Wooden 38 spl ammo box

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Eugen

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I recently acquired a 38 Spl wooden ammo box from an antique dealer, and I have several questions that I hope someone can answer for me.

From the stampings can you tell the date of manufacture?

There is a crossed cannon/ US Ordinance stamp just above the “38”. Do I assume correctly that this was for certain military ammo?

Is this box rare? I paid $50 for it.

Do you have any other observations or comments about this ammo box? Thanks Ammo box2.jpg Ammo box2.jpg


Ammo box.jpg
 
I recently acquired a 38 Spl wooden ammo box from an antique dealer, and I have several questions that I hope someone can answer for me.

From the stampings can you tell the date of manufacture?

There is a crossed cannon/ US Ordinance stamp just above the “38”. Do I assume correctly that this was for certain military ammo?

Is this box rare? I paid $50 for it.

Do you have any other observations or comments about this ammo box? Thanks View attachment 1111828 View attachment 1111828


View attachment 1111826

Based on the T2BAA stamp, i found this below. This numbering system was used by the military from 1942 through 1958.

Screenshot_20221030-194918.png
 
Bigblue94, thanks for that most helpful information.

Are such boxes rare? I have never seen one for 38 spl before.
 
Bigblue94, thanks for that most helpful information.

Are such boxes rare? I have never seen one for 38 spl before.
All wooden boxes are rare now. But as far as among wooden boxes, i cant say. Im not a collector, was just intrigued with finding the info lol. Id say 50 bucks was a fine buy: not a steal but you didnt get raked over the coals either. Its in real nice shape too.

I used to have an old DuPont Dynamite box, before a fire claimed it.
 
Parked my 38 spl box next to my 30 06 box. They are friends already.
20221101_180210.jpg One big difference is the 30 06 box contains its original unopened spam cans of ammo. :thumbup:
 
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I think western and others started using nails to build the boxes sometime in the 1940s. Before that, the sides were joined with finger joints (often erroneously called dove-tails). Wooden shot shell boxes are fairly common, probably because it took more boxes to ship a given number of shotshells than metallic cartridges of any size.
 
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