Gun
Control and the Old West
By Ross Collins
History News Service,
Summer 1999.
The smoke has cleared, and we peer down at the victim: another gun control bill,
shot full o holes. Just like in the old horse operas: a hero again shoots
to protect a precious freedom, Americas right to bear arms. For many who
keep a romantic image of Americas past, gun control is like that, a battle
steeped in American tradition. It calls us back to those legendary days of the
Old West, when cowboys defended their honor and their horses by way of their
Colts
.
In fact, most historians see the cowboys of the Old West as THE defining heroes
of 20th-century America. Hes used to sell everything from soap to hats.
Hes apparently also an ideal American for anti-gun control groups: gun
shows and gun advertising promote from a distinctive Old West flavor.
Todays anti gun control forces count their strongest support among societys
leaders from the states that once formed part of the Old West.
The actual Old West pioneers of historical fact viewed matters differently,
however. They would certainly hail the campaign to protect an American right
to bear arms, but the record puts them behind "moderate, common-sense measures"
for gun controlthe very kind that President Clinton has proposed.
Pioneer publications show Old West leaders repeatedly arguing in favor of gun
control. City leaders in the old cattle towns knew from experience what some
Americans today don't want to believe: a town which allows easy access to guns
invites trouble.
What these cow town leaders saw intimately in their day-to-day association with
guns is that more guns in more places caused not greater safety, but greater
death in an already dangerous wilderness. By the 1880s many in the west were
fed up with gun violence. Gun control, they contended, was absolutely essential,
and the remedy advocated usually was usually no less than a total ban on pistol-packing.
The editor of the Black Hills Daily Times of Dakota Territory in 1884, called
the idea of carrying firearms into the city a dangerous practice,
not only to others, but to the packer himself. He emphasized his point with
the headline, "Perforated by His Own Pistol."
The editor of the Montanas Yellowstone Journal acknowledged four years
earlier that Americans have "the right to bear arms," but he contended
that guns have to be regulated. As for cowboys carrying pistols, a dispatch
from Laramies Northwest Stock Journal in 1884, reported, "We see
many cowboys fitting up for the spring and summer work. They all seem to think
it absolutely necessary to have a revolver. Of all foolish notions this is the
most absurd."
Cowboy president Theodore Roosevelt recalled with approval that as a Dakota
Territory ranch owner, his town, at the least, allowed "no shooting in
the streets." The editor of that town's newspaper, The Bad Lands Cow Boy
of Medora, demanded that gun control be even tighter than that, however. Like
leaders in Miles City and many other cow towns, he wanted to see guns banned
entirely within the city limits. A.T. Packard in August 1885 called "packing
a gun" a "senseless custom," and noted about a month later that
"As a protection, it is terribly useless.
Old West cattlemen themselves also saw the need for gun control. By 1882, a
Texas cattle raising association had banned six-shooters from the cowboy's belt.
"In almost every section of the West murders are on the increase, and cowmen
are too often the principals in the encounters," concurred a dispatch from
the Texas Live Stock Journal dated June 5, 1884. "The six-shooter loaded
with deadly cartridges is a dangerous companion for any man, especially if he
should unfortunately be primed with whiskey. Cattlemen should unite in aiding
the enforcement of the law against carrying of deadly weapons."
This echoes President Clintons reaction following the failure in Congress
of the most recent gun control proposals: The American people will not
stand for this. So far they have, however, as recalled by the record of
defeated attempts to legislate control. As U.S. Rep. Martin Sabo (D.-Minn.)
noted, theres broad public support for it, but he opponents are
much more intense about it.
The Old Wests leaders who argued for gun control knew that a long time
ago. Their arguments sound as contemporary at the end of this century as they
were earnest at the end of the last. But despite them, few packers have been
persuaded to put away their pistols, then or now.
Copyright 2004 by Ross F. Collins <www.ndsu.edu/communication/collins>