Not much of either. There are several variations of Columbia (Arms, Gun Co, etc) on trade name shotguns made in the late 19th - early 20th century. Many imported from Belgium, some made by US companies like Crescent, Stevens, Davenport and sold in hardware stores for as little as $3. Most are not considered safe with modern ammunition and are usually valued as mantle decorations. A single shot may bring $25-$50 and a double barrel with large sidehammers could go as high as $250.
London 1853-1898
It is not a machine gun. It is a shotgun. Most likely made at the turn of the century. Value not worth in excess of 100 USD.
Value of ANY gun is based on EXACT make, model, variety and condition. You need a hands-on appraisal.
Unfortunately, a serial number ALONE does not impart any information. H&A made rifles, shotguns and handguns. The company closed in 1916.
I don't know of any published sn information on these shotguns.
On the internet. Just search up the name of this gun or any other one and usually you will get results.
With the amount of information provided in the question, it could have any value.
Value of any gun is based on exact make, model, and condition. For a collectable firearm, a #1 serial number would increase that value, but Nikko is not especially collectable. You also gave us no information on the model (There were several rifles AND shotguns that used the Golden Eagle designation).
If that number is appearing on the frame, as I suspicion it is, that is the serial number and not the model number. The model information appears on the barrel and will be something similar to 101.1. In any event, these single-shot shotguns top out at $75. sales@countrygunsmith.net
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Yes
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