<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" version="2.0"><channel><title><![CDATA[Washington Firearms History: From Territorial Trails to Initiative Battles]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p dir="auto">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.</p>
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<p dir="auto">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.</p>
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<p dir="auto">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.</p>
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<p dir="auto">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."</p>
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<p dir="auto">That language is notably blunt — "defense of himself" — written over a century before <em>Heller</em> 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.</p>
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<p dir="auto">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.</p>
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<p dir="auto">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.</p>
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<p dir="auto">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.</p>
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<p dir="auto">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 <em>Bruen</em> changed things, you know exactly why this matters. Washington had a functioning system — then the initiative machine got pointed at it.</p>
<p dir="auto">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?</p>
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<p dir="auto"><strong><a href="https://boisegunclub.com/handbook/washington-firearms-history" rel="nofollow ugc">Read the full article in The Handbook →</a></strong> | By The Boise Gun Club Team</p>
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