Mississippi Firearms History
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Spent some time going down the rabbit hole on Mississippi firearms history — figured it was worth bringing here since a lot of what shaped modern gun culture and carry law in this country runs right through that state.
A well-armed traveler on the Natchez Trace wasn't making a political statement — he was making a survival calculation.
That line cuts through a lot of the modern noise. When your carry gun debate is framed entirely around politics, it's easy to forget that for most of American history armed self-reliance was just logistics. The Trace was genuinely dangerous — organized gangs, ambushes, no law within fifty miles. The culture that grew out of that didn't just disappear when roads got better.
Mississippi's Black Codes of 1865, passed by the all-white state legislature almost immediately after the war, included explicit firearms prohibitions targeting freed Black Mississippians. The codes made it illegal for freedmen to carry firearms without a license issued by a local board — a licensing authority composed entirely of white Democrats with every incentive to deny applications.
Anyone who thinks licensing schemes are neutral needs to read this paragraph twice. A permit requirement is only as clean as the people administering it — and history has a long record of those systems being used as disarmament tools against specific populations. That context doesn't make every modern licensing debate simple, but it does make it more honest.
Mississippi had no significant domestic arms manufacturing infrastructure. The state's military was dependent on imports from Northern manufacturers (cut off by secession), European suppliers reached through blockade-running, Confederate arsenals in Georgia and Virginia, and whatever weapons individual soldiers brought from home.
This is something that gets glossed over in a lot of Civil War conversation. Supply chain problems lost as many engagements as tactics did. Confederate soldiers showing up to rifle-musket fights carrying smoothbores — that range disadvantage compounded over four years. You see echoes of that same principle every time there's a supply disruption and half the club shows up to a match asking if anyone has extra 9mm.
The piece covers a lot of ground — colonial trade guns through Reconstruction-era disarmament — and it doesn't try to make any of it tidy. Worth the read.
What's a piece of regional firearms history — Mississippi, Idaho, wherever you're from — that you think most shooters in your area don't actually know about?
Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
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