A National Firearms company is a shotgun that was made around 1864 and the pat. was picked up by Marlin and they made the model 17 and 30 and so on so look up a model 17 or 30 Marlin which where made between 1907 thru 1917
Thanks Tim@crippen.net
National Arms Company: Trade name used by the H. & D. Folsom Arms Company on firearms made for the May Hardware Company of Washington, D.C. and also for the Moskowitz and Herbach Company of Philadelphia, PA, c. 1900. The guns would have either been made by Crescent Firearms of Norwich, Ct, or imported from various Belgian manufacturers.
Chances are that your shotgun was a model 385k,or a 395K model shotgun made by Mossberg firearms company.
100 years or so
50-100 USD
The Noble firearms company made this shotgun.It was the Noble model 50.
Glenfield,which was made by Marlin Firearms Company made a bolt action .410ga shotgun from 1956-1965.This was the marlin model 59 which is the same shotgun as your Glenfield model 60.
It sounds to me that what you have is a shotgun that was made by the crescent firearms company,they made many shotguns under hundreds of store names for hardware,and general supply stores from 1880-1930.
National Firearms Company was a name used by at least 3 different companies. Your .22 was probably made when Marlin was using that name. Value will depend on condition, but is typically in the $75-$125 range.
It was a trade name used by the Hopkins & Allen Firearms Company for shotguns they made.
probably made around 1883. Contact Colt Firearms to get a "factory letter",which will tell you exactly when it was made, and what company it was first shipped to.
Many companies have made firearms for the NWTF.
Possibly, but no guarantee. Serial numbers were often duplicated.