My dad fought on Iwo Jima in 1945. I He was with the advance party of the 142 Army Garrison force, and landed on the island on D-Day +5. He was on the Island and in the Army advance party compound the night they were attacked in the "Big Banzai Charge, on March 25th."
He was armed with an Inland M1 carbine. He also carried a S&W Victory Model .38 Special. As a senior NCO, he had access to a 1911A1, but said he couldn't hit anything with the 45, so he had them issue him a S&W 4" .38 special. He liked the 38 revolver he carried, and felt he could hit what he aimed at with it. I know he used the carbine that night of the charge, him saying that it never let him down. I don't know, however, if he also used the revolver during the fight.
Where I am going with this, is that I finally acquired a Victory Model 38 Special. I won it on Gunbroker. This will go with my Inland M1 Carbine and all my dad's WW2 stuff to honor him, my uncles, and all of that greatest generation.
Generally, shooting martial arms always gives me a sense of History. Shooting the Inland is an intense personal experience for me, that goes above that normal sense of History. My dad and his brothers, now all gone to their eternal rest, all used the Carbines in the Pacific. I hope that shooting the Victory Model will also give me that heightened sense of personal History that shooting the carbine does.
Well, My baby came to her new home. Vintage Western .38 Special 158 grain Lubaloy rounds in a reproduction shoulder holster from World War Supply.

Hopefully I'll get a chance to pop a few rounds in the woods tomorrow. I have about 1,000 rounds of .38 Special, about 700 rounds of it is vintage standard velocity 158s and 148 wadcutter. Another couple hundred is current production wadcutter and semi-wadcutter.