pic of my Grandfathers half brother ,,if yall could help me date the pic and the exact model of Rifle I would be HAPPY,

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Join the contest SubscribeConsidering that wrist watches did not really come into vogue until WW1, this is a fascinating photograph!
Very few people (and most of them military) wore wristwatches prior to WW1. They existed, primarily in Europe where companies like Mappin and Webb were making watches for, mainly, well-heeled officers. For this young man to be wearing a wristwatch in the period before WW1... is pretty cool.
Beautiful picture. Mind if I circulate this to some historian friends?
Cheers,
Sirhr
So the top picture is Raymond H. Leonard's half-brother?
And definitely last-named Leonard? The half-brother same father...
I'll see what I can come up with!
Cheers,
Sirhr
I'm thinking there is about ten year difference in uniforms.
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I think there may be a good explanation for that, however, which is that in 1917, there was a shortage of everything! The U.S. had gone from isolationist to ramped up for sending hundreds of thousands of soldiers overseas in months. If the Army had it in a warehouse, storage drum, closet or barracks... it was dusted off and used. Add in that, at the time, regiments and units were still 'local' in nature so that a Pennsylvania unit might have snazzy new uniforms where a Colorado unit might have something left over from the Spanish American War. The industrial ramp-up may actually have been faster in WW1 than in WW2... and remember that at the beginning of WW2, soldiers were still drilling with WW1 uniforms... and some eating WW1 rations!
So not sure we can read too much into uniform differences...
I'd also argue that the photography quality and exposure, etc. seems to indicate that the pictures were taken, if not the same day, at least very close together. And look at things like the Tassles on the flag and drape? The background has not moved one bit. The format of the photo (and the quality of the lighting, emlusion, etc.) are all virtually identical. Slightly different camera angle. But, really, these can't have been taken far apart in time. Days, certainly. Weeks, perhaps. Months... doubt it. Years... no chance!
The watch still puzzles me, though. Unless it, too, was a prop. Like "Hey mom and dad, I have the best of everything." Really, wristwatches were a very big deal c. WW1. Even as late as 1917. So perhaps it was a prop as well?
Cheers,
Sirhr
the white line on the side of the stock on the rifle forward of the sling looks the exact same in both pictures,,I hope Momma comes back with a date ,,she is very into the ancestory thing and I bet she can find out when he joined up,,