WHITNEY ARMS COMPANY
Location: ELI WHITNEY, SR./P. & E.W. BLAKE/ELI WHITNEY, JR.
As the United States' first major commercial arms maker, Eli Whitney's New Haven plant, which began production in 1798 and continued under family control for the next 90 years, was one of the more important American arms manufactories of the 19th century. Its products, accordingly, are eminently collectible. Moreover, during its 90 years of operation, Whitney clan produced a number of unusual arms, some exact copies of regulation U.S. martial longarms, other variations and derivatives of U.S. and foreign longarms, a variety of percussion revolvers and finally a variety of single-shot and repeating breech-loading rifles in an attempt to capture a portion of the burgeoning market in these cartridge arms during the post-Civil War period. Contrary to the prevailing myth, Eli Whitney Sr., who also invented the cotton gin, did NOT perfect a system of interchangeability of parts in the arms industry. His contributions in this line were more as a propagandist for the concept that was brought to fruition by others, notably Simeon North and John Hall.
Choose your Firearm
Results filtered by
By Photos
Browse By Photo 📷By Series
WHITNEY NAVY REVOLVERWHITNEY POCKET REVOLVERBy Model
Eli Whitney, Sr. Armory Muskets, 1798-1824. 1798 U.S. Contract Muskets, Types I-IV📷
A
Whitney Connecticut, New York, and U.S. 1812 Contract Muskets📷
A
Whitney (and P. & E.W. Blake) U.S. M1816/1822 Contract Muskets📷
A
Whitney Armory U.S. M1816/M1822 Muskets, Flintlock or Altered to Percussion and Adapted with "Sea Fencible" Heavy Buttplates📷
A
Whitney Armory U.S. M1816/M1822 Muskets, Altered to PercussionWhitney Armory Muskets, 1825-1842Eli Whitney, Jr. Armory Rifles and Rifle-Muskets, 1842-1865Whitney U.S. M1841 Contract Rifle (unaltered)📷
A
Whitney U.S. M1841/1855 Contract Rifle, Adapted to Saber Bayonet and Long Range Sights📷
A
Whitney U.S. M1841 Contract Rifles, Adapted to Saber Bayonets and Long Range Rear Sights (Colt 1862 Adaptation)📷
A
Whitney South Carolina Contract M1841 RifleA
Whitney "Good & Serviceable" M1841 Derivatives📷
A
Whitney M1842 Rifled Musket Derivative📷
A
Whitney P1853 "Long Enfield" Rifle-Musket Derivative📷
A
Whitney P1853 "Short Enfield" Rifle Derivative📷
A
Whitney M1855 Rifle Derivative📷
A
Whitney M1855 Rifle-Musket Derivative📷
A
Whitney M1861 Connecticut Contract Rifle-Musket DerivativeA
Whitney "High Humpback" Lockplate M1861 Rifle-Musket Derivative📷
A
Whitney "Manton" M1861 Rifle-Musket Derivative📷
A
Whitney "Direct Vent" M1861 Rifle-Musket DerivativesA
Whitney U.S. M1861 Contract Rifle-MusketA
Whitney U.S. Navy Contract Rifle📷
A
the Whitney Arms Company, 1865-1888A
Single Barreled Percussion ShotgunA
Double-Barreled Percussion ShotgunA
Swing-Breech CarbineA
Whitney-Cochran Carbine📷
A
ExcelsiorA
Whitney-Howard Lever Action (Thunderbolt)A
Whitney Phoenix📷
Whitney-Laidley Model I Rolling BlockA
Whitney-Remington Model 2 Rolling BlockA
Whitney-Burgess-Morse RifleWhitney-Kennedy Rifle📷
Hooded Cylinder Pocket RevolverA
Two Trigger Pocket Revolver📷
A
Whitney-Beals Patent Revolver📷
Whitney 1851 NavyA
First ModelFirst ModelFirst Variation
A
First ModelSecond Variation
A
First ModelThird Variation
A
First ModelFourth Variation
A
Second ModelSecond ModelFirst Variation
A
Second ModelSecond Variation
A
Second ModelThird Variation
A
Second ModelFourth Variation
A
Second ModelFifth Variation
A
Second ModelSixth Variation
A
First ModelFirst ModelFirst Variation
A
First ModelSecond Variation
A
First ModelThird Variation
A
First ModelFourth Variation
A
First ModelFifth Variation
A
Second ModelSecond ModelFirst Variation
A
Second ModelSecond Variation
A
Second ModelThird Variation
A
Second ModelFourth Variation
A
New Model Pocket Revolver📷
A
Rimfire Pocket Revolver📷
A