Pulled out my copy of Jos. Vorisek's little book to refresh my fallible remembery. The model with the taper pin thru the side is an XL Junior. According to Vorisek, made from 1880 to 1908. I'm less sure about that. The Junior is a scaled-down version of what we now call the "medium frame". Both are very close to the Davenport-designed Bay State, a late 1880s child, made only for a couple of years. (I've got one, chambered .32 Long Colt CF). H&A bought Bay State out in 1890, so I'm inclined to think that the Junior and Medium frame started in 1890 as H&A products. In 1900 the H&A plant burned to the ground, and to keep going they bought the Forehand plant. The 722/822/922 seem to be new designs brought out after the fire. Probably because they had to make new tooling anyway, so they improved the design. And I also think that, despite Vorisek's dating, the XL medium and XL Junior probably disappeared in the fire, since the tooling was certainly gone. Vorisek did his best, I'm sure, but he also got some points wrong. For instance, he describes the 922 as an upgraded model using the same action as the 822, which it is not. The 822 is a rolling block, while as we see the 922 is a falling block. Given that he was certainly well and truly taken up with the blizzard of H&A handgun models to sort out, he can be forgiven, IMHO. BTW from this source and also a catalog reprint I have, the O.P.'s rifle seems to be a 2922, the very top of the line. My two complete H&A rifles: Upper one is the XL Junior. Lower is a model 1932, modified to shoot .32 S&W centerfire.
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