Jock Auld Posted January 30, 2015 Posted January 30, 2015 Guys, More stuff rescued from the skip. Were in an envelope dated 1961, when did the Germans get the G3?
speedytop Posted January 30, 2015 Posted January 30, 2015 Hi Jock, G3 since 1959. I don't see weapons on the small pictures? Uwe
Jock Auld Posted January 31, 2015 Author Posted January 31, 2015 (edited) Uwe, Now you have made me look closer I see they are FN rifles! At a casual glance I thought G3 at first. Perhaps these soldiers are not even German, some sort of competition perhaps. Edited January 31, 2015 by Jock Auld
Long Thrust VI Posted February 5, 2015 Posted February 5, 2015 My impression, based on uniforms, etc., is that those photos are actually pre-1961; perhaps mid-late 1950s. From my personal observation at Wildflecken, some Bundeswehr Soldiers were armed with Belgian-made FN rifles as late as 1963.
Jock Auld Posted February 7, 2015 Author Posted February 7, 2015 My impression, based on uniforms, etc., is that those photos are actually pre-1961; perhaps mid-late 1950s. From my personal observation at Wildflecken, some Bundeswehr Soldiers were armed with Belgian-made FN rifles as late as 1963.Thanks for the info, envelope states Fursten???brück 1961, it is only pened on so could be wrong.
Long Thrust VI Posted February 8, 2015 Posted February 8, 2015 (edited) Chances are good the photos are from 1961. I was thinking they may have been taken earlier & developed in 1961. In terms of personal equipment, weapons, uniforms, etc., the Bundesheer was a new & dynamic organization in the 1950s & early 1960s. A lot of insignia items were adopted & changed during those years. Originally, West German Infantrymen wore crossed rifles insignia, reminiscent of that worn by U.S. Infantrymen. That didn't last long & was soon replaced by traditional German "two-ribbon" collar insignia w/branch of arm colors. By 1963, high, pull-on "dice-box" boots had replaced the original British-style lace-up short boots w/gators. Early West German Soldiers wore "splinter" camouflage (not unlike the Wehrmacht) field uniforms replaced shortly thereafter by heavy wool dark-olive field uniforms referred to as "the felt louse" because of their rough, itchy texture. Given that all, or nearly all, senior officers & non-commissioned officers were WW II Veterans, uniform items were influenced by Wehrmacht experience. In the early 1960s, for example, West German military police wore traditional "chain dog" plaques, hanging by a chain around their necks, to identify themselves a MPs. Edited February 8, 2015 by Long Thrust VI
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