964, 1965
|-
|-
| ''[[Rat Patrol]]'' || [[Justin Tarr]] || Pvt. Tully Pettigrew || || 1966-1968
| [[John Wright]] || Willy Moss
|-
|-
| ''[[Rat Patrol]]'' || Various actors || US Army soldiers || rarely used || 1966-1968
| [[Edson Stroll]] || Virgil Edwards
|-
|-
| ''[[Hawaii Five-O (1968)|Hawaii Five-O]]''||.|| USAF Honor Guard || Pilot Episode || 1968
| [[Billy Sands]] || "Tinker" Bell || rowspan=2| "The Seven Faces of Ensign Parker" (S3E23) || rowspan=2|1965
|-
| [[ Carl Ballantine]] || Lester Gruber
|-
| || Army soldiers and Military Police || || 1965-1966
|-
|rowspan=2|''[[Rat Patrol]]'' || [[Justin Tarr]] || Pvt. Tully Pettigrew || ||rowspan=2|1966-1968
|-
|Various actors || US Army soldiers || rarely used
|-
| ''[[Hawaii Five-O (1968)|Hawaii Five-O]]''|| || USAF Honor Guard || Pilot Episode || 1968
|-
|-
| ''[[M*A*S*H (TV Series)|M*A*S*H]]'' || Various actors || Various U.N. soldiers || || 1972-1983
| ''[[M*A*S*H (TV Series)|M*A*S*H]]'' || Various actors || Various U.N. soldiers || || 1972-1983
|-
|-
| ''[[A Rumor of War]]'' || [[Brad Davis]] || Lt. Philip 'Phil' Caputo || Dressed up to resemble [[M14 Rifle]]s || 1980
| ''[[Columbo]]''|| [[Nate Esformes]] || Hakim || "A Case of Immunity" (S05E02) || 1975
|-
|rowspan=4|''[[A Rumor of War]]'' || [[Brad Davis]] || Lt. Philip 'Phil' Caputo ||rowspan=4|Dressed up to resemble [[M14 Rifle]]s ||rowspan=4|1980
|-
|-
| ''[[A Rumor of War]]'' || [[Keith Carradine]] || Lt. Murph McCoy || Dressed up to resemble [[M14 Rifle]]s || 1980
|[[Keith Carradine]] || Lt. Murph McCoy
|-  
|-  
| ''[[A Rumor of War]]'' || [[Michael O'Keefe]] || Lt. Walter Cohen || Dressed up to resemble [[M14 Rifle]]s || 1980
|[[Michael O'Keefe]] || Lt. Walter Cohen
|-
|Various actors || US Marines
|-
|rowspan=3|''[[Tour of Duty]]'' || || Vietnamese Villager || S01E03 ||rowspan=3|1987
|-
| || Vietnamese sniper ||rowspan=2|M1C Sniper Variant / S02E06
|-
|-
| ''[[A Rumor of War]]'' || Various actors || U.S. Marines || Dressed up to resemble [[M14 Rifle]]s || 1980
|[[Michael Madsen]] || Sgt. Block
|-
|-
| ''[[Tour of Duty]]'' || || Vietnamese Villager || S01E03 || 1987
|''[[The X-Files - Season 1]]'' || || || "The Jersey Devil" (S1E04), "Space" (S1E08) || 1993
|-
|-
| ''[[Tour of Duty]]'' || || Vietnamese sniper ||M1C Sniper Variant / S02E06 || 1989
|rowspan=5|''[[Star Trek: Voyager]]'' || [[Robert Beltran]] || Chakotay ||rowspan=5|"The Killing Game" ||rowspan=5|1995-2001
|-
|-
| ''[[Tour of Duty]]'' ||[[Michael Madsen]]  || Sgt. Block ||M1-C Sniper Variant / S02E06 || 1989
|[[Robert Duncan McNeill]] || Tom Paris
|-
|-
|''[[The X-Files - Season 1]]'' || ||  || "The Jersey Devil" (S1E04), "Space" (S1E08) || 1993
|[[Tim Russ]] || Tuvok
|-
|-
|''[[Star Trek: Voyager]]'' || [[Robert Beltran]] || Chakotay || "The Killing Game" || 1995-2001
|[[Roxann Dawson]] || B'Elanna Torres
|-
|-
|''[[Star Trek: Voyager]]'' || [[Robert Duncan McNeill]] || Tom Paris ||"The Killing Game" || 1995-2001
|Various actors || US Army soldiers
|-
|-
|''[[Star Trek: Voyager]]'' || [[Tim Russ]] || Tuvok ||"The Killing Game" || 1995-2001
| ''[[The Alsatians or the Two Matildas]]'' || || American soldiers || || 1996
|-
|-
|''[[Star Trek: Voyager]]'' || [[Roxann Dawson]] || B'Elanna Torres ||"The Killing Game" || 1995-2001
|rowspan=14|''[[Band of Brothers]]''|| [[Damian Lewis]] || Richard "Dick" Winters || occasionally seen with M1 bayonet ||rowspan=14|2001
|-
|-
|''[[Star Trek: Voyager]]'' || Various actors || U.S. Army soldiers ||"The Killing Game" || 1995-2001
|[[Adam James]]||Pvt. Cleveland Petty||
|-
|-
| ''[[Band of Brothers]]''|| [[Damian Lewis]] || Richard "Dick" Winters || occasionally seen with M1 bayonet || 2001
|[[Rocky Marshall]]||Earl Clugg||
|-
|-
| ''[[Band of Brothers]]''|| [[Peter Youngblood Hills]] || Shifty Powers || occasionally seen with M1 bayonet || 2001
|[[Peter Youngblood Hills]] || Shifty Powers ||rowspan=10|occasionally seen with M1 bayonet
|-
|-
| ''[[Band of Brothers]]'' || [[Ross McCall]] || Joseph Liebgott || occasionally seen with M1 bayonet || 2001
|[[Ross McCall]] || Joseph Liebgott
|-
|-
| ''[[Band of Brothers]]''|| [[James Madio]] || Frank Perconte || occasionally seen with M1 bayonet || 2001
|[[James Madio]] || Frank Perconte
|-
|-
| ''[[Band of Brothers]]'' || [[Bart Ruspoli]] ||Pvt. Tipper || occasionally seen with M1 bayonet || 2001
|[[Bart Ruspoli]] ||Pvt. Tipper
|-
|-
| ''[[Band of Brothers]]'' || [[Marc Warren]] || Pvt. Albert Blythe || occasionally seen with M1 bayonet || 2001
|[[Marc Warren]] || Pvt. Albert Blythe
|-
|-
| ''[[Band of Brothers]]''|| [[Mark Huberman]] || Pvt. Hashey || occasionally seen with M1 bayonet || 2001
|[[Mark Huberman]] || Pvt. Hashey
|-
|-
| ''[[Band of Brothers]]''|| [[Douglas Spain]] || Pvt. Garcia || occasionally seen with M1 bayonet || 2001
|[[Douglas Spain]] || Pvt. Garcia
|-
|-
| ''[[Band of Brothers]]''|| [[Matt Hickey]] || Pvt. Patrick O'Keefe || occasionally seen with M1 bayonet || 2001
|[[Matt Hickey]] || Pvt. Patrick O'Keefe
|-
|-
| ''[[Band of Brothers]]'' || [[Mark Lawrence]] || Cpl. William Dukeman || occasionally seen with M1 bayonet || 2001
|[[Mark Lawrence]] || Cpl. William Dukeman
|-
|-
| ''[[Band of Brothers]]''|| [[Donnie Wahlberg]] || Carwood Lipton || occasionally seen with M1 bayonet || 2001 
|[[Donnie Wahlberg]] || Carwood Lipton
|-
|-
| ''[[Band of Brothers]]'' || Various actors || US Army soldiers || occasionally seen with M1 bayonet and [[M7 rifle grenade]] launcher || 2001
|Various actors || US Army soldiers || occasionally seen with M1 bayonet and [[M7 rifle grenade]] launcher
|-
|''[[Ghost Whisperer]]''||||honor guard||"Pilot" (S1E01)||2005
|-
|-
| ''[[Foyle's War - Season 4]]'' || || US Army soldiers || "Invasion" (S4E01) || 2006
| ''[[Foyle's War - Season 4]]'' || || US Army soldiers || "Invasion" (S4E01) || 2006
|-
|-
| ''[[House of Saddam]]'' || [[Aris Sahn]] || Young Uday Hussein || || 2008
|rowspan=2|''[[House of Saddam]]'' || [[Aris Sahn]] || Young Uday Hussein || ||rowspan=2|2008
|-
|-
| ''[[House of Saddam]]'' || [[Yigal Naor]] || Saddam Hussein || || 2008
|[[Yigal Naor]] || Saddam Hussein ||
|-
|-
| ''[[Mail Call]]''|| [[ R. Lee Ermey]] || Himself || Seen in saddle on his jeep || 2002-2009
|rowspan=4|''[[Mail Call]]''|| [[ R. Lee Ermey]] || Himself || Seen in saddle on his jeep ||rowspan=4|2002-2009
|-
|-
| ''[[Mail Call]]''|| [[ R. Lee Ermey]] || Himself || equipped with [[M7 rifle grenade]] launcher / Season 1|| 2002-2009
|[[ R. Lee Ermey]] || Himself || equipped with [[M7 rifle grenade]] launcher / Season 1
|-
|-
| ''[[Mail Call]]'' || Newsreel footage || || M1C-sniper variant / Season 1 || 2002-2009
|Newsreel footage || || M1C-sniper variant / Season 1
|-
|-
| ''[[Mail Call]]''|| US Army soldier re-enactors || || Season 1 || 2002-2009
|US Army soldier re-enactors || || Season 1
|-
| ''[[Eureka]]''|| American soliders || American soliders||  || 2006-2012
|-
| ''[[Life - Season 1]]'' || || LAPD Honor Guard || || 2007 - 2008
|-
|-
| ''[[My Name is Earl]]'' || || soldiers || || 2008
| ''[[My Name is Earl]]'' || || soldiers || || 2008
|-
|-
| ''[[The Pacific]]'' || [[James Badge Dale]] || Robert Leckie || || 2010
| ''[[Krupp: A Family Between War and Peace]]''|| || US soldiers || Ep. 03 || 2009
|-
|-
| ''[[The Pacific]]'' || [[Ashton Holmes]] || Sid Phillips || || 2010
|rowspan=8|''[[The Pacific]]'' || [[James Badge Dale]] || Robert Leckie || ||rowspan=8|2010
|-
|-
| ''[[The Pacific]]'' || [[Jacob Pitts]] || Bill "Hoosier" Smith || || 2010
|[[Ashton Holmes]] || Sid Phillips ||
|-
|-
| ''[[The Pacific]]'' || [[Brendan Fletcher]] || Bill Leyden || || 2010
|[[Jacob Pitts]] || Bill "Hoosier" Smith ||
|-
|-
| ''[[The Pacific]]'' || [[Joseph Mazzello]] || Eugene Sledge || || 2010
|[[Brendan Fletcher]] || Bill Leyden ||
|-
|-
| ''[[The Pacific]]'' || [[Gary Sweet]] || Gunny Sgt. Elmo Haney || || 2010
|[[Joseph Mazzello]] || Eugene Sledge ||
|-
|-
| ''[[The Pacific]]'' || Various actors || U.S. Marines || || 2010
|[[Gary Sweet]] || Gunny Sgt. Elmo Haney ||
|-
|-
| ''[[The Pacific]]'' || Various actors || US Army soldiers || || 2010
|Various actors || US Marines ||
|-
|-
| ''[[CSI: Miami]]'' || Various actors || U.S. Marine honor guard || "Come As You Are" || 2002-???
|Various actors || US Army soldiers ||
|-
|-
| ''[[Sanctuary]]'' || Various actors || U.S. Soldiers ||  "Normandy" || 2011
| ''[[Lost - Season 6]]'' ||  || one of Jacob's followers ||"LA X (Part 2)" (S6E02) || 2010
|-
| ''[[CSI: Miami]]'' || Various actors || US Marine honor guard || "Come As You Are" || 2002-???
|-
|''[[Leverage - Season 4|Leverage]]''||[[Aldis Hodge]]||Charlie||"The Van Gogh Job" (S4E04)||2011
|-
| ''[[Sanctuary]]'' || Various actors || US soldiers ||  "Normandy" || 2011
|-
|-
| ''[[Falling Skies]]'' || Extra || Resistance fighter ||  || 2011
| ''[[Falling Skies]]'' || Extra || Resistance fighter ||  || 2011
|-
|-
| ''[[Foyle's War - Season 8]]'' || || US Army soldiers || "Sunflower" (S8E03) || 2013
| ''[[Foyle's War - Season 8]]'' || || US Army soldiers || "Sunflower" (S8E03) || 2013
|-
| ''[[Spies (Razvedchitsy)]]'' || || A US Army soldier || Possibly Denix replica || 2013
|-
|-
| ''[[Parer's War]]'' || || US Marines || || 2014
| ''[[Parer's War]]'' || || US Marines || || 2014
|-
|''[[Agent Carter - Season 1|Agent Carter]]''||||||M1D - sniper model||2015
|-
|-
| ''[[Policie Modrava]]'' || || Members of the Military History Club || In a holster/ "Případ Strnad" (S1E04) || 2015
| ''[[Policie Modrava]]'' || || Members of the Military History Club || In a holster/ "Případ Strnad" (S1E04) || 2015
|-
|-
| ''[[The Last Ship - Season 2|The Last Ship]]'' |||| Thorwald's men ||"Fight the Ship" (S2E02) || 2015
| ''[[The Last Ship - Season 2|The Last Ship]]'' |||| Thorwald's men ||"Fight the Ship" (S2E02) || 2015
|-
| ''[[Crown, The|The Crown]]'' |||| United States Army ||episode: "Vergangenheit" (S2E06) || 2017
|-
| ''[[Fear the Walking Dead - Season 3]]'' || || Black Hat Reservation resident ||"The Unveiling" (S3E07), "Children of Wrath" (S3E08) || 2017
|-
|''[[The Walking Dead: Red Machete]]''||Jose Rosete|| David||"Behind Us" (S1E01), "Sorrowful" (S1E02)||2018
|-
|''[[Man in the High Castle, The - Season 4|The Man in the High Castle]]''||||American Resistance fighters||||2019
|-
|''[[The Falcon and the Winter Soldier]]''||||||on display in the Museum and propaganda poster; "New World Order" (S1E01), "One World, One People" (S1E06)||2021
|-
| ''[[The Last of Us - Season 1]]'' ||||||seen in armory; "Long Long Time" (S1E03)|| 2023
|-
|rowspan=2|''[[The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon - Season 1]]'' |||| ||seen in armory; "L'ame Perdue" (S1E01) || rowspan=2|2023
|-
| || American Soldiers ||"Coming Home" (S1E06)
|-
|-
|}
|}


=== Video Games ===
===Video Games===
 
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%"
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%"
|-bgcolor=#D0E7FF
|-bgcolor=#D0E7FF
Line 550: Line 863:
| ''[[WWII G.I.]]'' || "Grenade Garand" || Fitted with [[M7 rifle grenade]] launcher ||  || 1999
| ''[[WWII G.I.]]'' || "Grenade Garand" || Fitted with [[M7 rifle grenade]] launcher ||  || 1999
|-
|-
| ''[[Medal of Honor (1999)]]'' ||  ||  ||  || 1999
| ''[[Medal of Honor (1999)|Medal of Honor]]'' ||  ||  ||  || 1999
|-
|-
| ''[[Medal of Honor: Underground]]'' ||  ||  || Multiplayer Only || 2000
| ''[[Medal of Honor: Underground]]'' ||  ||  || Multiplayer Only || 2000
Line 564: Line 877:
| ''[[Battlefield: 1942]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  || Added with the release of patch v1.6; primary weapon of the American Engineer class; cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2002
| ''[[Battlefield: 1942]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  || Added with the release of patch v1.6; primary weapon of the American Engineer class; cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2002
|-
|-
| ''[[Forgotten Hope]]'' ||  || M1 and M1C Garand ||  || 2003
| ''[[Forgotten Hope]]'' ||  || M1 and M1C with M84 Garand ||  || 2003
|-
|-
| ''[[Vietcong]]'' ||  ||  || M1D sniper variant || 2003
| ''[[Vietcong]]'' ||  ||  || M1C with M84 sniper variant || 2003
|-
|-
| ''[[Day of Defeat]]'' || "Garand Rifle" ||  || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2003
| ''[[Day of Defeat]]'' || "Garand Rifle" ||  || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2003
Line 574: Line 887:
| ''[[Hidden & Dangerous 2]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  ||  || 2003
| ''[[Hidden & Dangerous 2]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  ||  || 2003
|-
|-
| ''[[Call of Duty (2003)]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2003
| ''[[Call of Duty (2003)|Call of Duty]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2003
|-
|-
| ''[[Medal of Honor: Rising Sun]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2003
| ''[[Medal of Honor: Rising Sun]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2003
|-
| ''[[Medal of Honor: Infiltrator]]'' ||  ||  ||  || 2003
|-
|-
| ''[[Call of Duty: United Offensive]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2004
| ''[[Call of Duty: United Offensive]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2004
Line 584: Line 895:
| ''[[Medal of Honor: Pacific Assault]]'' || "M1 Garand" || Fitted with bayonet || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2004
| ''[[Medal of Honor: Pacific Assault]]'' || "M1 Garand" || Fitted with bayonet || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2004
|-
|-
| ''[[Forgotten Hope 2]]'' || || ||  || 2005
| ''[[Call of Duty: Finest Hour]]'' || "M1 Garand" || || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2004
|-
|-
| ''[[Brothers in Arms: Road to Hill 30]]'' || M1 Garand ||  || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2005
| ''[[Brothers in Arms: Road to Hill 30]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2005
|-
|-
| ''[[Day of Defeat: Source ]]'' ||  ||  || Primary weapon of the American Rifleman class; cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2005
| ''[[Day of Defeat: Source ]]'' ||  ||  || Primary weapon of the American Rifleman class; cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2005
|-
| ''[[Medal of Honor: European Assault]]'' || "M1 Garand" || With and without scope || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied ||2005
|-
|-
| ''[[Call of Duty 2]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2005
| ''[[Call of Duty 2]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2005
|-
| ''[[Call of Duty 2: Big Red One]]'' || "M1 Garand" || || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2005
|-
|-
| ''[[Brothers in Arms: Earned in Blood]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2005
| ''[[Brothers in Arms: Earned in Blood]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2005
|-
| ''[[Medal of Honor: Heroes]]'' ||  ||  || Available in  few levels || 2006
|-
|-
| ''[[Call of Duty 3]] || "M1 Garand" ||  || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2006
| ''[[Call of Duty 3]] || "M1 Garand" ||  || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2006
|-
|-
| ''[[Commandos: Strike Force]]'' ||  ||  || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2006
| ''[[Commandos: Strike Force]]'' ||  ||  || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2006
|-
| ''[[Company of Heroes (2006)|Company of Heroes]]'' || ||  || || 2006
|-
|-
| ''[[Darkest Hour: Europe '44-'45]]'' || "M1 Garand" || Can be fitted with M7 bayonet || Standard weapon of the American Corporal, Rifleman, Artillery Officer, RTO, and Mortar Observer classes || 2006
| ''[[Darkest Hour: Europe '44-'45]]'' || "M1 Garand" || Can be fitted with M7 bayonet || Standard weapon of the American Corporal, Rifleman, Artillery Officer, RTO, and Mortar Observer classes || 2006
|-
|-
| ''[[Alliance of Valiant Arms]]'' ||  ||  || Appears as an unlockable weapon || 2007
| ''[[Alliance of Valiant Arms]]'' ||  ||  || Appears as an unlockable weapon || 2007
|-
| ''[[Medal of Honor: Vanguard]]'' || "M1 Garand" || Can be upgraded to an M1D sniper variant by finding a scope || M1 Garand and M1D sniper variant, Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2007
|-
|-
| ''[[Medal of Honor: Airborne]]'' || "M1 Garand" || Upgrades give it a match barrel, adjustable sights, and an [[M7 rifle grenade]] launcher ||  || 2007
| ''[[Medal of Honor: Airborne]]'' || "M1 Garand" || Upgrades give it a match barrel, adjustable sights, and an [[M7 rifle grenade]] launcher ||  || 2007
|-
|-
| ''[[Medal of Honor: Vanguard]]'' || "M1 Garand" || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied; can be upgraded with a scope ||  || 2007
| ''[[Forgotten Hope 2]]'' || "M1 Garand" || Can be fitted with two types of bayonets and [[M7 rifle grenade]] launcher ||  || 2007
|-
| ''[[Hour of Victory]]'' ||  ||  || || 2007
|-
|-
| ''[[Turning Point: Fall of Liberty]]'' ||  ||  || || 2008
| ''[[Death to Spies]]'' ||  ||  || || 2007
|-
|-
| ''[[Brothers in Arms: Hell's Highway]]'' || "M1 Garand" || Available with scope in multiplayer || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2008
| ''[[Brothers in Arms: Hell's Highway]]'' || "M1 Garand" || M1C variant with M82 scope in multiplayer || Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied || 2008
|-
|-
| ''[[Call of Duty: World at War]]'' || "M1 Garand" / "M1000" || Can be fitted with flash hider, bayonet, [[M7 rifle grenade]] launcher, and a sniper scope ||  || 2008
| ''[[Call of Duty: World at War]]'' || "M1 Garand" / "M1000" || Can be fitted with flash hider, bayonet, [[M7 rifle grenade]] launcher, and a sniper scope ||  || 2008
|-
|-
| ''[[Battlefield 1943]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  || Standard weapon of the American Rifleman class; can be fitted with [[M7 rifle grenade]] launcher || 2009
| ''[[Call of Duty: World at War - Final Fronts]]'' || "M1 Garand" || || || 2008
|-
| ''[[Battlefield 1943]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  || Standard weapon of the American Rifleman class; can be fitted with [[M7 rifle grenade]] launcher; modified model stands in for the Japanese Type 5 rifle || 2009
|-
|-
| ''[[Death to Spies: Moment of Truth]]'' ||  ||  ||  || 2009
| ''[[Death to Spies: Moment of Truth]]'' ||  ||  ||  || 2009
|-
|-
| ''[[Battlefield: Bad Company 2]]'' || "WWII M1 Garand" ||  || Unlocked by registering as a Battlefield "Veteran"; picture of the weapon's info in-game incorrectly shows the Type 5 rifle || 2010
| ''[[Battlefield: Bad Company 2]]'' || "WWII M1 Garand" ||  || Unlocked by registering as a Battlefield "Veteran"; modified model stands in for the Japanese Type 5 rifle || 2010
|-
|-
| ''[[Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker]]'' || "M1C" ||  || || 2010
| ''[[Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker]]'' || "M1C" ||  || M1C with M82 sniper variant || 2010
|-
|-
| ''[[Mafia II]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  ||  || 2010
| ''[[Mafia II]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  ||  || 2010
Line 630: Line 951:
| ''[[7554 (VG)]]'' || "Garand" ||  ||  || 2011
| ''[[7554 (VG)]]'' || "Garand" ||  ||  || 2011
|-
|-
| ''[[Heroes & Generals]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  ||  || 2012
|''[[Sniper Elite V2]]''|| M1-D || ||M1D with M84 variant||2012
|-
| ''[[State of Decay]]'' ||"M1 Garand" ||  ||  || 2013
|-
|-
|''[[Sniper Elite V2]]||M1-D || ||||2012
| ''[[Payday 2]]'' || "Galant" || Optional T62 Tanker short barrel, railed top and cloth ammo pouches || Added in Update #153 || 2013
|-
|-
| [[Project Reality: Normandy]] ||  || With optional M7 rifle grenade launcher ||  || 2013
|rowspan=2|''[[Project Reality: Normandy]]'' ||  || With optional M7 rifle grenade launcher ||  ||rowspan=2|2013
|-
|-
| [[Project Reality: Normandy]] ||  || M1C sniper variant || || 2013
| || M1C with M82 sniper variant ||
|-
|-
| [[Enemy Front]] || M1 GARAND || || || 2014
| ''[[Company of Heroes 2]] || || || M1 and M1C Sniper Variant; added with "The Western Front Armies" 2014 || 2013
|-
|-
| [[Sniper Elite III]] ||  || M1C sniper variant ||  || 2014
| ''[[Enemy Front]]'' || M1 GARAND || ||  || 2014
|-
| ''[[Sniper Elite III]]'' ||  || M1D with M84 sniper variant ||  || 2014
|-
| ''[[Counter-Strike Online]]'' ||M1 Garand ||  ||Chambered for 7.62 NATO ||2014
|-
| ''[[World of Guns: Gun Disassembly]]'' ||M1 Garand ||scope, bayonet and cheekpad  || || 2014
|-
| ''[[Mafia III]]'' || || || ||2016
|-
| ''[[Heroes & Generals]]'' || "M1 Garand" ||  || unscoped and with M84 scope (M1D)|| 2016
|-
| ''[[Hot Dogs, Horseshoes & Hand Grenades]]'' || || || || 2016
|-
| ''[[Day of Infamy]]'' || || || M1 and M1C || 2017
|-
| ''[[Call of Duty: WWII]]'' || "M1 Garand" || || || 2017
|-
| rowspan="2" | ''[[Rising Storm 2: Vietnam]]'' ||  ||  || Normal variant ||rowspan="2" | 2017
|-
| || ||M1D
|-
| ''[[TheHunter: Call of the Wild]]'' || "M1 Iwaniec" ||  ||  || 2017
|-
| ''[[Post Scriptum]]'' || || Can mount bayonet and used with M7 launcher || || 2018
|-
| ''[[Gun Club VR]]'' ||  || || || 2018
|-
| ''[[Battlefield V]]'' || "M1 Garand" || || added in the "War in the Pacific" chapter (2019) || 2018
|-
| ''[[Insurgency Sandstorm]]'' || "M1 Garand" || can mount M7 Launcher|| M1 and M1D variants || 2018
|-
| ''[[Battlefield 2042]]'' ||  || || || 2021
|-
| rowspan=4|''[[Enlisted]]'' || || || M1 Garand|| rowspan=4| 2021
|-
| || || M1C Garand (M82 scope)
|-
| || || M1D Garand (M84 scope)
|-
| || || M1 Garand with M7 Grenade Launcher
|-
|-
|}
|}


=== Animation ===
===Animation===
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%"
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%"
|-bgcolor=#D0E7FF
|-bgcolor=#D0E7FF
Line 652: Line 1,015:
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="100"|'''Date'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="100"|'''Date'''
|-
|-
| [[The Iron Giant]] || US Army soldiers || With M7 rifle grenade launchers || 1999
| ''[[The Iron Giant]]'' || US Army soldiers || With M7 rifle grenade launchers || 1999
|-
|-
|}
|}
Line 664: Line 1,027:
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="100"|'''Date'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="100"|'''Date'''
|-
|-
| [[Stella Women's Academy, High School Division Class ]] || C³ Club || Imaginary || 2013
|''[[The Cockpit]]''|| US Marines || Ep. 3 "Knight of the Iron Dragon" || 1993
|-
|''[[Zipang]]''|| US Marines || || 2004–2005
|-
| ''[[Mystic Archives of Dantalian, The|The Mystic Archives of Dantalian]]''|| Suitor || || 2011
|-
| ''[[Strike Witches: The Movie]]'' || Liberian soldiers ||  || 2012
|-
| ''[[Upotte!!]]'' || || on Seishou Academy logo and a large sign || 2012
|-
| ''[[Stella Women's Academy, High School Division Class C3]]'' || C³ Club || Imaginary || 2013
|-
|''[[Magic Kaito: Kid the Phantom Thief]]''  ||  || Episode 04 || 2010
|-
|''[[Saga of Tanya the Evil]]''  || Allied Kingdom and Entente Alliance mages || w/ M7 bayonet || 2017
|-
| rowspan=2 | ''[[Saga of Tanya the Evil: The Movie]]'' || Mary Sioux  || rowspan="2" | w/ M7 bayonet || rowspan=2 | 2019
|-
| Unified States mages
|-
|''[[Jujutsu Kaisen - Season 1|Jujutsu Kaisen]]'' ||  || "Black Flash" (S1E19) || 2020-2021
|-
|-
|}
|}


==Type 5==
=Springfield Armory M1E5=
[[Image:JapanType5.jpg|500px|thumb|right|Type 5 - 7.7x58mm]]
A prototype battle rifle produced in 1944 designed to reduce the dimensions of the full-size M1 Garand by reducing the barrel and using a folding stock.
[[Image:Type5.jpg|500px|thumb|right|Type 5 - 7.7x58mm]]
[[File:Springfield Armory M1E5 bez chwytu.jpg|thumb|right|450px|Springfield Armory M1E5 with stock folded - .30-06. The first variant without a pistol grip.]]
[[File:Springfield Armory M1E5 stock extended.jpg|thumb|right|450px|Springfield Armory M1E5 with stock extended - .30-06]]
[[File:Springfield Armory M1E5 stock folded.jpg|thumb|right|450px|Springfield Armory M1E5 with stock folded - .30-06]]
 
==Specifications==
''(1944 - 1944)''
 
* '''Type:''' Battle Rifle
* '''Country of Origin''': USA
* '''Caliber:''' .30-06 Springfield
* '''Weight:''' 8.4 lb / 3.81 kg
* '''Length:''' 37.5 in / 952 mm
* '''Barrel length:''' 18 in / 457 mm
* '''Capacity:''' 8-round "en bloc" clip
* '''Fire Modes:''' Semi-Auto
-----
{{Gun Title|Springfield Armory M1E5}}
__TOC__<br clear=all>
 
===Video Games===
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%" |-bgcolor=#D0E7FF
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="200"|'''Title'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="200"|'''Appears as'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="250"|'''Mods'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="250"|'''Note'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="50"|'''Date'''
|-
| ''[[Enlisted]]'' || || || The second variant with a pistol grip || 2021
|-
|}


Weight 9.13 lb (4.14 kg) <Br>
=Springfield Armory T20=
Length 43.25 in (1,099 mm) <Br>
A prototype to create a fully automatic Garand. By 1948, 100 were produced. The rifle [[M14]] was created on the basis of development research.
Cartridge 7.7x58mm Arisaka  <Br>
[[File:Springfield Armory T20E1.jpg|thumb|right|450px|Springfield Armory T20E1 - .30-06]]
Action Gas-Operated, Rotating bolt <Br>
[[File:Garand T20.jpg|thumb|right|450px|Springfield Armory T20E2 - .30-06]]
Muzzle velocity 2,740 ft/s (840 m/s) <Br>
Feed system 10-Round Internal Box Magazine loaded via two 5-Round Stripper Clips <Br>


==Specifications==
''(1945 - 1948)''


The Type 5 Rifle was a Japanese experimental semi-automatic rifle. It was a copy of the American M1 Garand but with an integral 10-round magazine and chambered for the Japanese 7.7x58mm Arisaka cartridge. Where the Garand used an en-bloc clip, the Type 5's integral magazine was charged with two 5 round stripper clips and the rifle also used Japanese style tangent sights. The Type 5 had been developed alongside several other experimental semi-automatic rifles. However, none of the rifles entered into service before the end of the World War II, with only 250 being made and many others were never assembled. There were several problems with jamming and feed systems, which also delayed its testing.
* '''Type::''' Battle Rifle
* '''Country of Origin:''' USA
* '''No. built:''' 100
* '''Caliber:''' .30-06 Springfield
* '''Weight:''' 9.61 lb
* '''Length:''' 48 1/4 in
* '''Barrel length:''' 24 in / 610 mm
* '''Capacity:''' 20 round box magazine from [[BAR]].
* '''Fire Modes:''' Semi-Auto / Full-Auto
* '''Rate of Fire:''' 750rpm
-----
{{Gun Title|Springfield Armory T20E2}}
__TOC__<br clear=all>


===Video Games===
===Video Games===
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%" |-bgcolor=#D0E7FF
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="200"|'''Title'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="200"|'''Appears as'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="250"|'''Mods'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="250"|'''Note'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="50"|'''Date'''
|-
| ''[[Company of Heroes 2]]'' || || || || 2013
|-
| ''[[Call of Duty: WWII]]'' || || || || 2017
|-
| ''[[Raid: World War II]]'' || || || || 2017
|-
| ''[[Call of Duty: Vanguard]]'' || || || || 2021
|-
| ''[[Enlisted]]'' || || || T20E1 || 2021
|-
|}


<br clear=all>
=Springfield Armory T26 Tanker Garand=
M1 Garand variant: 18 in (457 mm) barrel and standard stock, 1 prototype made by Springfield Armory used for testing, proposed use for aerial and jungle operations. While never adopted, the ease of implementation has led to many commercially produced M1s being made as "tanker" rifles. This configuration is relatively common for commerical 7.62x51mm NATO Garands, as 18 inches is already a preferred barrel length for the caliber.
[[File:Tanker Garand.jpg|thumb|right|450px|Springfield Armory T26 Tanker Garand - .30-06]]
==Specifications==
''(1944 - 1944)''
* '''Type::''' Battle Rifle
* '''Country of Origin:''' USA
* '''Caliber:''' .30-06 Springfield (prototype and commercial production) 7.62x51mm NATO (commercial production only)
* '''Barrel length:''' 18 in / 457 mm
* '''Capacity:''' 8-round "en bloc" clip
* '''Fire Modes:''' Semi-Auto
-----
{{Gun Title|Springfield Armory T26 Tanker Garand}}
__TOC__<br clear=all>
===Film===
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%"
|-bgcolor=#D0E7FF
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="200"|'''Title'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="150"|'''Actor'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="260"|'''Character'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="350"|'''Note'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="50"|'''Date'''
|-
| ''[[Green Berets, The]]''|| || || || 1968
|-
|}
===Video Games===
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%" |-bgcolor=#D0E7FF
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="200"|'''Title'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="200"|'''Appears as'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="250"|'''Mods'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="300"|'''Note'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="50"|'''Date'''
|-
| ''[[Payday 2]]'' || || || || 2013
|-
| ''[[Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare]]'' || || || || 2016
|-
| ''[[Call of Duty: WWII]]'' || || || || 2017
|-
|}
<br clear=all>
=Type 4=
[[Image:JapanType5.jpg|450px|thumb|right|Type 4 - 7.7x58mm]]
[[Image:Type5.jpg|450px|thumb|right|Type 4 - 7.7x58mm]]
The '''Type 4''' (Japanese: 四式自動小銃, ''Yon-shiki jidousyoujyuu''), also referred to as the '''Type 5''', is an experimental Japanese semi-automatic rifle, a copy of the M1 Garand. It is chambered in the Japanese 7.7x58mm Arisaka cartridge and fed via a 10-round fixed magazine, which is loaded with 5-round [[Arisaka]] stripper clips. Japan experimented with several semi-automatic rifle designs throughout the 1930s, but none were found suitable for combat. When the war in the Pacific broke out, Japanese forces found their bolt-action Arisaka rifles outgunned by American troops with M1 Garands and sought to introduce a more modern design to compete. Rather than building a new weapon from the ground up, it was decided to simply copy the M1 Garand instead. While cosmetically distinct from the Garand, the Type 4 functions as almost an exact replica of the M1 Garand. 
Design of the Type 4 began in 1944, with full-scale production slated for later in 1945. However, the surrender of Japan meant production ceased without the rifle ever seeing any reported combat use, leaving much of its merits as a service rifle unknown. Approximately 250 were produced, with only about 125 actually assembled. 20 were taken by the victorious Allies for study and display, with a few turning up on the private market to this very day. Most recently, a Type 4 was sold at auction in August 2020 for $31,500 USD.
==Specifications==
(1944 - 1945)
*'''Weight:''' 9.13 lb (4.14 kg)
*'''Length:''' 43.25 in (1,099 mm)
*'''Cartridge:''' 7.7x58mm Arisaka
*'''Action:''' Gas-operated, Rotating bolt
*'''Muzzle velocity:''' 2,740 ft/s (840 m/s)
*'''Feed system:''' 10-round internal box magazine loaded via two 5-round stripper clips
-----
{{Gun Title|Type 4}}
__TOC__<br clear=all>
===Video Games===
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%"
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%"
|-bgcolor=#D0E7FF
|-bgcolor=#D0E7FF
Line 692: Line 1,207:
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="100"|''' Release Date'''
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="100"|''' Release Date'''
|-
|-
| [[Battlefield: 1942]] || || || || 2002
| ''[[Battlefield: 1942]]'' || || || Magazine incorrectly depicted as detachable || 2002
|-
| ''[[Battlefield: Bad Company 2]]'' || || ||Image of rifle incorrectly used for M1 Garand in weapon page|| 2010
|-
|-
| [[Battlefield 1943]] || || || || 2009
| ''[[Call of Duty: WWII]]'' || || || Incorrectly reloads with 10-round en-bloc clips, functions exactly the same as the M1 Garand; Added in Blitzkrieg update (2018) || 2017
|-
|-
| [[Battlefield: Bad Company 2]] || || || Functions exactly the same as the M1 Garand || 2010
| ''[[Enlisted]]'' || || || || 2021
|-
|-
|}
|}
Line 702: Line 1,219:
<br clear="all">
<br clear="all">


==See also==
=See also=
 
*[[Beretta BM59]], an Italian Garand descendant with a detachable magazine.
*[[Beretta BM59]], an Italian Garand clone with a detachable magazine.
*[[M14 Rifle]], a rifle developed from the Garand in the 1950s firing 7.62 NATO from a detachable magazine.
*[[M14 Rifle]], a similar weapon developed in the 1950s firing 7.62 NATO from a detachable magazine.


[[Category:Gun]]
[[Category:Gun]]

Latest revision as of 10:57, 29 December 2023

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
M1 Garand with leather M1917 sling - .30-06
Error creating thumbnail: File missing
M1C with M82 scope - .30-06
Error creating thumbnail: File missing
M1C with M84 scope - .30-06
Error creating thumbnail: File missing
M1D with M84 scope - .30-06. Note the different type of scope mount. The T-37 flash suppressor is an option on both models; an earlier conical flash hider also exists.

The M1 Garand was the standard rifle of the United States military during the Second World War and the first semi-automatic rifle to be issued as a primary arm by a major armed force, officially replacing the bolt-action Springfield M1903 as the US Army's standard rifle in 1936.

The Garand features a distinctive loading method where the entire 8-round en-bloc clip is inserted into the action, automatically ejecting when expended and locking the bolt open for a rapid reload. The sharp closing of the bolt when a clip was inserted could result in the bolt slamming shut on the operator's thumb, resulting in a condition given names such as "rifleman's thumb" or "Garand thumb." In videogames, the Garand is often depicted as impossible to reload without expending the entire clip; this is not strictly true, as it is possible to eject a partially fired clip by pressing the clip latch button and operating the action, though this requires the use of both hands. Soldiers were drilled to fully expend a clip rather than attempt this in combat.

Much is made of the "ping" sound that occurred when the metal clip ejects or lands on a hard surface, but this "disadvantage" imagines that wars are fought as one-on-one duels in perfect silence, and was seldom a factor in reality. A survey of users during the Korean War found a small number concerned over the possibility, but far more deemed it a helpful reminder of needing to reload than a potential hazard.

The Garand served in both theaters in WWII and remained the standard US rifle in the Korean War, being replaced by the select-fire M14 Rifle in 1957, though Garands remained in service until the seventies. After WW2, many European countries made use of the Garand during the early days of NATO, both by rearming themselves with US Surplus/Aid and some Italian production. The M14 and Beretta BM59 are essentially Garands redesigned for select-fire operation and use of a detachable magazine.

There were also 2 sniper variants of the M1 Garand rifle being the M1C (formerly M1E7, introduced in June 1944) and M1D (formerly M1E8, introduced in September 1944). The only difference between the 2 models was the mounting system for the telescopic sights, with the first needing to be installed during a rifle's construction and the second requiring only a barrel swap. The M1C could mount the M73, M81, M82 and M84 scopes using a Griffin & Howe mount affixed to the left side of the received, whereas the M1D could mount the M82 and M84 scopes in a Springfield Armory mount attached to the rear of the barrel (for proper identification use the following method: M1C has 2 mounting rings for the sight, M1D has only a single ring). Both served in WW2 and saw relatively limited service in the Korean and Vietnam Wars. The relative inaccuracy of the M1 as an early semi-auto and difficulties with the production of the scoped variants made the sniper variants relatively rare.

At the end of WW2 there were some trials with a shortened M1 Garand carbine version called the T26 Tanker Garand in the Philippines. Although the weapon has never been officially adopted by the US Forces, there are commercial versions available on the market. After NATO's adoption of 7.62x51mm NATO, many M1s were converted to use the new ammo (either by a total rebarreling or less reliable barrel sleeve) and produced in the caliber to start.

The Garand is popular today, because of its design, effectiveness and historical presence. The rifle's legacy is significant enough that original spec M2 Ball (required to run the rifle reliably without modification) is still produced in significant numbers. General George S. Patton described the Garand as "the greatest battle implement ever devised".

M1 Garand

Specifications

(1936 – 1963)

  • Type: Battle Rifle
  • Caliber: .30-06 Springfield, 7.62x51mm NATO
  • Weight: 9.5 lbs (4.3 kg) - 11.6 lbs (5.3 kg)
  • Length: 43.5 in (110.5 cm)
  • Barrel length: 24 in (61 cm)
  • Muzzle velocity: 2,800 ft/s (853 m/s)
  • Capacity: 8-round "en bloc" clip
  • Fire Modes: Semi-Auto

The M1 Garand and variants can be seen in the following films, television series, video games, and anime used by the following actors:

Film

Title Actor Character Note Date
Wake Island US troops 1942
Gung Ho! Marine Raiders 1943
A Walk In The Sun Norman Lloyd Private Archimbeau 1945
John Ireland PFC Windy Craven
The Story of G.I. Joe Various actors Various characters 1945
Battleground Van Johnson Private Holley 1949
Sands of Iwo Jima John Wayne Sgt. John M. Stryker w/ M7 bayonet 1949
John Agar PFC Peter Conway
Forrest Tucker PFC Al Thomas
Richard Jaeckel PFC Frank Flynn
Martin Milner Pvt. Mike McHugh
Arthur Franz Corporal Robert Dunne
US Marines w/ M7 bayonet
The Third Man US troops 1949
Breakthrough Dick Wesson Pvt. Sammy Hansen 1950
Frank Lovejoy Sgt. Bell
Paul Picerni Pvt. Edward P. Rojeck
Richard Monahan Pvt. 'Four-Eff' Nelson
Edward Norris Sgt. Roy Henderson
US soldiers
The Steel Helmet Gene Evans Sgt. Zack 1951
Fixed Bayonets! Gene Evans Sgt. Rock 1951
Go for Broke! Van Johnson 2LT Michael Grayson 1951
Henry Nakamura Tommy
Don Haggerty SFC Culley
Lane Nakano Sam
Akira Fukunaga Frank
Ken K. Okamoto Kaz
Henry Oyasato SSG Ohhara
Harry Hamada Masami
George Tanaguchi Ohhara's brother Uncredited
Halls of Montezuma Neville Brand Sgt. Zelenko w/ M7 bayonet 1951
Richard Hylton Conroy
Bert Freed Slattery
Jack Palance Pigeon Lane
Robert Wagner Koffman
Jack Webb Sgt. Dickerman
US Marines w/ M7 bayonet
Decision Before Dawn George Tyne Sgt. Griffin 1951
Retreat, Hell! Russ Tamblyn Jimmy McDermid 1952
Various actors US Marines Featured with and without M1 bayonet and M7 rifle grenade launcher
Battle Circus US Army soldiers 1953
The War of the Worlds US Army soldiers and Marines 1953
The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms National Guard soldiers and NYPD officers 1953
Godzilla Japanese Ground Self-Defense Forces soldiers 1954
White Christmas US Army soldiers 1954
Them! US Army soldiers 1954
Beachhead Tony Curtis Burke 1954
To Hell and Back Audie Murphy Himself 1955
Charles Drake Pvt. Brandon
Marshall Thompson Pvt. Johnson
Various Various characters
Battle Cry Various US Marines 1955
It Came from Beneath the Sea Various US Navy sailors 1955
Earth vs. the Flying Saucers Various US Army soldiers 1956
Between Heaven and Hell National Guardsmen 1956
Attack Buddy Ebsen Tolliver 1956
20 Million Miles to Earth Various US Marines and Italian soldiers 1957
Men in War Vic Morrow Cpl. James Zwickley 1957
Invasion of the Saucer Men US Air Force guards 1957
Darby's Rangers Murray Hamilton Sgt. Sims Delancey 1958
Various actors US Army soldiers
The Young Lions Various actors US Army soldiers 1958
Dean Martin Michael Whiteacre
Montgomery Clift Noah Ackerman
When Hell Broke Loose Charles Bronson Steve Boland 1958
The Black Battalion (Cerný prapor) French Foreign Legion 1958
Pork Chop Hill US Army soldiers 1959
Woody Strode Pvt. Franklin
Hell to Eternity US Marines 1960
G.I. Blues Arch Johnson MSG McGraw Only on promotion still 1960
Reptilicus Danish soldiers 1961
Lonely Are the Brave Bill Bixby Helicopter crewmember 1962
Merrill's Marauders Peter Brown Bullseye 1962
Hell Is for Heroes James Coburn Cpl. Henshaw 1962
Bobby Darin Pvt. Corby
Fess Parker Sgt. Pike
Harry Guardino Sgt. Larkin
Nick Adams Homer
Various US Soldiers
The Black Seagull (Chyornaya chayka) Cuban soldiers 1962
Manchurian Candidate, The US Army honor guard 1962
The Longest Day John Wayne Lt. Col. Benjamin Vandervoort 1963
Various actors US Army soldiers
Dr. Strangelove US forces 1964
The Thin Red Line Jack Warden 1st Sgt. Welsh 1964
The Man from U.N.C.L.E. - Season 1 Unknown THRUSH agent Used with M7 Rifle Grenade Launcher 1964
Seven Days in May Martin Balsam Paul Girard 1964
I Am Cuba (Soy Cuba) Cuban government soldiers and guerrillas 1964
Kissin' Cousins US Army soldiers With M1 bayonets 1964
Battle of the Bulge George Montgomery Sgt. Duquesne M1C Garand 1965
Various actors US Army soldiers Featured with and without M7 rifle grenade launcher
Help! Various actors Cult member and Bahamian police 1965
None But the Brave US Marines 1965
Cast a Giant Shadow US Army 1966
The Battle of Algiers French soldiers 1966
Poppies Are Also Flowers Brigands, Colonel Salem's men 1966
Is Paris Burning? US Army and Free French Forces soldiers 1966
What Did You Do in the War, Daddy? Carroll O'Connor Gen. Bolt 1966
Art Lewis Needleman with and without M1 bayonet
US Army soldiers with and without M1 bayonet
Beach Red Marines 1967
The Born Losers Tom Laughlin Billy Jack 1967
The President's Analyst US Marines white parade slings 1967
The Devil's Brigade Andrew Prine Private Theodore Ransom 1968
Various actors US Army soldiers
The Green Berets Various actors Mike Force Honor Guards 1968
Various actors Mike Force Honor Guards T26 Tanker Garand
Various actors ARVN troops
Various actors Strike team members
OSS 117 - Double Agent (Niente rose per OSS 117) Tuaregs guard 1968
Anzio Giancarlo Giannini Private Cellini 1968
If.... Combined Cadet Force 1968
Che! Omar Sharif Che Guevara 1969
The Bridge at Remagen Various actors US Army soldiers 1969
100 Rifles Michael Forest Humara 1969
Mexican soldiers
Castle Keep Al Freeman Jr. Private Allistair Piersall Benjamin 1969
Kelly's Heroes Gene Collins Pvt. Babra 1970
Patton American soldiers 1970
Catch-22 American honor guard 1970
Joe Peter Boyle Joe Curran 1970
The Omega Man 1971
Godzilla vs. Gigan JGSDF personnel 1972
Savage Sisters Various actors Philippine soldiers, guerrillas 1974
Cleopatra Jones and the Casino of Gold Thugs 1975
Jaws Roy Scheider Police chief Martin Brody 1975
Robert Shaw Quint
The Muthers Rocco Montalban Rocco 1976
Various actors Pirates, Camp guards
The ... Beautiful Country (il ... Belpaese) Carabinieri 1977
Drummer-Crab (Le Crabe-Tambour) French soldiers, Viet Minh fighters 1977
A Bridge Too Far Ryan O'Neal Brigadier General James Gavin 1977
Death Force Soldiers 1978
Go Tell the Spartans South Vietnamese troops 1978
National Lampoon's Animal House ROTC cadets 1978
Convoy Busters (Un poliziotto scomodo) carabiniers and policemen 1978
The Inglorious Bastards French Resistance member 1978
The Olsen Gang Goes to War Danish Royal Guards 1978
The Outsider Niall O'Brien Emmet Donovan 1980
The Big Red One Mark Hamill Griff 1980
Lee Marvin The Sergeant
Various actors Various characters
Flatfoot in Egypt Bedouins 1980
Enter the Ninja A guard 1981
Stripes recruits 1981
The Border (1982) Honor Guard Detail 1982
Year of Living Dangerously, The US Marine guards 1982
Uncommon Valor Gene Hackman Col. Rhodes 1983
Code Name: Wild Geese Manfred Lehmann Klein M1D with M84 scope and fake suppressor 1984
Ninja III: The Domination Phoenix PD officers 1984
A Soldier's Story soldiers 1984
Volunteers US Marines on TV news show 1985
Nadine Gary Grubbs Cecil 1987
Extreme Prejudice one of Cash's men semiautomatic Rifle with leather M1917 sling 1987
Six Against the Rock US Marines 1987
Empire of the Sun US Soldiers 1987
Equalizer 2000 Rebels 1987
The Deer Hunter Matthew Broderick Eugene Morris Jerome 1988
Biloxi Blues Matthew Broderick Eugene Morris Jerome 1988
Hell Comes to Frogtown Borger guards 1988
Return of the Killer Tomatoes US Army soldiers 1988
RoboCop 2 1990
Born on the Fourth of July veterans 1989
Air America soldiers of Laotian General Soong 1990
Cape Fear Various actors US Army soldiers on an allegorical car 1991
Diên Biên Phú Viet Minh 1992
A Midnight Clear Gary Sinise Vance 'Mother' Wilkins 1992
Ethan Hawke Will Knott
Frank Whaley Paul 'Father' Mundy
Forrest Gump Various actors Alabama National Guardsmen 1994
Clear and Present Danger Air Force Honor Guard 1994
Mulholland Falls Various actors LAPD honor guard 1996
Life Is Beautiful American soldiers 1996
The English Patient American soldiers 1996
Saving Private Ryan Nathan Fillion Pvt. James Frederick "Minnesota" Ryan 1998
Adam Goldberg Pvt. Stanley Mellish
Vin Diesel Private Adrian Caparzo
Jeremy Davies Cpl. Timothy Upham
Paul Giamatti Sergeant Hill
Tom Hanks Cpt. Miller
Matt Damon Pvt. James Francis Ryan
The Thin Red Line Dash Mihok PFC Doll 1998
Jim Caviezel Pvt. Witt
Matt Doran Pvt. Coombs
Ben Chaplin Pvt. Bell
Various actors US Army soldiers
When Trumpets Fade Zak Orth Pvt. Sanderson 1998
Dylan Bruno Sgt. Talbot
Martin Donovan Capt. Pritchett
Blues Brothers 2000 Militiaman 1998
The Matrix Seen in the Virtual Armory behind Trinity 1999
Harsh Realm Brad Greenquist Captain Wolfe M1-D Sniper Variant with M84 scope 1999
American Beauty 1999
X-Men US Marine Honor Guard 2000
Stacy: Attack of the Schoolgirl Zombies archive footage 2001
Pearl Harbor Newsreel footage US military personnel 2001
A Beautiful Mind US soldiers 2001
Windtalkers Martin Henderson Private Nellie 2002
Mark Ruffalo Private Pappas
The Quiet American Gen. The's soldiers 2002
Secondhand Lions 2003
Saints and Soldiers Corbin Allred Cpl. Nathan 'Deacon' Greer 2003
Deacons for Defense some Deacons 2003
Hellboy Angus MacInnes Sgt. Whitman 2004
Tae Guk Gi: The Brotherhood of War South Korean soldier 2004
Siamese Outlaws Polices 2004
The Notebook soldiers 2004
The Great Raid Craig McLachlan Lt. Riley 2005
Sam Worthington PFC Lucas
Various actors US Rangers and some Filipino resistance one seen with M7 rifle grenade launcher
Thank You For Smoking 2005
Days of Glory Bernard Blancan Sergent Roger Martinez 2006
Benoît Giros Capitaine Durieux
Free French Soldiers
Flags of our Fathers Jamie Bell Pfc. Ralph "Iggy" Ignatowski 2006
Jesse Bradford Corporal Rene Gagnon
Benjamin Walker Corporal Harlon Block
Adam Beach Corporal Ira Hayes
Paul Walker Sergeant Hank Hansen
Various actors US Marines
Home of the Brave honor guard 2006
Letters from Iwo Jima US Marines 2006
The Good Shepherd Soldiers in the unnamed Central American country 2006
Philosophy of a Knife American soldiers archive footage 2008
The Bridge Lars Steinhöfel Walter Forst with M7 bayonet 2008
US soldiers w/ M7 bayonet
The Red Baron ANZAC troops Mocked as Lee-Enfield No.1 Mk.III* 2008
The Dark Knight Heath Ledger The Joker 2008
David Dastmalchian Thomas Schiff
Various actors Joker's men
Gran Torino Clint Eastwood Walt Kowalski 2008
Bee Vang Thao Vang Lor
Miracle at St. Anna Omar Benson Miller Private First Class Samuel 'Sam' Train 2008
Michael K. Williams Private Tucker
Various actors US Army soldiers
Street Kings LAPD honor guard 2008
Che Part One: Argentine Benicio del Toro Che Guevara 2008
Miracle at St. Anna Omar Benson Miller Private First Class Samuel Train 2008
An American Carol 2008
Brother's War Various actors US Army soldiers 2009
Red and White (Merah Putih) Darius Sinathryah Marius 2009
Lukman Sardi Amir
Donny Alamsyah Tomas
T. Rifnu Wikana Dayan
Dutch/Indonesian soldiers
71: Into the Fire Seung Hyun Choi Oh Jung-Beom 2010
Sang-woo Kwone Ku Kap-jo
Hyeong-tak Shin Dal-young w/ M7 bayonet
Various US Army soldiers
Various South Korean Army soldiers
Various Student soldiers w/ M7 bayonet
Spoils of War 2009
Elephant White several examples in weapons caches 2010
The A-Team (2010) 2010
Djinns (Stranded) Emmanuel Bonami Pvt. Ballant with the optic sight 2010
Oba: The Last Samurai Various actors US Marines and Military Policemen 2011
Memorial Day Reed Sigmund Gorski 2011
Aaron Courteau Frankie Califano
Various 82nd Airborne Paratroopers
The Front Line (2011) Go Soo 1stLt. Kim Soo-hyeok M1D variant; occasionally seen with M84 scope attached 2011
Ko Chang-seok MSgt. Yang Hyo-sam
Da-Wit Lee Pvt. Nam Sung-Sik
Various actors ROK soldiers
Captain America: The First Avenger Chris Evans Steve Rogers 2011
Various actors US Army soldiers
My Way (2011) Various actors US Army soldiers 2011
Saints and Soldiers: Airborne Creed David Nibley Sergeant Jones 2011
Jasen Wade Corporal Curtis w/ M7 Rifle Grenade Launcher
Various US Army soldiers
Red Tails American troops 2012
German troops
Cockneys vs. Zombies 2012
Emperor American soldiers 2013
Machete Kills On gun wall 2013
Pacific Rim 2013
Diplomacy US Army soldiers 2014
Fury US Army soldiers 2014
Captain America: The Winter Soldier Chris Evans Steve Rogers 2014
The Monuments Men US troops 2014
Far from Men Algerian rebels 2014
Muppets Most Wanted Actors 2014
Bridge of Spies US Army snipers M1D with M84 sniper variant 2015
Mr. Holmes US Army soldiers 2015
War Pigs US Army soldiers 2015
Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk honor guard 2016
Hacksaw Ridge Andrew Garfield Desmond Doss 2016
Vince Vaughn Sergeant Howell
Ben O'Toole Corporal Jessop
Richard Pyros Randall "Teach" Fuller
Luke Bracey Smitty Ryker
Luke Pegler Milt "Hollywood" Zane
Firass Dirani Vito Rinnelli
Ben Mingay Grease Nolan
Goran D. Kleut Andy "Ghoul" Walker
Nico Cortez Wal Kirzinski
US Army soldiers
Neruda Chilean soldiers 2016
Memorial Day Aaron Courteau Frankie Califano 2016
Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk honor guard 2016
Daylight's End Survivors 2016
Free Fire Patrick Bergin Howie 2017
Babou Ceesay Martin
Detroit Michigan Army National Guard 2017
Overlord Jovan Adepo PFC Boyce 2018
A War Within Sebastian Jessen Esben 2018
Daughter of the Wolf Joshua Murdoch Phillip 2019
Gina Carano Clair Hamilton
Battle of Jangsari, The South Korean Army, Student-soldiers 2019
To Paris! (Na Parizh) A US Army soldier Possibly a replica 2019
Secret in the Mountain US Army soldiers 2019
Jojo Rabbit U.S. Army 2019
Rambo: Last Blood Sylvester Stallone John Rambo 2019
Black Widow Soldier on parade 2021

Television

Show Title Actor Character Note / Episode Air Date
Combat! Dick Peabody Little John 1962-1967
Pierre Jalbert Caje
Various actors US Army soldiers
McHale's Navy Navy Shore Patrol, Marines 1962-1965
Ernest Borgnine Lt. Cmdr. Quinton Mchale "The Balloon Goes Up" (S2E18) 1964
Tim Conway Ensign Charles Parker "Lester the Skipper" (S3E2) 1964
Gary Vinson George "Christy" Christopher "McHale's Floating Laundromat" (S3E20), "The Seven Faces of Ensign Parker" (S3E23) 1964, 1965
John Wright Willy Moss
Edson Stroll Virgil Edwards
Billy Sands "Tinker" Bell "The Seven Faces of Ensign Parker" (S3E23) 1965
Carl Ballantine Lester Gruber
Army soldiers and Military Police 1965-1966
Rat Patrol Justin Tarr Pvt. Tully Pettigrew 1966-1968
Various actors US Army soldiers rarely used
Hawaii Five-O USAF Honor Guard Pilot Episode 1968
M*A*S*H Various actors Various U.N. soldiers 1972-1983
Columbo Nate Esformes Hakim "A Case of Immunity" (S05E02) 1975
A Rumor of War Brad Davis Lt. Philip 'Phil' Caputo Dressed up to resemble M14 Rifles 1980
Keith Carradine Lt. Murph McCoy
Michael O'Keefe Lt. Walter Cohen
Various actors US Marines
Tour of Duty Vietnamese Villager S01E03 1987
Vietnamese sniper M1C Sniper Variant / S02E06
Michael Madsen Sgt. Block
The X-Files - Season 1 "The Jersey Devil" (S1E04), "Space" (S1E08) 1993
Star Trek: Voyager Robert Beltran Chakotay "The Killing Game" 1995-2001
Robert Duncan McNeill Tom Paris
Tim Russ Tuvok
Roxann Dawson B'Elanna Torres
Various actors US Army soldiers
The Alsatians or the Two Matildas American soldiers 1996
Band of Brothers Damian Lewis Richard "Dick" Winters occasionally seen with M1 bayonet 2001
Adam James Pvt. Cleveland Petty
Rocky Marshall Earl Clugg
Peter Youngblood Hills Shifty Powers occasionally seen with M1 bayonet
Ross McCall Joseph Liebgott
James Madio Frank Perconte
Bart Ruspoli Pvt. Tipper
Marc Warren Pvt. Albert Blythe
Mark Huberman Pvt. Hashey
Douglas Spain Pvt. Garcia
Matt Hickey Pvt. Patrick O'Keefe
Mark Lawrence Cpl. William Dukeman
Donnie Wahlberg Carwood Lipton
Various actors US Army soldiers occasionally seen with M1 bayonet and M7 rifle grenade launcher
Ghost Whisperer honor guard "Pilot" (S1E01) 2005
Foyle's War - Season 4 US Army soldiers "Invasion" (S4E01) 2006
House of Saddam Aris Sahn Young Uday Hussein 2008
Yigal Naor Saddam Hussein
Mail Call R. Lee Ermey Himself Seen in saddle on his jeep 2002-2009
R. Lee Ermey Himself equipped with M7 rifle grenade launcher / Season 1
Newsreel footage M1C-sniper variant / Season 1
US Army soldier re-enactors Season 1
Eureka American soliders American soliders 2006-2012
Life - Season 1 LAPD Honor Guard 2007 - 2008
My Name is Earl soldiers 2008
Krupp: A Family Between War and Peace US soldiers Ep. 03 2009
The Pacific James Badge Dale Robert Leckie 2010
Ashton Holmes Sid Phillips
Jacob Pitts Bill "Hoosier" Smith
Brendan Fletcher Bill Leyden
Joseph Mazzello Eugene Sledge
Gary Sweet Gunny Sgt. Elmo Haney
Various actors US Marines
Various actors US Army soldiers
Lost - Season 6 one of Jacob's followers "LA X (Part 2)" (S6E02) 2010
CSI: Miami Various actors US Marine honor guard "Come As You Are" 2002-???
Leverage Aldis Hodge Charlie "The Van Gogh Job" (S4E04) 2011
Sanctuary Various actors US soldiers "Normandy" 2011
Falling Skies Extra Resistance fighter 2011
Foyle's War - Season 8 US Army soldiers "Sunflower" (S8E03) 2013
Spies (Razvedchitsy) A US Army soldier Possibly Denix replica 2013
Parer's War US Marines 2014
Agent Carter M1D - sniper model 2015
Policie Modrava Members of the Military History Club In a holster/ "Případ Strnad" (S1E04) 2015
The Last Ship Thorwald's men "Fight the Ship" (S2E02) 2015
The Crown United States Army episode: "Vergangenheit" (S2E06) 2017
Fear the Walking Dead - Season 3 Black Hat Reservation resident "The Unveiling" (S3E07), "Children of Wrath" (S3E08) 2017
The Walking Dead: Red Machete Jose Rosete David "Behind Us" (S1E01), "Sorrowful" (S1E02) 2018
The Man in the High Castle American Resistance fighters 2019
The Falcon and the Winter Soldier on display in the Museum and propaganda poster; "New World Order" (S1E01), "One World, One People" (S1E06) 2021
The Last of Us - Season 1 seen in armory; "Long Long Time" (S1E03) 2023
The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon - Season 1 seen in armory; "L'ame Perdue" (S1E01) 2023
American Soldiers "Coming Home" (S1E06)

Video Games

Game Title Appears as Mods Notes Release Date
Commandos: Behind Enemy Lines Seen only in cutscenes; unusable 1998
WWII G.I. "Grenade Garand" Fitted with M7 rifle grenade launcher 1999
Medal of Honor 1999
Medal of Honor: Underground Multiplayer Only 2000
Fallout Tactics "M1 Garand" 2001
World War II Online: Battleground Europe "M1 Garand" Released with 1.34 update 2001
Medal of Honor: Allied Assault "M1 Garand" Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied 2002
Medal of Honor: Frontline "M1 Garand" Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied 2002
Battlefield: 1942 "M1 Garand" Added with the release of patch v1.6; primary weapon of the American Engineer class; cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied 2002
Forgotten Hope M1 and M1C with M84 Garand 2003
Vietcong M1C with M84 sniper variant 2003
Day of Defeat "Garand Rifle" Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied 2003
Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory 2003
Hidden & Dangerous 2 "M1 Garand" 2003
Call of Duty "M1 Garand" Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied 2003
Medal of Honor: Rising Sun "M1 Garand" Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied 2003
Call of Duty: United Offensive "M1 Garand" Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied 2004
Medal of Honor: Pacific Assault "M1 Garand" Fitted with bayonet Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied 2004
Call of Duty: Finest Hour "M1 Garand" Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied 2004
Brothers in Arms: Road to Hill 30 "M1 Garand" Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied 2005
Day of Defeat: Source Primary weapon of the American Rifleman class; cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied 2005
Medal of Honor: European Assault "M1 Garand" With and without scope Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied 2005
Call of Duty 2 "M1 Garand" Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied 2005
Call of Duty 2: Big Red One "M1 Garand" Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied 2005
Brothers in Arms: Earned in Blood "M1 Garand" Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied 2005
Call of Duty 3 "M1 Garand" Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied 2006
Commandos: Strike Force Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied 2006
Company of Heroes 2006
Darkest Hour: Europe '44-'45 "M1 Garand" Can be fitted with M7 bayonet Standard weapon of the American Corporal, Rifleman, Artillery Officer, RTO, and Mortar Observer classes 2006
Alliance of Valiant Arms Appears as an unlockable weapon 2007
Medal of Honor: Vanguard "M1 Garand" Can be upgraded to an M1D sniper variant by finding a scope M1 Garand and M1D sniper variant, Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied 2007
Medal of Honor: Airborne "M1 Garand" Upgrades give it a match barrel, adjustable sights, and an M7 rifle grenade launcher 2007
Forgotten Hope 2 "M1 Garand" Can be fitted with two types of bayonets and M7 rifle grenade launcher 2007
Hour of Victory 2007
Death to Spies 2007
Brothers in Arms: Hell's Highway "M1 Garand" M1C variant with M82 scope in multiplayer Cannot be reloaded until the entire clip is emptied 2008
Call of Duty: World at War "M1 Garand" / "M1000" Can be fitted with flash hider, bayonet, M7 rifle grenade launcher, and a sniper scope 2008
Call of Duty: World at War - Final Fronts "M1 Garand" 2008
Battlefield 1943 "M1 Garand" Standard weapon of the American Rifleman class; can be fitted with M7 rifle grenade launcher; modified model stands in for the Japanese Type 5 rifle 2009
Death to Spies: Moment of Truth 2009
Battlefield: Bad Company 2 "WWII M1 Garand" Unlocked by registering as a Battlefield "Veteran"; modified model stands in for the Japanese Type 5 rifle 2010
Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker "M1C" M1C with M82 sniper variant 2010
Mafia II "M1 Garand" 2010
Fallout: New Vegas "Battle Rifle" / "This Machine" 2010
Karma Online "M1 Garand" 2011
7554 (VG) "Garand" 2011
Sniper Elite V2 M1-D M1D with M84 variant 2012
State of Decay "M1 Garand" 2013
Payday 2 "Galant" Optional T62 Tanker short barrel, railed top and cloth ammo pouches Added in Update #153 2013
Project Reality: Normandy With optional M7 rifle grenade launcher 2013
M1C with M82 sniper variant
Company of Heroes 2 M1 and M1C Sniper Variant; added with "The Western Front Armies" 2014 2013
Enemy Front M1 GARAND 2014
Sniper Elite III M1D with M84 sniper variant 2014
Counter-Strike Online M1 Garand Chambered for 7.62 NATO 2014
World of Guns: Gun Disassembly M1 Garand scope, bayonet and cheekpad 2014
Mafia III 2016
Heroes & Generals "M1 Garand" unscoped and with M84 scope (M1D) 2016
Hot Dogs, Horseshoes & Hand Grenades 2016
Day of Infamy M1 and M1C 2017
Call of Duty: WWII "M1 Garand" 2017
Rising Storm 2: Vietnam Normal variant 2017
M1D
TheHunter: Call of the Wild "M1 Iwaniec" 2017
Post Scriptum Can mount bayonet and used with M7 launcher 2018
Gun Club VR 2018
Battlefield V "M1 Garand" added in the "War in the Pacific" chapter (2019) 2018
Insurgency Sandstorm "M1 Garand" can mount M7 Launcher M1 and M1D variants 2018
Battlefield 2042 2021
Enlisted M1 Garand 2021
M1C Garand (M82 scope)
M1D Garand (M84 scope)
M1 Garand with M7 Grenade Launcher

Animation

Film Title Character Notation Date
The Iron Giant US Army soldiers With M7 rifle grenade launchers 1999

Anime

Title Character Notes Date
The Cockpit US Marines Ep. 3 "Knight of the Iron Dragon" 1993
Zipang US Marines 2004–2005
The Mystic Archives of Dantalian Suitor 2011
Strike Witches: The Movie Liberian soldiers 2012
Upotte!! on Seishou Academy logo and a large sign 2012
Stella Women's Academy, High School Division Class C3 C³ Club Imaginary 2013
Magic Kaito: Kid the Phantom Thief Episode 04 2010
Saga of Tanya the Evil Allied Kingdom and Entente Alliance mages w/ M7 bayonet 2017
Saga of Tanya the Evil: The Movie Mary Sioux w/ M7 bayonet 2019
Unified States mages
Jujutsu Kaisen "Black Flash" (S1E19) 2020-2021

Springfield Armory M1E5

A prototype battle rifle produced in 1944 designed to reduce the dimensions of the full-size M1 Garand by reducing the barrel and using a folding stock.

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Springfield Armory M1E5 with stock folded - .30-06. The first variant without a pistol grip.
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Springfield Armory M1E5 with stock extended - .30-06
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Springfield Armory M1E5 with stock folded - .30-06

Specifications

(1944 - 1944)

  • Type: Battle Rifle
  • Country of Origin: USA
  • Caliber: .30-06 Springfield
  • Weight: 8.4 lb / 3.81 kg
  • Length: 37.5 in / 952 mm
  • Barrel length: 18 in / 457 mm
  • Capacity: 8-round "en bloc" clip
  • Fire Modes: Semi-Auto

The Springfield Armory M1E5 and variants can be seen in the following films, television series, video games, and anime used by the following actors:

Video Games

Title Appears as Mods Note Date
Enlisted The second variant with a pistol grip 2021

Springfield Armory T20

A prototype to create a fully automatic Garand. By 1948, 100 were produced. The rifle M14 was created on the basis of development research.

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Springfield Armory T20E1 - .30-06
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Springfield Armory T20E2 - .30-06

Specifications

(1945 - 1948)

  • Type:: Battle Rifle
  • Country of Origin: USA
  • No. built: 100
  • Caliber: .30-06 Springfield
  • Weight: 9.61 lb
  • Length: 48 1/4 in
  • Barrel length: 24 in / 610 mm
  • Capacity: 20 round box magazine from BAR.
  • Fire Modes: Semi-Auto / Full-Auto
  • Rate of Fire: 750rpm

The Springfield Armory T20E2 and variants can be seen in the following films, television series, video games, and anime used by the following actors:

Video Games

Title Appears as Mods Note Date
Company of Heroes 2 2013
Call of Duty: WWII 2017
Raid: World War II 2017
Call of Duty: Vanguard 2021
Enlisted T20E1 2021


Springfield Armory T26 Tanker Garand

M1 Garand variant: 18 in (457 mm) barrel and standard stock, 1 prototype made by Springfield Armory used for testing, proposed use for aerial and jungle operations. While never adopted, the ease of implementation has led to many commercially produced M1s being made as "tanker" rifles. This configuration is relatively common for commerical 7.62x51mm NATO Garands, as 18 inches is already a preferred barrel length for the caliber.

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Springfield Armory T26 Tanker Garand - .30-06

Specifications

(1944 - 1944)

  • Type:: Battle Rifle
  • Country of Origin: USA
  • Caliber: .30-06 Springfield (prototype and commercial production) 7.62x51mm NATO (commercial production only)
  • Barrel length: 18 in / 457 mm
  • Capacity: 8-round "en bloc" clip
  • Fire Modes: Semi-Auto

The Springfield Armory T26 Tanker Garand and variants can be seen in the following films, television series, video games, and anime used by the following actors:

Film

Title Actor Character Note Date
Green Berets, The 1968

Video Games

Title Appears as Mods Note Date
Payday 2 2013
Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare 2016
Call of Duty: WWII 2017


Type 4

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Type 4 - 7.7x58mm
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Type 4 - 7.7x58mm

The Type 4 (Japanese: 四式自動小銃, Yon-shiki jidousyoujyuu), also referred to as the Type 5, is an experimental Japanese semi-automatic rifle, a copy of the M1 Garand. It is chambered in the Japanese 7.7x58mm Arisaka cartridge and fed via a 10-round fixed magazine, which is loaded with 5-round Arisaka stripper clips. Japan experimented with several semi-automatic rifle designs throughout the 1930s, but none were found suitable for combat. When the war in the Pacific broke out, Japanese forces found their bolt-action Arisaka rifles outgunned by American troops with M1 Garands and sought to introduce a more modern design to compete. Rather than building a new weapon from the ground up, it was decided to simply copy the M1 Garand instead. While cosmetically distinct from the Garand, the Type 4 functions as almost an exact replica of the M1 Garand.

Design of the Type 4 began in 1944, with full-scale production slated for later in 1945. However, the surrender of Japan meant production ceased without the rifle ever seeing any reported combat use, leaving much of its merits as a service rifle unknown. Approximately 250 were produced, with only about 125 actually assembled. 20 were taken by the victorious Allies for study and display, with a few turning up on the private market to this very day. Most recently, a Type 4 was sold at auction in August 2020 for $31,500 USD.

Specifications

(1944 - 1945)

  • Weight: 9.13 lb (4.14 kg)
  • Length: 43.25 in (1,099 mm)
  • Cartridge: 7.7x58mm Arisaka
  • Action: Gas-operated, Rotating bolt
  • Muzzle velocity: 2,740 ft/s (840 m/s)
  • Feed system: 10-round internal box magazine loaded via two 5-round stripper clips

The Type 4 and variants can be seen in the following films, television series, video games, and anime used by the following actors:

Video Games

Game Title Appears as Mods Notation Release Date
Battlefield: 1942 Magazine incorrectly depicted as detachable 2002
Battlefield: Bad Company 2 Image of rifle incorrectly used for M1 Garand in weapon page 2010
Call of Duty: WWII Incorrectly reloads with 10-round en-bloc clips, functions exactly the same as the M1 Garand; Added in Blitzkrieg update (2018) 2017
Enlisted 2021


See also

  • Beretta BM59, an Italian Garand descendant with a detachable magazine.
  • M14 Rifle, a rifle developed from the Garand in the 1950s firing 7.62 NATO from a detachable magazine.