H&R Firearms

H&R 1871, LLC
Subsidiary
Industry Firearms
Founded 1871
Headquarters Ilion, N.Y. (manuf.) & Madison, NC, (admin.) USA
Key people
Nathan Harrington, William Augustus Richardson, George F. Brooks
Products Single-shot, pump-action, and semi-auto shotguns. Single-shot rifles.
Website H&R Website

H&R 1871, LLC (Harrington & Richardson) is a manufacturer of firearms under the Harrington & Richardson and New England Firearms trademarks. H&R is a subsidiary of the Freedom Group.

History

H&R Factory Postcard

The original H&R firm was in business for over a century from 1871 to 1986.[1]

Frank Wesson started a firearms manufacturing firm in 1859, sharing an early patent with Nathan Harrington. Wesson produced two trigger rifles and spur trigger pistols and pocket rifles/shotguns popular for short length holster models such as the discontinued topper compact pocket shotguns. He started a brief partnership in 1871 with his nephew Gilbert Henderson Harrington, as Wesson & Harrington, until Harrington bought him out in 1874.

In 1875 Harrington and another former Wesson employee, William Augustus Richardson, formed the new Harrington & Richardson Company. In 1888 the firm was incorporated as The Harrington & Richardson Arms Company. Their original capital investment was $75,000. Harrington was president, Richardson was treasurer, and George F. Brooks was secretary. After the deaths of Harrington and Richardson in 1897, Brooks became the manager and the company was held by heirs Edwin C. Harrington (Gilbert Harrington's son) and Mary A. Richardson (William Richardson's sister).

In 1894 the company opened a new facility on Park Avenue in Worcester, Massachusetts. The factory was expanded again after a few years. The firearms produced through this time to 1911 carry extreme value as original antiquities. Original rifles and shotguns from these dates are scarce because of their limited production and discontinued parts.

In 1950 the company opened a new facility on Cockburn street in Drummondville, Québec, Canada.

In the 1960s H&R was acquired by the Kidde corporation and run by the Rowe family. Warranty cards were sent to 'Industrial Rowe', Gardner, Massachusetts.[2] The original H&R company went out of business in 1986, and the building was demolished.[3]

A new company, H&R 1871, Inc., was formed in 1991 and started production of revolvers, single-shot rifles and shotguns using original H&R designs. H&R 1871, Inc. assets were subsequently sold to H&R 1871, LLC., a Connecticut LLC owned by Marlin Firearms Company in November 2000. H&R 1871, LLC. did not extend their product warranty to H&R guns made prior to the LLC's takeover.

Marlin, including all its H&R assets, was later acquired by Remington Arms Company in December, 2007. H&R 1871, LLC production was moved to Ilion, N.Y. (the site of Remington's original manufacturing plant) in late 2008, while their corporate offices are co-located with Remington Arms in Madison, N.C. (HR1871.com and Remington.com). Remington, along with its Marlin and H&R subsidiaries, are now part of the Freedom Group. H&R 1871 production ceased 27 February 2015.

Locations

Some of the other factory addresses that Harrington & Richardson has used:

and

and

Military contributions

H&R built flare guns during World War I, and a variety of firearms, including the Reising submachine gun during World War II. H&R was granted a contract to produce the M1 rifle during the Korean War, although the first deliveries of the rifles were not made until after the Armistice. H&R manufactured the M14 rifle during that rifle's production cycle (1959–1964). H&R also manufactured M16A1 rifles during the Vietnam War, and is one of only four manufacturers (along with Colt, Fabrique National, & GM Hydramatic Division) to have ever made an official M16 variant for the U.S. Military.[1] Due to their relative scarcity, all H&R military weapons are considered highly desirable by collectors.

Miscellaneous

Patents

Products

Revolvers

H&R Vest-Pocket Self-Cocker (Early model)
H&R Vest-Pocket Self-Cocker (Later model)
H&R The American Double Action
H&R Double Action Safety Hammer

Solid Frame (All models discontinued)

Note: Many of the above guns are stamped as "H&R .22 Special" / ".22 W.R.F. or .22 Winchester Rim Fire

NOTE: Pre-1898 solid frame revolvers were designed for use with black powder loads. Using smokeless powder rounds with these revolvers may cause damage to the revolver and/or injury to the user.

H&R Revolver of Top-Break design
H&R Revolver of Top-Break design with knife
The 3rd model of the .38 S&W H&R Hammerless Safety came out in 1909. Flat springs common to the first two models were replaced with coil wire.
Early break-action model with factory pearl grips.

Top-Break (All models discontinued)

Pistols

H&R Self-Loading (Automatic) Pistol

(All models discontinued).

Shotguns

20 GA NEF Pardner shotgun

Rifles

Military rifles

(All models discontinued).

Reising Submachine Gun

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 "About Us" by Harrington & Richardson at the H&R 1871 web site
  2. Molina, Roger (2011). My Life, Our Lives. iUniverse. p. 652. ISBN 978-1-4502-9649-6.
  3. Walgreens Store locator
  4. "243 Park Avenue"Advertisement showing 243 Park Ave as the address for H&R
  5. "320 Park Avenue"Letter from H&R showing 320 Park Ave as the address for H&R
  6. "439 Park Avenue"Advertisement showing 439 Park Ave as the address for H&R
  7. "484 Park Avenue"Advertisement showing 484 Park Ave as the address for H&R
  8. Flayderman, Norm (3 December 2007). Flayderman's Guide to Antique American Firearms and Their Values. Gun Digest Books. p. 274. ISBN 1-4402-2651-2.
  9. Schroeder, Joseph (24 August 2007). Gun Digest Handbook Collectible American Guns. Iola, Wisconsin: Gun Digest Books. p. 77. ISBN 1-4402-2663-6.
  10. Warner, Ken (1990). Gun Digest 1991 45th Annual Edition. DBI Books. p. 292.
  11. Smith, Walter Harold Black; Joseph Edward Smith (1968). The W.H.B. Smith Classic Book of Pistols. Stackpole Books. p. 739.
  12. The .410 bore and 28 gauge H&R 'Handy-Gun' are smooth bore pistols, regulated under the National Firearms Act of 1934 (NFA), and must be registered with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) as an "Any Other Weapon." "Any Other Weapon," as defined in 26 U.S.C., § 5845(e), means any weapon or device capable of being concealed on the person from which a shot can be discharged through the energy of an explosive, a pistol or revolver having a barrel with a smooth bore designed or redesigned to fire a fixed shotgun shell, weapons with combination shotgun and rifle barrels 12 inches or more, less than 18 inches in length, from which only a single discharge can be made from either barrel without manual reloading, and shall include any such weapon which may be readily restored to fire. Such term shall not include a pistol or revolver having a rifled bore, or rifled bores, or weapons designed, made, or intended to be fired from the shoulder and not capable of firing fixed ammunition.
  13. A rifled-barrel H&R 'Handy-Gun' is not subject to the National Firearms Act of 1934 unless accompanied by a shoulder stock.
  14. http://www.hr1871.com/Firearms/Combos/handislug.asp
  15. "Advanced Armament Corp. Announces Handi-Rifle Chambered in 300 AAC Blackout". Ammoland. September 17, 2012.
  16. 2010 Standard Catalog of Firearms copyright 2009 by Krause Publications, Inc.
  17. Excerpted from The M1 Garand: Owner’s Guide copyright 1994 by Scott A. Duff.

References

External links

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