There was an article on American Arms Co. in
The American Rifleman, April 1970, by Elliot L. Minor, Curator of the NRA Museum. It covered the double barrel pistol, the George H. Fox patent side-swing hammer doubles, the revolvers, the semi-hammerless single barrel shotgun and the semi-hammerless double barrel shotgun. He mentions the Whitmore hammerless but couldn't find an example to examine?!? He goes on and on about various spellings of -- Whittmore -- Whittemore -- Whitmore. I don't know where he got this as it is
Whitmore on A.E.'s patents, engraved on the bottom of the guns, in the magazine ads I've found, and on the patents for his E. Remington & Sons doubles back in the 1870s?!?

- # 332

- # 643

- # 1145
Maybe bad typesetting in the old issues of
Shooting and Fishing he referenced. According to an article in the August 6, 1891, issue of Shooting & Fishing, the company had a new, well lighted, factory 220 feet long by 70 feet wide in Bluffton, Alabama. However, it seems much production stayed in Boston as George H. Fox's estate when he died in 1901, included a lot of gun parts. Also the company had machinery in Boston which was sold to Marlin in 1901. American Arms Co. of Bluffton stopped paying their taxes in 1915 and their file at the State's internal revenue office is marked "Dead."