<?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[Nebraska Firearms History: From the Platte River Trail to Constitutional Carry]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p dir="auto">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.</p>
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<p dir="auto">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.</p>
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<p dir="auto">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.</p>
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<p dir="auto">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.</p>
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<p dir="auto">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.</p>
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<p dir="auto">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.</p>
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<p dir="auto">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.</p>
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<p dir="auto">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.</p>
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<p dir="auto">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.</p>
<p dir="auto">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?</p>
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<p dir="auto"><strong><a href="https://boisegunclub.com/handbook/nebraska-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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