Description
WW1 LFC M1913 Cavalry Saber made in 1918 by Landers, Frary & Clark (LF&C), rare unit-marked type, original canvass-covered scabbard included. Scarce uncut specimen in great overall condition, considering the age.
A scarce WW1 intact M1913 Cavalry Saber, typically referred to as the “Patton Sword” manufactured in 1918 by Landers, Frary & Clark (LF&C) in New Britain, Connecticut. Rare unit-marked specimen is in great overall condition; original issue scabbard is included. The original M1913 Cavalry saber was developed by General Patton prior to WW1. The sword was a well-designed, excellent quality weapon at the time of its conception, but by the time the United States has actually entered WW1 the M1913 Saber was rendered useless by the advances in the modern warfare. There is a small chance that some of these Patton Swords saw the actual combat with the small detachment of the 15th Cavalry assigned as the protection detail for General Pershing in France, or with the 26th Cavalry Regiment (Philippine Scouts) during the 1941 Defense of the Philippines campaign. During the fighting retreat the 26th Cavalry engaged in the last cavalry charge in the history of the US Cavalry; it is entirely likely that the sabers were used during that charge but sadly no records or first-hand accounts survived the war.
In any event, the glory days of cavalry were over; after the Great War most of the M1913 sabers ended up collecting dust in the government arsenals. But the Second World War gave these old timers an unexpected new role in the modern warfare. During the first couple of years of WW2 the US servicemen had no standard-issue fighting knife and the military was desperately looking for a quick way to satisfy the demand for the much-needed fighting knives. Someone came up with the idea of re-purposing these old (and by than obsolete weapons anyway) info fighting knives and daggers. A huge quantity of M1913 Patton Swords were converted into somewhat crude, but very practical and effective fighting knives and trench daggers – I have a few such WW2 specimens in my store. Only a small portion of M1913 sabers survived WW2 intact, even fewer exist with the original-issue scabbard included – this is a great find, especially in such well-preserved original condition.
This huge saber is about 42” / 106.7 cm overall; the blade is about 35-1/45” / 89.5 cm. The blade is very sharp and without the typical edge nicks from sword practice; the tip is intact as well. The sword in the scabbard is about 43″ / 109.2 cm overall – this huge sidearm was designed to be strapped to a saddle, not to be carried on a hip belt. This M1913 Saber was manufactured by the famous Landers, Frary & Clark (LF&C on ricasso) in 1918. LF&C did not serial-numbered their swords beyond SN 40000 as they stated that they were breaking way too many blades during the numbering process. Some sword enthusiasts consider the blade steel used by LF&C to be superior to similar M1913 saber blades manufactured by the Springfield Arsenal – LF&C blades are stronger and retain the edge better, but they are more brittle. Both sides of ricasso are stamped with unit numbers and LF&C / “flaming bomb”/ 1918 on one side, No.13 “screaming eagle” acceptance stamp on the other. Original composite handle scales and tempered steel handguard and intact leather washer are in excellent condition, considering the age.
The original canvass-over-wood scabbard in in great shape as well; all parts are tight. This scabbard has not been altered or repainted. It is in is great shape, considering the age – all original metal parts are nice and tight; a few typical minor abrasion spots and spots on the canvas cover are noted for accuracy. This original WW1 LFC M1913 Cavalry Saber / scabbard set in very good shape overall, considering the age; finding a complete and unaltered M1913 set is not easy nowadays. This is one of the best American edged weapons of the long-gone WW1 era; this sword has lot of character AND it’s in excellent shape – you will not be disappointed!
This original American WW1 LFC M1913 Cavalry Saber has not been cleaned or tampered with in any way, it is in 100% original “as is” condition; these are the actual photos. This is one of the best American edged weapons of the long-gone WW1 era; this sword has lot of character AND it’s in excellent shape – you will not be disappointed!
This original American WW1 LFC M1913 Cavalry Saber has not been cleaned or tampered with in any way, it is in 100% original “as is” condition. These are the actual photos. I have several WW2 era fighting knives made from converted WW1 era Patton Swords, as well as some scarce WW1 and WW2 fighting daggers and trench knives available for sale – please take a look in the Militaria section.
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USPS PRIORITY MAIL SHIPPING WITHIN THE U.S. WILL BE $58 FOR THIS ITEM, SIGN-FOR DELIVERY CONFIRMATION INCLUDED
International shipping for this item will be $136 and up to most countries on our “ship-to” list.