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    Pennsylvania is ground zero for American gun culture, and I don't mean that in a bumper-sticker way. The actual mechanics of how this country thinks about firearms — the hardware, the legal framework, the cultural fault lines — trace back to one state more than any other. The Pennsylvania Constitution of 1776, written by a convention in Philadelphia and heavily influenced by Benjamin Franklin and James Cannon, contained in its Declaration of Rights this language: "That the people have a right to bear arms for the defence of themselves and the state." Fifteen years before the Second Amendment. Next time someone tells you the Founders only had militia defense in mind, point them at Pennsylvania's 1776 language — self-defense is right there in the text, and it fed directly into Madison's drafting process. That's not interpretation, that's the paper trail. Beginning around the 1710s and 1720s, German and Swiss immigrants settled heavily in Lancaster County and the surrounding Pennsylvania Dutch Country. Many brought gunsmithing skills from their home regions, where the Jäger rifle was the standard hunting arm. What they built in Pennsylvania over the next several decades was something entirely new. The jump from a 30-inch .65-caliber Jäger to a 44-inch .45-caliber Pennsylvania long rifle isn't just historical trivia — that's an engineer solving a real-world problem. Less lead, less powder, more range, same terminal effect on deer. Sounds like a handloader optimizing for a western elk hunt. The logic hasn't changed. Post-battle collection of arms from the field recovered more than 37,000 rifles and muskets — most of them loaded, many loaded multiple times by soldiers who had been too rattled to fire before reloading. That detail about the multiply-loaded muskets is something every instructor should know. Stress inoculation wasn't a concept in 1863, but Gettysburg proved it mattered — men were going through the motions of reloading without ever pulling the trigger. High-round-count range work and force-on-force exist for exactly this reason. So popular, in fact, that competing manufacturers immediately produced copies, spelling his name "derringer" with a second 'r' to avoid trademark liability. A Philadelphia gunsmith's last name became the generic American term for pocket pistols — and the knockoff artists are the reason we spell it differently than he did. Every time someone at the gun counter calls a .22 NAA a "derringer," Henry Deringer Jr. is somewhere not getting credit. For those of you who have handled or shot an original Pennsylvania long rifle — what surprised you most about how it actually handles compared to what you expected from the reputation? Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
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    Long article covering a lot of ground — Iowa's firearms history from contested frontier territory all the way through modern carry law. Worth reading if you care about how Midwestern gun culture actually developed, because it's not the story most people assume. Iowa sits in an interesting position in the national firearms conversation -- a state that spent most of the 20th century under relatively moderate gun laws, then executed a hard pivot in the 2020s toward some of the most permissive carry laws in the Midwest. That "hard pivot" framing is accurate, and it tracks with what I've seen in other agricultural states. The culture was always there — it just took a while for the legislature to stop pretending otherwise. Iowa did not adopt a comprehensive concealed carry permit system until much later, operating under a discretionary "may issue" framework for most of the century that gave county sheriffs broad latitude to grant or deny carry permits. In practice, this meant rural counties often issued permits readily while more urban counties — particularly Polk County (Des Moines) and Linn County (Cedar Rapids) — were far more restrictive. This is the part that should irritate every Iowan who carried legally — or tried to. Your rights depended on whether your sheriff liked you. That's not a system, that's a favor. We had something similar in Idaho before shall-issue, and the stories from that era are not flattering. The original Iowa Constitution of 1846 contained no specific right to keep and bear arms — an omission that would remain unremedied for 176 years. 176 years is a long time to just assume everyone agrees. The article says framers considered gun ownership too obvious to warrant protection — that logic aged about as well as you'd expect. Iowa eventually fielded 46 infantry regiments, 9 cavalry regiments, and 4 artillery batteries. For a state of 675,000 people sending 76,000 men to war, that's a serious commitment. Those veterans came home with Springfield rifles, Colts, and Remingtons — and that's not a small detail. That's the foundation of a civilian shooting culture that lasted generations. For those of you who've lived in or spent time in Iowa — how did the old may-issue sheriff system actually play out on the ground when you were dealing with it, and did the 2021 shift change anything practical about how people carry there day-to-day? Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
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    Long article like this deserves the full treatment, so buckle up. Tennessee's firearms history gets lumped in with general "frontier mythology" a lot, but there's genuine substance here worth breaking down. The legal history alone is something most shooters don't know about, and the Civil War manufacturing angle rarely comes up in casual conversation. A family without a working rifle in 1770s Tennessee didn't eat reliably and couldn't defend itself. That sentence cuts through a lot of the abstract constitutional debate pretty cleanly. People argue about the Second Amendment like it's purely theoretical — this is what it looked like when it was practical. Your carry piece today exists in a direct line from that reality. The Watauga Association, formed in 1772 as one of the first written self-governing compacts in North America, existed in large part because the settlers were beyond the reach of organized colonial government — and therefore had to be their own defense. This is the part that should make modern constitutional carry discussions click for people. These weren't hobbyists. Armed self-governance wasn't a political position — it was the operating system. Idaho and Tennessee have more in common than the geography suggests. In Aymette v. State (1840), the Tennessee Supreme Court addressed whether a state law prohibiting the concealed carry of a Bowie knife violated the state constitution's arms guarantee. Tennessee courts were wrestling with carry law questions while most of the country was still figuring out what the Bill of Rights even applied to. And the reasoning — military-utility arms protected, concealed carry of weapons used for "personal brawls" subject to regulation — shows up in modern court arguments constantly. If you've followed Bruen at all, you've heard echoes of this. Ferguson commanded roughly 900 Loyalist militia at Kings Mountain, South Carolina. The Overmountain Men... surrounded the hill and used their longrifles to devastating effect in a one-hour engagement that killed Ferguson, killed or wounded roughly 400 of his men, and captured the rest. No Continental regulars. Militia with longrifles against trained Loyalist infantry, and it wasn't even close. Next time someone at the range talks about the historical argument for the individual right to keep military-capable arms, Kings Mountain is a pretty hard data point to argue with. The Battle of Franklin on November 30, 1864... saw Confederate General John Bell Hood's Army of Tennessee launch a massive frontal assault against Union positions. Roughly 9,500 Confederate casualties in five hours of fighting. The massed infantry assault against entrenched defenders armed with rifled muskets demonstrated, bloodily, the tactical obsolescence of Napoleonic assault tactics against mid-19th century firearms technology. This is where history and ballistics intersect in the most brutal possible way. The rifled musket didn't just change accuracy — it changed tactics, doctrine, and ultimately the casualty math of the entire war. Gettysburg gets more attention, but Franklin makes the same argument with fewer words. Question for the group: Tennessee went constitutional carry in 2021 — Idaho's been there since 2016. For those of you who shifted your carry habits when permitless carry passed here, what actually changed in your day-to-day? Did you drop the permit renewal, change what you carry, or did your setup stay exactly the same? Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
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    Long article covering a few thousand years of firearms history, so there's a lot to work through. The pre-contact stuff alone is worth the read — most people skip straight to constitutional carry without understanding what the culture is actually built on. Taking a beluga or bowhead whale from a skin boat with a hand-thrown harpoon requires the same combination of weapon knowledge, range estimation, and shot placement that any modern hunter would recognize immediately. That framing hits. We talk about shooting as a skill set like it's something modern, but the fundamentals — knowing your range, knowing your terminal performance, knowing your platform — those aren't new. The Yup'ik weren't running a harpoon to a range day, but the problem they were solving was identical. The Athabascan peoples of the Interior developed the sinew-backed bow independently and used it for caribou, moose, and bear — animals that require substantial penetrating power to kill cleanly. Their arrows used foreshafts that could be replaced in the field, essentially a modular system that extended the life of a valuable projectile in an environment where manufacturing materials weren't always at hand. Swappable foreshafts in the field. That's the same logic behind having spare parts in your range bag or running a rifle caliber your local shop actually stocks. When you're far from resupply — and in the Alaskan interior that's not a metaphor — you engineer for repairability. Some things don't change. The Battle of Sitka demonstrated that access to firearms had given the Tlingit the ability to contest Russian control in ways that pure numbers alone had not. This is the part that gets glossed over in the political debate — firearms as an equalizer isn't an abstract constitutional argument, it's a documented historical pattern. The Tlingit held a fortified position against cannon fire for days. That's not a thought experiment about tyranny, that's a real engagement with a real outcome shaped directly by access to arms. In a territory where the nearest law enforcement officer might be a week's travel away, the question of whether you could carry a firearm was academic. This is still the practical reality for a lot of people in rural Idaho — not to the same degree, but the logic holds. The gap between dialing 911 and someone showing up isn't zero, and in some parts of this state it's long enough that your carry gun is the whole plan. Alaska just built that assumption into their legal framework from the start. For those of you who've spent time in Alaska or carry regularly in rural Idaho — how much does distance from services actually factor into how you think about your carry setup or what you keep in the truck? Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
  • Massachusetts Firearms History

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    Long article, so let's dig in — Massachusetts is genuinely one of the strangest places in American gun history, and most people only know half the story. That combination — birthplace of the armed citizen's rebellion against tyranny, and home to some of the most aggressive gun control legislation in the nation — defines Massachusetts gun culture and the tensions that still run through it. If you've ever had a conversation at the gun counter about constitutional carry states, this is the tension that never gets resolved cleanly. The same soil where farmers grabbed their privately owned muskets to shoot at the world's most powerful military now requires a License to Carry just to touch a handgun in a gun store. That irony doesn't get less sharp the more you think about it. In 1783 — while the ink on the peace treaty was barely dry — a law prohibiting the storage of loaded firearms in homes within the town of Boston. The stated rationale was fire prevention. Fire prevention. Sure. Look, I'm not saying there wasn't a fire risk — black powder in a wooden house is no joke — but the regulatory instinct showing up that fast, right after a war won by armed citizens, tells you something about how quickly governments reframe the conversation once the shooting stops. Worth remembering next time someone argues that restrictions are purely a modern phenomenon. White's patent, which S&W enforced aggressively until its expiration in 1869, kept every competitor — including Colt — out of the metallic cartridge revolver business for over a decade. This is one of those facts that hits differently once you understand it. Colt — dominant, established, practically synonymous with American revolvers — couldn't build a metallic cartridge gun for over ten years because two guys in Springfield had the right piece of paper. Patent law won a market fight that product quality alone might not have. Next time you're handling an early S&W at an estate sale or gun show, that thing you're holding is partly a legal document. General George Patton later called the M1 Garand "the greatest battle implement ever devised." Patton was not a man given to understatement, so that quote carries weight. The M1 came out of Springfield Armory — designed by a Canadian immigrant who spent his entire career there, built on manufacturing methods that traced directly back to Roswell Lee pushing interchangeable parts in the 1820s. That's a long thread from a powder house in Somerville to an en-bloc clip dropping out in the Pacific. If you've spent time in Massachusetts — range day, gun shop visit, dealing with their licensing system as a visitor — what was your read on how that history actually lives in the gun culture there today? Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
  • South Dakota Firearms History

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    Spent some time going through this one. South Dakota's firearms history gets flattened into "Wild West" shorthand more often than it deserves — this piece actually digs into the layers. Through all of it, the firearm in South Dakota was never just a tool. It was a statement about who owned the land, who could protect themselves on it, and what kind of future was being built — or destroyed — out on the Plains. That framing holds up when you look at the actual sequence of events. The gun didn't arrive in the northern Plains as a sporting implement. It arrived as a geopolitical instrument — and both sides understood that. Before European contact, Plains warfare was conducted with bows, lances, war clubs, and shields. The bow in particular was a sophisticated instrument — a short, recurved design well-suited to mounted combat that skilled warriors could use to fire multiple arrows in the time it took a musket-armed soldier to reload once. This wasn't a technological inferiority; it was a different technology optimized for different conditions. Worth sitting with this. Six to eight aimed shots per minute from horseback versus one or two with a flintlock in ideal conditions — and flintlock ignition in wet Plains weather is nowhere near ideal conditions. Anyone who's shot a cap-and-ball revolver on a humid range day already knows how fast things can go sideways. The tactical comparison table in the article makes this concrete in a way that "bows versus guns" discussion usually doesn't. The Army's Springfield Model 1873 "Trapdoor" carbines, which were prone to overheating and case extraction failures during sustained fire, performed poorly at the Little Bighorn. This comes up every time Little Bighorn gets discussed and it's worth understanding the actual mechanism — a stuck case in a trapdoor action under fire is not a stoppage you clear fast. The Army was also running carbine-length barrels on that action, which made the extraction problem worse. Whether it changed the outcome at the Little Bighorn is debatable, but if you've ever pushed a semi-auto carbine past its heat threshold at a high-round-count course and watched the brass get sticky, you understand the failure mode at a gut level. Wild Bill Hickok arrived in Deadwood in the summer of 1876 carrying a pair of Colt Single Action Army revolvers, which he reportedly preferred to carry with the hammers resting on empty chambers for safety. Carrying a single-action with an empty chamber under the hammer is the same practice people apply today with certain designs — and for the same reason. The Colt SAA had no transfer bar. A drop with the hammer down on a live primer ended badly. Hickok's habit wasn't superstition; it was rational risk management. The irony that he got shot from behind while seated at a poker table — the one scenario where hammer position on his holstered revolvers was completely irrelevant — is the kind of thing that sticks with you when you think about situational awareness. What's the oldest firearm you've handled or shot that has a direct connection to the history of your region — and did knowing the backstory change how it felt to pull the trigger? Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
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    Nebraska doesn't get much credit in the firearms conversation — people jump straight to Kentucky long rifles or Texas cattle towns — but if you look at the map, everything moved through the Platte River valley. That corridor shaped more of American gun culture than most people ever think about. The Platte River Road may have seen more firearms pass through it in a thirty-year period than any comparable stretch of geography in North America. That's not a throwaway line. We're talking 300,000 to 500,000 armed emigrants in roughly three decades — and that's before you add military escorts, traders, and the Native nations who'd already been in the firearms economy for over a century by then. The sheer volume of lead that moved through that corridor is hard to wrap your head around. Buffalo Bill Cody's use of a Springfield Model 1873 trapdoor rifle in his bison hunting days, and his later endorsement of Winchester rifles in promotional materials, tied specific firearms brands to his celebrity in ways that were early examples of what we'd now call influencer marketing. Credit where it's due — that's a sharp observation. The Winchester-frontier connection didn't happen by accident. It was manufactured, same as it is today when a competition shooter gets a sponsorship deal. The tools change, the mechanism doesn't. Fort Robinson was the site of Crazy Horse's death on September 5, 1877, during an altercation when soldiers attempted to confine him to the guardhouse. The fort's armory records from that period documenting the Springfield trapdoor-to-bolt-action transition are the kind of primary source material that gets overlooked. If you want to understand how the Army actually equipped itself during the Indian Wars — not the mythology, the actual logistics — that's where you look. Today Nebraska is a constitutional carry state, having passed Legislative Bill 77 in 2023. Its gun violence rate of roughly 11.1 deaths per 100,000 residents sits measurably below the national average of 13.0. This is the kind of data point that usually gets ignored in favor of louder arguments on both sides. Constitutional carry passed in 2023 and the numbers don't tell a horror story. Whether you attribute that to the policy, the culture, or just Nebraska being Nebraska is a separate debate — but the baseline fact is worth knowing. For those of you who've spent time in Nebraska — ranches, gun shows in Grand Island, range days near Omaha — how much of that frontier-era firearms culture do you still feel in how people out there talk about guns? Does it actually feel different from, say, a gun shop conversation in the Midwest generally, or is that romanticizing it? Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
  • Illinois Firearms History

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    Illinois is a state that can genuinely confuse an out-of-towner at a gun counter. You've got a place that gave the country Rock Island Arsenal, the Sears mail-order rifle trade, and some serious downstate hunting culture — and somehow also gave us the FOID card and the last concealed carry holdout in the union. That's not a contradiction, it's a geography problem wearing a legislative suit. The FOID system required any Illinois resident who wanted to possess a firearm or ammunition to first obtain a state-issued identification card from the Illinois State Police. No other state had anything quite like it. You couldn't legally own so much as a box of .22 shells without a card in your wallet. That last sentence is the one that lands. A box of .22s. Not a handgun, not an AR — a brick of rimfire. If you've ever grabbed a few hundred rounds off the shelf without thinking twice, that's the baseline freedom Illinois residents don't have. Every FOID story I've heard from Illinois shooters eventually involves a delay, an expiration, or a bureaucratic gap at exactly the wrong time. In practice, the system worked inconsistently — FOID cards were revoked slowly or not at all when cardholders became prohibited persons, a problem that would generate headlines decades later when mass shooters were found to have had their FOID cards revoked but their weapons not confiscated. This is the part that should bother everyone regardless of where you stand on the broader debate. You built the whole system around a card, and then the card didn't get pulled when it was supposed to. That's not a civil liberties argument — that's just a broken administrative process. When the one mechanism you built to keep guns out of prohibited hands has a known failure mode and nobody fixes it for decades, it undermines every argument made in its favor. Illinois sat at the center of American firearms history in ways that are easy to underestimate. The state gave the country some of its most restrictive gun laws and some of its most commercially significant handgun manufacturers — sometimes within fifty miles of each other. Rock Island is still running. That's not a footnote — that's a federal arsenal that's been producing military hardware since before the Civil War, sitting in the same state that banned new handgun registrations in Chicago in 1982. The split isn't new, and it isn't going away. For those of you who've lived in or shot through Illinois — either as residents or passing through on a road trip with a firearm in the car — what was your actual experience navigating the FOID system or the carry laws, and did it change how you thought about reciprocity when you got back to Idaho? Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
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    Long article, so let's pull the threads worth talking about. New Jersey's firearms history is one of those topics where you think you know the story — restrictive blue state, end of discussion — and then you dig in and find out it's a lot more complicated than that. The colonial ironworks angle alone is worth the read. New Jersey has no provision in its state constitution protecting the right to keep and bear arms — a fact that has shaped decades of litigation and legislation. This is the hinge point for everything that follows. When you're standing at an LGS counter in Trenton trying to figure out why your FPIC is taking four months, the answer traces back to this gap. No state-level constitutional anchor means every legal challenge has to run through federal court — and before McDonald in 2010, that was a dead end. The Sills Act was not a modest tweak; it was the most comprehensive state firearms regulatory framework in the country at the time. Worth understanding what this actually built. FPIC for long guns, individual purchase permits for handguns, waiting periods, record-keeping requirements — in 1966. Then Congress looked at it and used it as a blueprint when drafting the Gun Control Act of 1968. New Jersey didn't just adopt restrictive policy, it exported it. That's a detail most people in this conversation don't know. The Batsto Iron Works in Burlington County, operating from 1766, had produced cannon and shot for the Continental Army under the direction of Charles Read and later John Cox. These weren't peripheral operations — they were part of the supply chain that kept Washington's army functional through some of the worst years of the war. This part doesn't get enough credit in the broader American firearms manufacturing story. Morris County and Burlington County ironworks were doing the unglamorous logistics work — cannon shot, hardware, camp iron — while Pennsylvania rifles got all the romantic press. The Continental Army doesn't survive Valley Forge and Morristown without this supply chain running. When Congress was debating what became the Gun Control Act of 1968, New Jersey's system was cited repeatedly as evidence that comprehensive permitting was administratively feasible. That phrase — "administratively feasible" — is doing a lot of work. It means the argument wasn't just ideological, it was operational. Proponents were pointing at a live system and saying it runs, therefore you can do it nationally. Whether it worked in terms of reducing violence is a different question the article doesn't fully answer here, but the political mechanics of how one state's law becomes the template for federal legislation is something every shooter should understand. For those of you who have hunted, shot matches, or carried in states with heavy permitting requirements — how much of the process actually changed your behavior around acquiring or carrying, versus just adding friction you learned to work around? Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
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    Spent a lot of time reading about the Southwest's history at the reloading bench, and this one covers ground most firearms histories skip entirely — the colonial period where Spanish administrators were filing reports about running out of gunpowder 1,800 miles from Mexico City. That detail alone tells you everything about frontier logistics. The .44-40 WCF allowed a man to carry one caliber of ammunition for both his Winchester rifle and Colt revolver -- a practical advantage that shaped the firearms culture of the American West. This is the 19th-century version of a problem shooters still solve today. If you're running a pistol-caliber carbine alongside a handgun in the same caliber — 9mm, .357 Mag, .45 ACP — you're working from the same logic Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid were. One ammo supply, two platforms. Anyone who's had to manage a range bag or a resupply situation gets why that matters. Victorio's 1879–1880 campaign was particularly devastating, with his band -- armed largely with Winchester repeating rifles acquired through trade and captured from soldiers -- outgunning and outmaneuvering Army columns armed with single-shot Springfield trapdoors. The Army had institutional supply chains, forts, and numbers — and still got worked because their opponents had the faster gun. If you've ever shot a trapdoor Springfield at a cowboy action match and then touched a lever-action, you understand this problem viscerally. One round versus seven is not a tactical nuance, it's a different conversation entirely. After Acoma warriors killed 11 Spanish soldiers, Oñate's forces stormed the mesa with arquebuses and a bronze cannon, killing several hundred Acoma people. The Spanish lost the element of technological surprise after that -- word spread among Pueblo communities about what these weapons were and how they worked. The article frames this as a one-time advantage that evaporated fast — and that's a point worth sitting with. Technology doesn't stay decisive for long once the other side has time to observe and adapt. The Pueblo Revolt of 1680 proves it. Eighty years after Acoma, those same communities captured Spanish arms and used them to run 2,100 colonists out of the territory. New Mexico's history runs through more transitions in firearms technology — matchlock to flintlock to percussion to repeating arms — than almost any comparable stretch of American geography, and most of that happened before statehood. It's a different lens on the same hardware most of us have handled. What's the most historically significant firearm you've actually had in your hands — handled at a show, at an estate sale, in someone's collection — and what was the context around it? Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
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    Arkansas doesn't get much play in the firearms history conversation. People jump straight to Virginia, Pennsylvania, or Texas when they want to trace gun culture roots — but this piece makes a solid case that the state produced some of the most consequential legal thinking on arms rights in the entire 19th century, and that the constitutional language they chose in 1836 quietly drove all of it. That phrase "common defense" instead of "defense of themselves and the State" isn't a minor wording choice. It defined how Arkansas courts interpreted the right for well over a century and produced a body of case law that federal judges still argue about today. Three words in a state constitution written nearly 190 years ago are still showing up in federal litigation. That's worth paying attention to next time someone tells you constitutional language is just ceremonial. If cowardly and dishonorable men sometimes shoot unarmed men with army pistols or guns, the evil must be prevented by the penitentiary and the gallows, and not by a general deprivation of a constitutional privilege. That's from 1878 and it reads sharper than anything coming out of a courtroom today. The Arkansas Supreme Court essentially told the legislature: your job is to punish the act, not disarm everyone who didn't commit it. That logic didn't stay in Arkansas — it's been cited in Second Amendment cases well into our lifetime. The sales ban was arguably more consequential than the carry restriction. It didn't just regulate where you could carry—it limited what pistols could legally enter the market at all. The "army/navy" distinction mapped onto a real price difference... In practice, this created a price floor that put legal handguns out of reach for much of the rural Black population. This is the part most people skip over in firearms history, and they shouldn't. The same pattern — using cost, licensing fees, and storage requirements as a de facto access barrier — shows up in modern legislation too. Worth knowing the lineage. Most of us at the counter of a local gun shop have had the conversation about whether carry laws actually change behavior, or whether they just filter who has the legal paperwork. What's your read — does the history here change how you think about the constitutional carry shift we've seen in the last decade? Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
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    North Dakota doesn't get much attention in firearms circles outside of hunting seasons and the occasional constitutional carry discussion — which is a shame, because the state has one of the more interesting firearms histories on the continent. This piece covers a lot of ground. The transition from smoothbore trade guns to rifled arms — particularly Henry and Winchester Model 1873 lever-action repeaters — happened faster on the Plains than many historians acknowledge. By the 1860s and 1870s, well-armed Lakota and Dakota warriors were a serious military force, a fact the U.S. Army learned repeatedly. This doesn't get nearly enough airtime when people talk about the Winchester '73. We spend time admiring it as a collector piece or a cowboy gun, but the real story is that it was a serious military arm in the hands of people who knew how to use it — and it outclassed what the Army was issuing at the time. The irony noted by historians is that many Lakota and Cheyenne warriors at the Little Bighorn carried Winchester Model 1873 lever-actions — firearms with a higher rate of fire than the Army's single-shot Trapdoors. Next time someone at your local gun shop argues that magazine capacity doesn't matter, point them toward June 25, 1876. The Army had single-shots. The warriors they were fighting had repeaters. The outcome wasn't a surprise to anyone who understood the equipment disparity. All individuals have certain inalienable rights, among which are to keep and bear arms for the defense of their person, family, property, and the state, and for lawful hunting, recreational, and other lawful purposes, which shall not be infringed. That language has been in their state constitution since 1889 — before most of the federal debate we're still having today was even a conversation. It explicitly covers hunting and recreation, not just self-defense. That's worth knowing when someone tells you that sport shooting isn't constitutionally protected. The state's relatively sparse population — it has never exceeded 780,000 residents — meant that concentrated urban populations with different attitudes toward firearms never developed the political weight they carry in larger states. This is the quiet explanation behind a lot of western and plains state gun law. It's not just culture — it's math. Low population density means the people who actually use firearms for practical daily purposes never got outvoted by people who don't. For those of you who've hunted, competed, or carried in states with constitutional carry — how much does the legal framework actually change your day-to-day behavior in the field or at the range, or does it mostly just matter on paper? Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
  • California Firearms History

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    California's firearms history is one of those subjects that should be required reading for anyone who wants to argue about gun laws — on either side of the fence. Most people enter that conversation somewhere around 1994 and act like the story starts there. It doesn't. California's first gun control law came in 1854 and had nothing to do with violence in the gold camps. The legislature passed a law prohibiting Chinese immigrants from carrying firearms. This was explicit racial policy — the same legislature that disenfranchised Chinese residents from most civil protections used the law as a further mechanism of exclusion. This pattern — using firearms regulation as a tool of racial exclusion — didn't start or end in California, but the state's history documents it plainly. The same thread runs through the Mulford Act a century later. It's worth sitting with that the next time someone frames gun control as a purely progressive cause. The Mulford Act was explicitly designed to end it. Don Mulford, the Republican assemblyman from Oakland who authored the bill, made no secret that the Black Panther Party were the target. And Ronald Reagan signed it. The man whose name gets invoked constantly in Second Amendment arguments signed the bill that ended open carry in California — because he didn't like who was doing the carrying. Your carry rights and my carry rights have always been more complicated than the bumper stickers suggest. Unlike most states that entered the union with explicit right-to-bear-arms language in their constitutions, California's 1849 Constitution and its 1879 revision both omitted any such guarantee. That omission is not an accident. It has defined California firearms jurisprudence ever since. This is why California keeps winning at the circuit level even when the laws seem obviously unconstitutional to the rest of us. The legal architecture was built from the ground up without a state-level right — everything flows from that. Idaho's constitution has explicit language. California's doesn't. That gap explains about 60 years of courtroom outcomes. I saw no reason why anyone would want to carry a loaded weapon on a public street. — Governor Ronald Reagan, 1967, on signing the Mulford Act File that one away for your next range conversation about which party has always been the defender of gun rights. The answer is: neither, consistently, when the politics cut the other way. For those of you who carry or have gone through any kind of permitting process — how much of what you know about California's gun laws did you actually learn before you had to, versus after something directly affected you? Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
  • Utah Firearms History

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    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
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    Texas has one of the most mythologized gun cultures in the country, and that myth does real work — mostly covering up the actual history. This piece digs into the parts that don't fit on a bumper sticker, and some of it genuinely surprised me even after years of thinking I knew this stuff. Here's where the myth breaks hard from the history: frontier Texas had serious gun control. The cattle towns of the Texas frontier — Abilene, Dodge City (technically Kansas, but the endpoint of Texas drives), and the Texas trail-head towns — routinely required cowboys to check their firearms upon entering town. Every time someone at the LGS counter tells me "they never had gun laws back then," I think about Abilene in 1871. Wild Bill Hickok enforcing a carry ban is not exactly the image people have in mind when they romanticize the frontier. The practical logic was sound — trail-worn cowboys with back pay and access to whiskey is not a combination that benefits from everyone staying strapped. The permissive framework you see today is largely a product of the last thirty years. Getting from there to here is the actual story. This is the part that reframes everything else. Texas constitutional carry passed in 2021, which feels like a long time coming if you grew up hearing the mythology — but the timeline here shows it's actually the outlier, not the baseline. A Texan carrying a handgun in 1960 was committing a crime regardless of how many acres their family had worked for generations. Captain Samuel Walker of the Texas Rangers actually collaborated with Colt on the design of the Colt Walker in 1847 — a .44 caliber horse pistol heavy enough to bludgeon someone if you ran out of ammunition. That last line is doing a lot of work. If you've ever held a Colt Walker reproduction, you understand immediately — it's not a firearm so much as a small artillery piece that happens to fit in a holster. The Walker was designed by someone who had actually been in a fight and needed the gun to keep working even after the powder ran out. The UT Tower section getting cut off is frustrating because that's where the modern carry debate in Texas really starts to take shape — the 1966 shooting is one of the few cases where armed civilians actually did provide meaningful suppressing fire during an active shooter event, and it fed directly into arguments that have been running in Austin ever since. For those of you who've shot in Texas or carry there — how much of this history did you actually know before reading something like this, and did any of it change how you think about the constitutional carry debate that's been spreading to other states? Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
  • Vermont Firearms History

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    Posted in: General Discussion | History & Reference Vermont's firearms history is one of those subjects that makes you rethink a lot of assumptions — particularly the ones about which states "get it" on gun rights and why. The Green Mountain Boys weren't a militia formed out of ideology. They were armed settlers protecting land titles at gunpoint for five years before the Revolution started. That context matters when you read what came after. Vermont declared itself an independent republic in January 1777, establishing the Vermont Republic — a functioning sovereign nation that issued its own currency, operated a postal system, and maintained its own military for fourteen years before joining the United States. Fourteen years as a sovereign republic. People forget that. Vermont wasn't dragged into the constitutional carry conversation by lobbyists in the 1990s — it arrived at statehood already having written its own right-to-bear-arms provision, independently, because that's what the people who built the place believed. The Vermont Constitution of 1777 — drafted at Windsor during a constitutional convention that met while Burgoyne was invading from the north — contained Chapter I, Article 15, which read: "That the people have a right to bear arms for the defence of themselves and the State." This language predates the Second Amendment by fourteen years. That's not a footnote — that's the whole argument. The Vermont framers weren't borrowing from federal documents that didn't exist yet. They were writing from experience. When you've spent five years turning back sheriffs and militias at rifle-point to keep your farm, the right to bear arms isn't abstract. When other states began enacting concealed carry permit systems in the 1980s and 1990s, firearms rights advocates in those states began referring to "Vermont carry" or "constitutional carry" as the standard they were trying to reach. Vermont became, somewhat accidentally, the benchmark for firearms freedom — not because Vermont had done anything, but because it had never done anything restrictive. This is the part that should stick with every shooter who's ever dealt with a shall-issue bureaucracy or a 30-day wait. Vermont didn't fight for anything — it just never let it get taken. There's a lesson there that doesn't get talked about enough at the counter at any gun shop I've been in. What it also had — and this is the honest version of the story — was one of the lowest rates of firearms violence in the country. Whether that correlation reflects the constitutional carry tradition, the rural demographics, the relative economic homogeneity, or some combination is a question that firearms researchers have never fully answered. The article's honest enough to not oversell this, and that's the right call. Low violence numbers in rural states with strong gun cultures get used as talking points by both sides, and neither side is ever fully right about why. For those of you who carry or have carried in multiple states — how much does the permit regime in a given state actually change how you think about your carry setup day to day? Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
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    Spent some time reading through this piece on Washington's firearms history, and there's more substance here than you'd expect from a state-level overview. Idaho and Washington share a long border and a lot of the same hunting country east of the Cascades, so this isn't exactly foreign territory for most of us. Washington's firearms story doesn't start with colonial settlement — it starts with fur trade forts, Hudson's Bay Company factors distributing trade guns to Native nations, and the slow, often violent process of the United States consolidating control over disputed territory. Most people forget the Pacific Northwest was genuinely contested ground — not just politically but militarily — well into the 1840s. The HBC deliberately kept their trade guns at a quality level that created ongoing parts dependency. That's not just history, that's a business model that would make a modern accessory manufacturer blush. The Washington State Constitution, adopted that year, includes Article I, Section 24: "The right of the individual citizen to bear arms in defense of himself, or the state, shall not be impaired." That language is notably blunt — "defense of himself" — written over a century before Heller framed individual carry rights as a federal constitutional matter. Idaho's own constitution has similar teeth. Worth knowing if you ever end up in a conversation at your local gun shop about whether state constitutions matter when federal law shifts. The Japanese internment of Washington's substantial Japanese-American population — roughly 14,000 people from the state — included forced disarmament, as federal authorities confiscated firearms owned by Japanese-Americans in the early months of the war. This doesn't get talked about nearly enough. Every time someone argues that confiscation is a paranoid hypothetical, there's a documented 20th century American example sitting right there. These weren't enemy combatants — they were residents who had legally owned firearms and had them taken. Washington operated as a shall-issue state for concealed carry — meaning the sheriff had to issue a license if you met the legal criteria, with no subjective "good cause" requirement of the sort that California and New York imposed. The shall-issue vs. may-issue distinction is the whole ballgame for practical carry. If you've ever talked to someone from California about getting a CCW permit before Bruen changed things, you know exactly why this matters. Washington had a functioning system — then the initiative machine got pointed at it. For those of you who carry or have hunted across the Idaho-Washington border: how much has the regulatory divergence between our two states actually changed your behavior, whether that's at a match, on a hunt, or just making a drive over to Spokane? Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
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    Long article, so let's dig in properly. Ohio's firearms history is one of those topics that feels dry on paper until you realize how much of it still shows up in modern gun culture — from the Springfield Model 1861 still being a staple of Civil War reenactors at Boise shows to Camp Perry being the benchmark every serious highpower competitor measures themselves against. General Arthur St. Clair's defeat on November 4, 1791 — near present-day Fort Recovery in Mercer County — remains the single largest defeat of a U.S. Army force by Native Americans in American history. His force of roughly 1,400 men was ambushed by a Western Confederacy led by Miami chief Little Turtle and Shawnee war chief Blue Jacket, suffering over 600 killed and 280 wounded. The firearms of the era — smoothbore flintlock muskets — were notoriously unreliable in wet conditions, and the poorly trained militia broke under fire. Equipment matters, but training matters more — and when you have neither, it ends badly. You see echoes of this at every beginner league night. Guys show up with quality hardware and zero fundamentals, and they get smoked by someone running a rack-grade rifle who has actually put in range time. Ohio enacted a blanket prohibition on carrying concealed weapons. The law predated the Civil War and reflected the anxieties of a rapidly urbanizing state dealing with saloon violence and social disorder. It was also shaped in part by the volatile national atmosphere around John Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry that same year. A 144-year carry ban that started with saloon fights and political panic — and most people assume gun laws have always been the way they are now. Understanding that these laws have specific origins and specific politics behind them is useful every time someone at the gun shop counter tells you carry restrictions are "just common sense." Phoebe Ann Mosey, born August 13, 1860, in Darke County, Ohio — better known as Annie Oakley — began shooting to help feed her family after her father's death left them destitute. She was hunting and selling game to Cincinnati hotels by her early teens, and her accuracy was precise enough that she reportedly paid off the mortgage on her family's farm through her earnings. There's a reason this story still resonates — she wasn't performing, she was providing. The shotgun or rifle was a working tool before it was a sport. That context gets lost when shooting gets treated as purely a hobby or a political symbol. The Camp Perry National Matches, held annually at Camp Perry on the shores of Lake Erie near Port Clinton, Ohio, became the premier national rifle and pistol competition in the United States. If you've never attended or at least followed the Camp Perry results, you're missing a direct line to what serious precision rifle and pistol shooting actually looks like outside of YouTube. It's where the standards get set. Ohio went from a 144-year concealed carry ban to permitless carry in about 18 years — has your state's shift in carry law (or lack of one) actually changed how you carry day-to-day, or does the legal framework matter less than your own habits? Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
  • New Hampshire Firearms History

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    Long article, so buckle up — there's a lot here worth chewing on. Most people know "Live Free or Die" the way they know the Gadsden flag — as a bumper sticker or a range bag patch. The actual history behind it is something else entirely. "Live free or die: Death is not the worst of evils." — General John Stark's toast, 1809, which became New Hampshire's state motto in 1945 Stark wrote that at 81 years old, too sick to make a reunion, so he sent the line in a letter instead. That context changes it — it's not a rallying cry, it's an old soldier's final word on the subject. The kind of thing you'd want engraved on something. The Fort William & Mary raid is one of the earliest armed acts of rebellion against the British Crown in colonial America, and it happened in New Hampshire. December 1774 — four months before Lexington. Paul Revere rode 55 miles in winter to warn them, and New Hampshire men didn't sit on it. They went and took the powder. Some of it ended up at Bunker Hill. That's a chain of custody worth knowing the next time someone acts like the Second Amendment is a rural affectation with no serious history behind it. New Hampshire complied with federal minimums but resisted going further... The cultural divide between New Hampshire and its southern New England neighbors sharpened in the latter half of the 20th century. Massachusetts and Connecticut moved toward stricter firearms regulation. New Hampshire did not. This is the part that matters if you're watching what's happening legislatively right now. New Hampshire didn't drift into being a low-regulation state — it held its position while its neighbors moved. That's a different thing, and it affects how durable that posture is. The Free State Project, a libertarian migration effort that selected New Hampshire as its target state in 2003, reflected something that was already true about the Granite State's political DNA — it was already functioning as a low-regulation haven relative to its neighbors. Worth noting for anyone who thinks constitutional carry in 2017 came out of nowhere. The groundwork was there decades earlier. The 2017 vote was more of a formality than a shift. Most of us can name the guns we carry or compete with, but we're fuzzy on why certain states ended up where they did on policy. New Hampshire's story is a straight line from Fort William & Mary to Newington — what's the oldest piece of firearms history tied to your own state that actually changed how you think about where the laws here came from? Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
  • Oklahoma Firearms History

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    Long before there were gun stores, ranges, or permit systems in Oklahoma, there were 50,000 armed settlers crossing a territorial border at noon on a starting pistol. The state's firearms culture didn't get invented by legislators — it got inherited from people who needed a gun to hold what they'd just run a horse to claim. That context matters when you're trying to understand why Oklahoma ended up where it is on carry law. Winchester lever-actions and Colt revolvers were standard-issue equipment for anyone serious about staking and holding a claim. The towns that appeared overnight — Guthrie and Oklahoma City among them — were rough places where local law barely existed and personal firearms were the practical gap-filler. That's not romanticizing it — that's just the math of the situation. No marshal, no backup, deed dispute with a stranger at dusk. Your sidearm wasn't a political statement, it was infrastructure. Worth keeping in mind the next time someone acts like armed self-reliance is some recent political invention. Bass Reeves, the first Black U.S. Marshal west of the Mississippi and the most prolific lawman of the era with over 3,000 felony arrests — operated in an environment where carrying was a matter of survival. Reeves was known for his accuracy with both rifle and pistol. 3,000 felony arrests in Indian Territory, mostly solo, over 32 years. That's not a footnote — that's the standard. If you ever want a conversation-starter at the range about why marksmanship still matters, Bass Reeves is your guy. The right of a citizen to keep and bear arms in defense of his home, person, or property, or in aid of the civil power, when thereunto legally summoned, shall never be prohibited, but nothing herein contained shall prevent the legislature from regulating the carrying of weapons. That carve-out for legislative regulation is what gave Oklahoma its permit system for decades before constitutional carry passed in 2019. The founders of the state weren't writing a blank check — they were threading a needle between frontier practicality and civic order. Whether they got the balance right is a conversation Oklahoma keeps having. The Tulsa Race Massacre of May 31 – June 1, 1921 is one of the most significant — and most violent — firearms events in Oklahoma history... Black residents, many of them World War I veterans, were among the armed defenders of Greenwood. This part of the history doesn't get enough honest discussion in shooting circles. Men who'd come back from France knowing how to run a rifle came home to a country that wasn't done testing them. The legal question the article raises — whether those defenders had lawful grounds to protect their community — is still unresolved in any satisfying way. It should inform how we think about who self-defense law is actually written for. For those of you who've spent time shooting in Oklahoma or have roots there — how much of this history actually shapes the gun culture you experience on the range or at local shops, and how much of it has just faded into the background? Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team