New Jersey Firearms History: From Colonial Forges to the Nation's Strictest Gun Laws
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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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