Irwin Page and George S. Lewis were officers of the Stevens company and appeared to have been "downsized" when Savage took over Stevens. They promptly founded the Page-Lewis Arms Co. in Chicopee, MA in 1921. They made three versions of a lever single shot rifle, the Model A Target, the Model B Sharpshooter and the Model C Olympic. (They also made a bolt action single shot, the Model D Reliance for those who wanted one of them newfangled turnbolt guns.) You apparently have the Model C Olympic, which should have the tang sight, a regular barrel rear notch sight, and a front bead sight on the 24" barrel, with a walnut stock and a steel buttplate. The Model B Sharpshooter was like the Model C only without the tang sight; the Model A Target had a shorter barrel and no buttplate with only the barrel sights. George Lewis apparently designed the gun. The stock was attached to the receiver by a throughbolt and the barrel takes down with a screw, similar to the Stevens' boys .22s. The receivers of the guns were made of steel plates riveted tightly together, and the levers were also built-up of two different steel pieces. This avoided the use of castings, which this small company obviously could not afford to tool up for, but also allowed, as their advertising stated, "Before the War Prices and Better than Before the War Quality." The company bid fair to at least hold its own in the marketplace, but Page died unexpectedly in 1924. The company went downhill after that and soon after it was sold to Savage, which closed out the lever single shots and kept the bolt gun in its own line. This info is digested from Jim Perkins' "American Boys' Rifles 1890-1945" still available in paperback. So Page-Lewis single shots are pretty uncommon. I have a shot out Model A I need to reline and a pretty good Model B but only a Model C receiver. You don't see them often at gun shows, although one does show up once in a while. If you have to change the buttstock, you would do well to have another one made and save the original one to keep the collectability intact.
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