In M1 Garand: The Rifle That Won the War, Stephen Carrington tells the story of the semi-automatic rifle that transformed the American infantryman's experience of combat during the Second World War. From the interwar years at Springfield Armory to the battlefields of North Africa, Normandy, the Pacific, the Ardennes, and Korea, the M1 Garand emerged as far more than a standard service weapon. It became the product of industrial power, engineering innovation, battlefield adaptation, and the relentless demands of modern mechanized war. Drawing on wartime records, ordnance reports, infantry manuals, production history, and firsthand battlefield accounts, Carrington traces the development of the Garand from John C. Garand's early experiments through the Army's difficult search for a reliable semi-automatic rifle capable of surviving large-scale combat. He explores the rifle's revolutionary design, the immense manufacturing effort required to arm millions of American soldiers, and the tactical transformation created by placing rapid semi-automatic firepower into the hands of ordinary infantrymen. From the beaches of Normandy and the hedgerows of France to jungle patrols in the Pacific and frozen hills in Korea, the Garand continually proved itself under some of the harshest combat conditions of the twentieth century. More than the story of a military firearm, this book examines how the M1 Garand came to symbolize a broader transformation in warfare itself. Powerful, rugged, and instantly recognizable, it remains one of the defining weapons of the twentieth century and one of the most enduring symbols of the American soldier in World War II.
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