Empire Arms was a trade name sold by Sears Roebuck. If it has the Crescent name on it too, it would date from about 1907 to 1930. It's nothing a serious collector would want, but if checked by a gunsmith and given his OK, should be worth $200 or more as a shooter.
Value will most likely not exceed 100 USD.
The Crescent Arms "Empire Hammerless" double barrel (20 guage) is not a collectable gun, but is a "shooter". Thus, in shootable condition, it is worth about $200. That's what I paid for mine, strictly for bird hunting.
The 410 hammerless essex shotgun is worth anywhere from $300 to $350 in good shape.
To find a replacement stock for a Crescent Arms Empire Model 60 hammerless shotgun, you can check with specialty gun shops, vintage firearm dealers, or online marketplaces like GunBroker or eBay. Additionally, contacting manufacturers that specialize in shotgun parts or visiting forums dedicated to vintage firearms may yield leads. Custom gunsmiths could also craft a replacement if original parts are unavailable.
Yes Smith and Wesson made a hammerless shotgun. I did read at one time they were the first to do so, but they did not sell a lot of them because of the price back in the late 1800's
Hammerless
No.
50-100 USD or so
Try gunstocksinc.com
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It is only worth what the person buys it for...
what is a newera nitrohammerless #4012 model 1900 double barrel shotgun