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This is a World War Two era M-84 Scope / Telescope accessory for the M1 Garand Rifle.  This is the M84 Scope Accessory, made to go with your M1C or M1D Garand Rifle and with the leather cheek piece.   This was made by HART.  This scope is a cone-shaped scope. This scope, as you can see, mounts to the Garand Rifle.  This scope, with its lack of glass optics, is simply a one-power device.  This mounts easily and quickly to the World War 2 rifle.  This is an inert piece of optics, legal all over the world and in all 50 states.  There is no age limit to buy this telescope device.  These were used in WW2 and in the Korean war to get a bead on the enemy.   I think a few of these even made it to VietNam.  This is made by HART MANUFACTURING COMPANY.  This has the "H" hallmark.  This is in nice shape. The metal is nice and solid with no rust.  The parkerized / gray finish is lightly worn and shows just some light silver highlights.   
Please see the picture, I am including a vintage WW2 75th Infantry Division patch with this M-84 Telescope Accessory / Variation. 
I am also including a photo, the last photo, of the other WW1/WW2 items I am selling right now.  Please see my other auctions if you are interested in these other vintage and original WW2 military items. 
The auction is for the M1 Garand Scope Accessory  / Sniper Telescope Device and the one patch only, it does not include the other items.

Please see all the photos.  Please ask any questions before you bid.  All sales are final, as I need the room.

Thank you to our veterans.

In case you want to know more about the patch, the WW2 75th ID patch?  This is a WW2, embroidered on cotton, Olive Drab OD border, WWII patch for the shoulder sleeve. This insignia was for the combat shirt or jacket or coat, or the ike jacket or army service coat.  

The 75th Infantry Division was activated in April of 1943 at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, and their CO was Major General Willard S. Paul, then Maj. General Gay Prickett, then M-Gen. Ray E. Porter.  The 75th ID was made up of the following combat units: The 289th Infantry Regiment, the 290th Inf. Reg’t, and the 291st Infantry Rgt.  They also had the Division Artillery with the 105mm field artillery battalions of the 897th Field Artillery Battalion, the 898 Field Arty Batallion, and the 899 Field Arty Bn.  They also had a battalion of long-toms, the 155mm howitzers of the 730th Field Artillery BN.  They had their own cavalry troopers in the 75th Cav Reconnaissance Troop (Mechanized), the combat engineers of the 275th Engineer Combat Battalion, the combat medics of the 375th Medical Battalion, the 75 th ID Special Troops, the 775th Ordnance Light Maintenance Company, the QM 75th Quartermaster Company, the Signal Corps / 575th Signal Company, the MPs of the Military Police Platoon, the 75th ID HQ Headquarters Company, and the 75th I.D. Band.  

During the war in Europe, they also had attached to them the 379th tank battalion, the 701st tank bn., the 709th TK BN, the 717th, the 744th, the 747th, and the 750th Tank Battalions.   They had a bunch of tank destroyer battalions attached to them as well, with the 772nd Tank Destroyer Bn (Tracked), the 629th TD Bn (SP / Self-Propelled), the  814th TD Bn (S.P.),the 628th T.D. BN (SP), the 654th TD BN (SP), and the 807th Tank Destroyers / TD Battalion, Self-Propelled.

They were in the Louisiana Maneuvers in January of 1944 with the Fourth (4th) Army, and then trained at Camp Breckinridge, Kentucky.  They got ready for war in the ETO and they moved in  November to Camp Shanks, New York.  They left the POE Port of Embarcation on November  11th, and arrived in Europe on November 22nd, 1944  They were stationed at Tenby in Pembrokeshire, England and then at Yvetot in the Seine-Inferieure region of France.  The Germans launched the Battle of the Bulge in the Ardennes on 16 December 1944.  Their HQ was based in Wilfre,in Limburg in the Netherlands. 

The 75th ID was the newest, youngest, freshest Infantry Division committed to the battle of the Ardennes / Bulge. They were nicknamed the “Diaper Division,” but that name did not last long.  They fought alongside the 11th Armored and the 17th Airborne Division. They were at St Herren  Eldreen,  Liege, Ocquier, Villers St-Gertrude, Theux, Haute Bedeaux,  Odrimont, Abrefontaine, and Liege, Belgium.  They were with the VII Corps defending the Ourthe River. They fought the  German 560th Volksgrenadier Division at SOY. They were at Sadzot, and the Salm River, and at  Beck and Salmchateau, and Petit Their, and Vielsalm, and  Burtonville, fighting the German 2nd SS Panzer Division. They captured Braunlauf and hit the 326th Volksgrenadier Division hard. They took Commanster and the Grand Bios, Maldingen and Aldringen by the end of the bulge.  By then they had proven themselves and were known as the 75th “Bulgebusters” Division.

They fought at the Colmar Pocket and in the Ruhr. They were at Ribeauville and Bischwihr and  Andolsheim, at Rehainviller and Roclenge sur Geer, in Limbourg in Belgium, and at Panningen and Echt and Venlo and Lintfort in the Rhineland of Germany.  They were at Hiesfeld and Imloh and Marl and  Erkenschwick and Mecklinghoven and Ickern and Castrop-Rauxel and Braumbauer and Plettenberg in Westphalia in Germany.  They spent 94 days, more than 3 months, in combat.  They saw a lot of action at the end stages of the war. Their casualties included 888 KIA/Killed in Action,  2970 WIA/Wounded in Action, and 96 soldiers MIA / Missing in Action.

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