Going Upscale Cowboy: The Navy/Winchester ‘73

by
posted on April 10, 2014
** When you buy products through the links on our site, we may earn a commission that supports NRA's mission to protect, preserve and defend the Second Amendment. **
Blank-for-web.jpg

Wandering into my office yesterday was a friend of mine of the last quarter century, Val Forgett III. Even more important than Val’s presence was the rifle he had in his hands. It was the Navy Arms Winchester 1873. And it is a rifle that will reshape a great American brand. There hasn’t been a lot of news regarding guns bearing the Navy Arms name in some time, and there are reasons for that.

Navy Arms, founded in 1956 by Val’s father, Valmore Forgett Jr., was the pioneer of the replica firearm category. It was Val who sought out partners, first in Belgium and then in Italy, that resulted in the resurgence of cap-and-ball revolvers Colt and others were no longer interested in or capable of making in the 1960s. Then came the explosion of interest in “cowboy” single-action revolvers and lever-action rifles. You name it, if it was from the American Revolution, Civil War or the Old West, odds are Val made a replica available to shooters. Was it successful? Uberti in Italy has made far more Single Action Army revolvers than Colt. Navy Arms, almost overnight, also sold more Henry rifles than Benjamin Tyler Henry did. It was a good business for many years.

But the market changed, and Navy Arms’ main partner, Uberti, was obtained by Beretta Holdings. After Val Forgett Jr. died, there was a nasty family fight over the business. The end result is that Val III has had to climb back out of bankruptcy and rebuild what was once one of the biggest names in gun business from literally nothing beyond a name with a snappy logo and a pile of debt.

The Navy Arms Winchester Model 1873 is actually marked “Winchester” because it is, well, a Winchester. It’s complicated, though. The Winchester name belongs to Olin Corp, and Olin licenses it to Browning’s Winchester Repeating Arms Co. The 1873 is made for WRA by Miroku in Japan and is then shipped to the United States in the white. Navy Arms then has Doug Turnbull Restorations finish the receiver, lever, hammer, fore-end cap, buttplate, receiver cover and other major parts with real bone charcoal color-casehardening. This is not a chemical surface treatment-this is the real deal done like only Doug Turnbull’s craftsmen (alchemists, really) can do it. The barrel and magazine tube assembly is also blued by Turnbull.

The rifle is offered in 20” or 24 1/4” octagonal barrels in either .45 Colt or .357 Mag. (cowboy competitors are big fans of the soft-shooting .38 Spl.). The stock and fore-end are checkered “deluxe” American walnut, and sights are a brass bead front and a semi-buckhorn rear.

This is a seriously good-looking rifle. Its action is slick, too (I’m not sure exactly what the “Winchester short-Stroke Kit” is yet as I have not disassembled it), but I cannot wait until a shooting sample arrives. This is a rifle you will be seeing more of in the pages of American Rifleman.

Latest

Smith Wesson Model 29 10 Facts 1
Smith Wesson Model 29 10 Facts 1

10 Things You (Probably) Didn't Know About The Smith & Wesson Model 29

Without a doubt, the Smith & Wesson Model 29 is one of the 20th century’s most shootable, collectible "superstar" revolvers. Here are a few little-known facts about the gun.

Packable Punch: Discreet Ways to Carry More Firepower

While folding and takedown firearms chambered for full-power rifle cartridges may be niche defensive tools, the dark situations in which they shine brightest aren’t going away anytime soon.

Southpaw Solution: Ruger Introduces Left-Handed American Gen II Ranch Rifles

Traditionally, Ruger has offered a range of left-handed rifle models for the southpaws among us, and now, the company's Gen II American rifles are available in a left-handed variant, starting with the Ranch models.

Gun of the Week: Kimber 1911 DS Warrior LW

In 2026, Kimber developed its 1911 DS Warrior, an American-made, double-stack design that is intended to be an affordable entry point into Kimber's double-stack handgun line.

The Armed Citizen® April 24, 2026

Read today's "The Armed Citizen" entry for real stories of law-abiding citizens, past and present, who used their firearms to save lives.

Spin Difference: The Impact of Barrel Twist Rates on Terminal Performance

When most shooters think of rifling-twist rates, they mostly think of rifles with their high BC projectiles, but the rpm of a bullet also plays a part in terminal performance.

Interests



Get the best of American Rifleman delivered to your inbox.