I kid you not. I see maybe one in a thousand questions about air gun that ask about the Montgomery Ward Hawthorne brand Air gun. Unfortunately my catalogues sources has very little to say about the crossover brand. I do know that all the airguns for Wards were made by Crosman air gun company under the Hawthorne brand name. My books only list 10 crossover models, but I know there were more. Of the 10 listed only one is a pistol and that a Crosman 38T or 38C. it looks like an old Colt 38 firearm. This may be your pellet gun. ( Both of these came in .177 and .22 caliber.)
Now as for value. It's hard to set an estimated value without more information about the pellet gun. You will have to give it some sort of rating like Poor, Fair, Good, Very Good or Excellent so I can set a value.
See the link below for all the owners manual and parts manuals made by Crosman.
the Benjamin model 130 doesn't use a pellet it was designed for a .175 caliberBB. The 130 line of rifles came in 3 sizes. the 130 fired a BB, the 132 fired a .22 caliber pellet and the 137 fired a .177 caliber pellet. they were made between 1946 to 1985
Hawthorne was a brand name used by WARDS for their airguns. I believe all of their airguns were made by CROSMAN air gun company. They also made air guns for Sears and Western auto. I think your M130 is a Crosman model 130. that would be an underlever pump pistol made between 1953-1970. It a single shot .22 caliber pellet pistol. If I am right you can find the owners manual at the LINK Below. As for value. You will have to give it some rating like Poor, Fair, Good, Very Good, Or Excellent or NEW IN BOX. to get an estimate of value.
25-130 USD or so
This 22 cal pistol was made by Crosman Co for Sears. It is a model 130, Mfg 1953-1970. To assess the value I need to know the condition of the pistol, is it excellent, good, fair, poor. You can find the manual for the 130 on the Crosman web page see the link below
The approximate value is in the genreal area of 85-130 US dollars
10-130 usd
Please state the current condition of the pistol and is it still working? The 130 was made between 1953-70. Give it a rating, is it in Excellent, Very good, Good, Fair or Poor condition. Without more information it is not possible to give an estimate of value
The 137 is part of the 130 series of pistols made between 1946 to 1985. The 130 was a BB gun, the 132 was a .22 caliber and 137 was a .177 caliber pellet pistol. In order to give you an estimate of value I need to know the current condition of the gun. Is it in working condition. Is it in Poor, Fair, Good, Very Good or Excellent condition?
This model was made for Sears by Crosman air gun Co. In actuality it is a Crosman model 130. It was made from 1953 through 1970 in two variations. I am unable to give an estimate of value with out knowing the condition of the pistol. Condition determines the value.
Benjamin made this model from 1946 to 1985, but did not start serializing them until 1957. I also have a Benjamin Franklin that has no serial number. Before 1957 it is not possible to set an exact date. Just know it's OLD. The 137 is a .177 caliber pellet pistol the 132 is a .22 caliber pistol and the 130 is a BB pistol.
A model C .20 caliber not a model C9 or C9PB in very good condition is worth around $105 to $130. If you want the owners manual, see the link below. Download the C9 owners manual it will be almost the same as the "C" Crosman airguns owns both Sheridan and Benjamin airguns.
It would be somewhere around $40. It was made between 1946-1985. It is part of the 130 series, that included models 130, 132 ans 137. It came in BB, .177 or .22. If you want the owners manual I have it attached to the link below. See link below.