

of Operations with total daily control of the facility in NJ." Lou retained most of the factory personnel, maintained my father as basically head of Engineering, and I was made V.P. He purchased the building, most of the equipment, plus the carbine tooling & inventory. "Lou did not purchase the company but only some of the assets. Lou lived in Brooklyn, NY and wanted to move the factory closer to his home." Imperato had purchased IJ mainly for the name.

Profits convinced the two owners of Plainfield Machine (William Haas & his brother-in-law William Storck) to remain in the carbine manufacturing business and produce carbines under the Plainfield Machine name.įrom Art Haas, son of William Haas and a supervisor at Plainfield Machine: "There were some tough years in the mid 70s and in early 77 we started to negotiate with Lou Imperato who had purchased Iver Johnson Arms & Cycle Works several years earlier. When Millville Ordnance closed unexpectedly, Plainfield produced carbines from the leftover parts under the H&S name. Circa 1961-1962 they were contracted to machined receivers, barrels and other carbine parts for Millville Ordnance of Union, NJ. Plainfield Machine was a machine shop located in Middlesex, NJ with a post office box in Dunellen, NJ. This from a website on Iver Johnson Carbines.

Yours probably originally sold for less than $100 new, man if we could just go back and buy up a bunch and store them away right!! If it is early enough its parts are probably all interchangeable with USGI M1 Carbines. I'm guessing that's where you got this info from? I'm guessing this is a post-war "aftermarket" built gun.

No expert am I but on the back of the reciever there is manufacturer and serial number info probably partially obscured by the rear sight.
