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  3. Henry Repeating Arms

Henry Repeating Arms

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  • A Offline
    A Offline
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    Heritage & History

    Henry Repeating Arms is an American firearms manufacturer founded in 1996 by Anthony Imperato, specializing in lever-action rifles and shotguns. Based in New Jersey with additional manufacturing in Wisconsin, Henry operates under the slogan "Made in America, Or Not Made At All." Henry is a SAAMI member and operates three U.S. manufacturing facilities.

    :::callout
    The modern Henry Repeating Arms has no corporate connection to the original 1860s Henry rifle company (which became Winchester). Anthony Imperato revived the name in 1996 as an entirely new company. This generates occasional purist criticism — but Henry has earned its reputation on its own merits, becoming the largest lever-action rifle manufacturer in America through quality, customer service, and genuine domestic manufacturing.
    :::

    Key milestones:

    • 1860 — Original Henry rifle patented by Benjamin Tyler Henry (Civil War fame; became Winchester)
    • 1996 — Modern Henry Repeating Arms founded by Anthony Imperato (no corporate lineage to original)
    • 2000s — Growth through H001 Classic, Golden Boy, Big Boy lines
    • 2010s — Added side loading gates (addressed major criticism); launched Long Ranger series
    • 2020s — Three manufacturing facilities (NJ + two in WI); hundreds of thousands of rifles produced
    • Present — SAAMI member; largest lever-action manufacturer in the US

    Product Lines

    Henry's lineup spans rimfire trainers to big-bore hunting rifles, all lever-action:

    Rimfire models (entry-level):

    Model Caliber Receiver Magazine Price Notes
    H001 Classic .22 LR Brass Tube (15 rds) ~$350 Henry's flagship; first rifle for many shooters
    Golden Boy .22 LR/.22 Mag Brass (upgraded) Tube ~$500 Enhanced wood and brass furniture
    Frontier .22 LR/.22 Mag Brass Tube ~$400 Threaded barrel option
    Pump Action Octagon .22 LR Steel Tube ~$450 Pump-action variant

    Pistol-caliber lever actions (Big Boy series):

    Model Calibers Receiver Magazine Price Notes
    Big Boy .357 Mag, .44 Mag, .45 Colt Brass Tube (10 rds) ~$850-$1,000 Share ammo with your revolver
    Big Boy Steel .357 Mag, .44 Mag, .45 Colt, .327 Fed Steel Tube ~$700-$800 Same function, lower cost
    Big Boy X .357 Mag, .44 Mag, .45 Colt Steel Tube + loading gate ~$900 Tactical: threaded, Picatinny, side gate
    Big Boy Color Case Hardened .357 Mag, .44 Mag, .45 Colt Color case Tube + loading gate ~$1,000 Beautiful case-hardened finish

    :::callout
    The pistol-caliber Big Boy in .357 Magnum is Henry's most versatile rifle. Shoot cheap .38 Special for plinking (works in the same gun), step up to .357 Magnum for deer-capable power at 100 yards. Share ammunition with a .357 revolver for a classic lever-action/revolver pairing that's been a proven combo since the 1800s.
    :::

    Centerfire hunting rifles:

    Model Calibers Magazine Type Price Best For
    Long Ranger .223, .243, .308, 6.5 CM Detachable box (4 rds) ~$1,000-$1,200 Modern hunting with pointed bullets
    Long Ranger Express .223, .308 Detachable box (4 rds) ~$1,100 Enhanced version with upgrades
    Side Gate Lever .30-30, .35 Rem, .45-70, .360 Buckhammer Tube + side loading gate ~$900-$1,100 Traditional brush/woods hunting
    Single Shot .223 through .45-70 Break-action (1 rd) ~$500-$600 Simple, accurate, budget-friendly

    Specialty and collectible:

    Model Notes Price
    Henry Original Civil War-era reproduction in .44-40; front-loading tube only ~$2,500
    Special Editions Commemorative themes (military, American heritage) $1,000-$3,000+
    Silver Eagle/Silver Boy Nickel-plated receivers ~$700-$1,000

    Innovation & Technology

    Henry focuses on refining traditional lever-action design rather than revolutionary new technology:

    Innovation Application Impact
    Side loading gate Most centerfire models (added after launch) Fixed #1 customer complaint — can now top off without removing tube
    Long Ranger detachable magazine .223, .243, .308, 6.5 CM Allows pointed bullets (spitzer) safely in a lever action
    CNC + hand-fitting hybrid All models CNC precision for consistency; hand fitting for smooth action
    Test-fire every rifle All production Every Henry is fired before shipping
    Threaded barrel options Big Boy X, Frontier Suppressor-ready lever actions

    Manufacturing approach:

    • Brass receivers are cast (not machined from billet) — reduces cost while maintaining aesthetic
    • Steel receivers are conventionally machined
    • NJ facilities handle centerfire production; WI handles rimfire
    • American walnut stocks across the lineup
    • Every rifle test-fired before shipment

    The loading gate story:
    Henry's original models loaded only from the front of the magazine tube (historically accurate but annoying in practice). The addition of side loading gates — allowing shooters to top off the magazine through the receiver like a traditional Winchester — was Henry's most significant design improvement and addressed years of customer feedback.

    Community & Reputation

    Segment Reputation Notes
    Lever-action enthusiasts Very strong Now the most reliable source for new-production lever actions
    New shooters Excellent H001 is a top recommendation for first rifles
    Hunters (brush/woods) Strong .30-30, .45-70, .357 Big Boy for close-range
    Cowboy action Good Big Boy pistol-calibers work well for CAS
    Collectors Mixed Special editions appeal to some; purists note lack of historical lineage
    Made-in-USA advocates Very strong "Made in America, Or Not Made At All" resonates deeply

    Common praise:

    • Actions are among the smoothest of any production lever gun
    • Customer service is excellent (lifetime warranty, responsive support)
    • Genuine American manufacturing at every step
    • Beautiful fit and finish, especially brass-receiver models
    • Wide model range covers every lever-action niche
    • Most affordable entry point for quality lever actions

    Common criticism:

    • No corporate lineage to original Henry rifle (name appropriation debate)
    • Brass frames scratch and show wear easily (cosmetic, not functional)
    • Some rimfire models use plastic/zinc components (cost-cutting concern)
    • Original models' front-loading magazine was cumbersome (largely fixed with side gates)
    • Frequent special editions may dilute collectible value
    • Not as robust as Marlin 336/1895 for hard-use applications

    :::callout
    Henry vs. Marlin: With Marlin now under Ruger's ownership and rebuilding production, Henry became the dominant lever-action manufacturer by default. Henry actions are smoother, finish is better, and availability is superior. Marlin (Ruger) has the historical pedigree and arguably more rugged construction. Both are good — Henry is easier to buy right now.
    :::

    Buyer's Guide

    Which Henry should you buy?

    If You Want... Get This Why
    First rifle (youth/adult) H001 Classic (~$350) Smooth .22 LR lever action; ideal for learning
    Show-piece .22 Golden Boy (~$500) Upgraded brass and walnut; beautiful
    Deer rifle (woods) Big Boy .357 Mag (~$850) Versatile; shoots .38 Spl for practice
    Brush gun .30-30 or .45-70 Side Gate (~$1,000) Traditional lever hunting; proven calibers
    Modern hunting lever Long Ranger .308 (~$1,100) Pointed bullets; detachable magazine
    Tactical lever action Big Boy X (~$900) Threaded barrel, Picatinny rail, side gate
    Suppressor host Frontier Threaded or Big Boy X Factory-threaded barrels
    Historical reproduction Henry Original (~$2,500) Authentic 1860s design in .44-40

    Henry pricing reality:

    Category Price Range Value Assessment
    Rimfire (.22 LR) $350-$550 Excellent value; smooth action, beautiful rifles
    Pistol-caliber (Big Boy Steel) $700-$800 Good value; steel receiver saves money
    Pistol-caliber (Big Boy Brass) $850-$1,000 Fair; paying for brass aesthetics
    Centerfire hunting $900-$1,200 Competitive with bolt actions at similar prices
    Collectible/Special Edition $1,000-$3,000+ Subjective; depends on collector interest

    :::callout
    Bottom line: Henry makes the best production lever-action rifles available today — smooth actions, gorgeous finishes, genuine American manufacturing, and excellent customer service. The H001 is one of the best first rifles ever made, and the Big Boy in .357 Mag is the most versatile lever action on the market. If you want a lever gun, Henry is the safest bet for quality and availability.
    :::

    References

    • Henry Repeating Arms official site: henryusa.com
    • Guns & Ammo: "Henry Repeating Arms: 25 Years of American-Made"
    • The Truth About Guns: Henry rifle review compilation
    • Chuck Hawks: Henry rifles consumer survey
    • The Firearm Blog: Henry Original review

    Read the original article in The Handbook | By Boise Gun Club Editorial Team


    Join the Discussion

    If you've shot one of Henry's lever guns, how does the accuracy stack up compared to what you'd expect from that classic design—are you getting match-grade precision or is it more about the fun factor?

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