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Marlin Model 19 Slide Action Shotgun
Marlin's Model 19 slide-action shotgun was an improved version of their Model 1898. This model was produced from 1906-1907. This model usually featured a matte top barrel surface. SN 88560
John Mahlon Marlin was born on May 6, 1836 near Windsor Locks,
Connecticut. At the age of 18, he became an apprentice machinist
with the American Machine Works. He later served as a machinist
with Colt Patent Firearms of Hartford. In 1863, he started his own
pistol manufacturing business in New Haven, concentrating on
production of a small single-shot .22 caliber deringer. Marlin
expanded his efforts to include revolver in 1870, after the
expiration of Rollin White's cylinder patents. The Marlin story
later became intertwined with the Ballard breechloading rifle.
These single-shot arms were invented by Charles H. Ballard of
Worcester, Massachusetts, who received his original patent in
1861.
Approximately 24,000 sporting and military rifles, carbines, and
shotguns were manufactured between 1862 and 1873; Civil War sales
account for half of this total. Five different New England
companies produced various Ballard designs, with the New York firm
of Merwin & Bray acting as sales agents throughout Ballard's
brief history. Economic depression came to the United States in
1873, and diminishing sales forced Ballard into bankruptcy. All
patent rights, equipment, parts inventories, and properties were
purchased by New York arms dealers Schoverling and Daly, who
handled sales and distribution of Ballard rifles after reaching an
agreement with John Marlin to continue production. This partnership
would prove to be highly successful for all parties involved.
In 1881, the Marlin Firearms Company was incorporated, and
production of Ballard rifles continuing under the Marlin banner
until they were eventually discontinued circa 1891 due to the
rising popularity of repeating rifles.
Marlin-Ballard rifles were and are well-known for their accuracy
and workmanship, and fancy-grade long-range rifles are eagerly
sought after by modern collectors. Marlin continued to expand his
product line, introducing his Model 1881 lever-action tubular
magazine repeating rifle in that year. Many key features had been
patented by Andrew Burgess and others, but John Marlin incorporated
these into a single functional firearm. This rifle was available in
a variety of calibers ranging from .32-40 to 45-70 Government, a
feature that would not be duplicated by competing Winchesters for
several more years.
Marlin also produced several other lever action designs,
concluding with the Model 1897, which remained in production until
1922. Shotguns became a part of the Marlin line in 1898, when the
first of a series of slide-action guns was introduced. Production
continued until 1915, but a .410 lever-action shotgun was also
manufactured between 1929 and 1932.
John Marlin died in 1901, but the business continued under the
leadership of his sons, Mahlon and John Marlin. During their
tenure, the company expanded to include the Ideal Cartridge
Reloading Company. In 1915, the Marlin Firearms Company was sold to
a New York syndicate with close ties to financier J. P. Morgan, and
became the Marlin-Rockwell Corporation. The outbreak of war in
Europe focused the new company's efforts on the production of
machine guns for use by infantry troops and in both aircraft and
tanks.
After the armistice of 1918, Marlin-Rockwell returned to the
manufacture of civilian firearms. A reorganization in 1921 saw the
company's name change to the Marlin Firearms Corporation, but, like
Ballard before it, Marlin failed and went into receivership in
1923. Marlin's assets were purchased by Frank Kenna, the son of a
Union Army sergeant, pattern and model maker, Yale Law School
graduate and businessman. Kenna began a revitalization of the
company, but his efforts were hampered by the Great Depression.
Beginning in 1937, Marlin also manufactured razor blades in
addition to sporting arms.
The Second World War years brought contracts for the manufacture
of High Standard/UDM 42 9mm Parabellum caliber submachine guns, as
well as barrels and other parts for the M1 Garand rifle and M1
carbine. During this period, Marlin also produced aircraft and
other parts under contract for Bell Aircraft and other
corporations. Defense contracts also provided a revenue source
during the Korean War.
Sporting arms has long been a staple for Marlin, and the company's
place in the market has been consistently strong. By 1969, the
company had outgrown its original factory, and manufacturing
facilities moved from their original New Haven location to a new
modern plant in nearby North Haven. The Marlin Firearms Company
continues to be owned by members of the Kenna family, but for the
first time since 1924, a Kenna is not at the helm, as Robert W.
Behn replaced J. Stephen Kenna as president in 1997. The company's
product line no longer includes pistols or razor blades, but Marlin
remains a choice for bolt-, slide-, and lever-action rifles, as
well as for autoloaders and shotguns.