Utah's firearms history doesn't get talked about enough outside of the Browning mythology — and even the Browning story usually gets stripped down to the greatest hits. The full picture is messier, more interesting, and more relevant to how we think about guns and government today than most people realize.
You can trace a direct line from Jonathan Browning repairing rifles for Mormon pioneers in 1852 to his son John Moses Browning designing the M2 .50-caliber machine gun in a workshop four blocks from where Jonathan's shop stood — a weapon that is still in production and still in active military service nearly a century later.
That's not a footnote — that's a dynasty. Two generations, same block in Ogden, and between them they touched nearly every platform that defined American firearms through both World Wars. Next time you're running a 1911 or a BPS or a Model 94, you're holding something that traces back to a gunsmith shop that was keeping wagon train rifles running before Utah was even a state.
At its peak in the mid-1850s, it was estimated to number between 5,000 and 8,000 organized men, making it one of the largest military forces in the American West and arguably the largest militia in the United States at the time.
Five to eight thousand organized, artillery-equipped men — and Washington sent 5,500 regulars to deal with them. The Utah War barely registers in most American history courses, but as a case study in armed sovereignty versus federal authority, it's one of the most direct examples we've got. The conversation we're still having today about militia, federal overreach, and who controls armed force in a state has an origin story, and part of it runs right through Cedar Valley.
Browning did not move to Connecticut. He stayed in Ogden, working at his bench, producing prototypes with his brothers, and shipping designs east by rail.
Worth sitting with that for a second. The most prolific firearms designer in history — the guy who gave us the 1911, the BAR, the M2, the Auto-5, the Hi-Power — ran his operation out of Utah and shipped finished designs by rail to New Haven and Hartford. He didn't need to be in the room with the manufacturers. The work happened at the bench in Ogden.
The bit about Camp Floyd is something I hadn't thought about much before — the federal government abandoning a massive installation in 1861 and selling off weapons and ammunition at fire-sale prices to the local civilian population. That's a direct, documented example of a military surplus event reshaping civilian armament at a territorial level.
The Mountain Meadows section is handled honestly here, which I appreciate. The same militia rifles maintained for community defense were used in that massacre. That tension — between the legitimate and the catastrophic uses of an armed community — doesn't have a clean resolution, and the article doesn't pretend it does.
What's the oldest firearm or design you personally shoot or own, and do you know anything about where it came from before it got to you?
Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team