![]() With the change of the company name to AMAC, the Iver Johnson name and logo was replaced by the AMAC name and logo. Was not included in the brochure and may not have been available yet at the time the brochure was printed. The AMAC catalog for 1987, the only AMAC catalog/brochure found to date, showed a dramatic decrease in the number of carbine models to only one, with a choice of either a walnut or hardwood stock. Imperato managed Iver Johnson's Arms in Jacksonville, AR from his office in Brooklyn, NY. The name "American Military Arms Corporation" was not incorporated inĪrkansas until Septemwhen it was incorporated by another investor, Neal Paul Fisk of Mountain Home, AR. On company internal documents Imperato identified AMAC as "American Military Arms Corporation" with Iver Johnson Arms being a division of AMAC. ![]() It appears Imperato also acquired some or all of the damaged 43,500 Australian Enfield rifles that had contributed On FebruImperato incorporated AMAC, Inc., doing business as Australian Military Surplus Enfield Enterprises. ![]() While operations continued at Iver Johnson's Arms at their Jacksonville, AR location during their Chapter 11 Bankruptcy, the money owed Louis Imperato by Phillip Lynn Lloyd and others led to the return of the company to Louis Imperato. The Reorganization of Iver Johnson's Arms gives birth to AMAC Post WWII Commercially Manufactured M1 Carbines (U.S.A.)įive Separate Companies in Different Times and/or Different Places ![]()
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