Cas City Forum Hall & CAS-L
Special Interests - Groups & Societies => The Barracks => Topic started by: Dusty Tagalon on October 06, 2020, 09:40:49 PM
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Last weekend was given a Machete supposedly carried by an officer in Philippine war. Only after I arrived home did I examine closer. It wasn’t from Philippine War, it was from WW2. Legitimate/Collins no 128. Cool piece, but need to dig deeper. How it was associated with Philippine War vs WWII is a mystery. Hope to clarify orgin.
Brian
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Very cool score , I had a Collins & Co. Legitmus 1940 dated No. 1250 Jungle Bolo. Lost it in my barn fire in 2012 :(
I hope to run across another one day .
I recall my Dad had a #37 and a type 3 Bolo both of which disappeared. Stolen ?
https://www.amazon.com/Collins-Machetes-Bowies-1845-1965-Daniel/dp/0873414039
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The issue machete was serving with Americans long before the war - every tropical destination would see them, and the Philippines qualifies.
Also, Collins was pretty ubiquitous and shipped world-wide before the war.
Once hostilities began and the supply system kicked into gear, machetes were a staple of island fighting - again, the Philippines are an island chain - and they even found their way into the ETO - extant photos of Airborne sometimes show them - and they were a part of the AAF/USN survival kits, until they came up with the folding ones.
Scouts Out!