Blue Book of gun values lists only 300 mfgd, for the chisolm trail 999. Also 300 mfgd for the Abeline centennial model 926.
The 926 looks much like the 999. But, the 926 is a manual ejector, not auto eject like the 999.
The little lever located behind the trigger is the single action sear, it causes the hammer to drop when engaged while firing in single action mode.
H&R double actions were basically 2 separate actions.
This info was written by Bill Goforth, who is the man, when it comes to H&R's..
Watch for his book.
I have 2 Nebraska Centennial model 949 H&R's, unfird, in wooden cases.
I will never fire either one.
I highly suggest you don't fire yours either. These kind of pieces were made as commemoratives, not shooters.
For sale or not, the values will continue to increase, unless, you shoot them!
After the first firing, the collectibility is basically gone!
I hate to say it, and told myself, I would never own one, but some guns weren't made to shoot.
Keep them, enjoy them, pass them down.
MY 2 cents...
Jim
My H&R Nebraska centennial pieces.
Model 949 supposedly 300 mfgd,