Garand's fondness for machinery and
target shooting blended naturally into a hobby of designing guns, which took a more vocational turn in 1917. That year the
United States Army took bids on designs for a
light machine gun, and Garand's design was eventually selected by the
War Department. Garand was appointed to a position with the
United States Bureau of Standards in
Washington D.C., with the task of perfecting the weapon. The first model was built in 1919, too late for use in
World War I, but the government employed Garand as an engineer at the
Springfield Armory from November 4, 1919 until he retired in 1953. The resulting
Semiautomatic, Caliber .30, M1 Rifle was patented by Garand in 1932, approved by the
U.S. Army on January 9, 1936, and went into mass production in 1940. It replaced the
bolt-action M1903 Springfield and became the standard infantry rifle known as the
Garand Rifle. During
World War II, over four million M1 rifles were manufactured. The Garand Rifle proved to be an effective and reliable weapon and was praised by
General MacArthur.
General Patton wrote, "In my opinion, the M1 rifle is the greatest battle implement ever devised." In the late 1940s and early 1950s, Garand designed and built a prototype
bullpup rifle. It fired the same cartridge as the M1, but the magazine, action and shape were completely different. It was a
select-fire design, and had a firing rate of about 600rpm. When Garand retired in 1953, the second version of the T31 was incomplete. The project was scrapped, and the prototype was retired to the Springfield Armory museum in 1961. Garand never received any royalties from his M1 rifle design despite over six and a half million M1 rifles being manufactured as he transferred all rights regarding his inventions to the U.S. in January 1936. A bill was introduced in
Congress to award him $100,000 in appreciation, but it did not pass. Garand remained in his consulting position with the Springfield Armory until his retirement in 1953. ==Personal life and death==