Americans love
their guns – love them so much there are actually more guns in this country
than there are people. Love them so much that, when dozens of people – mostly
children – were slaughtered at an elementary school in Newtown, CT, the
media became filled with politicians and gun nuts defending lax gun control
laws by claiming guns are an American heritage, an inherent right – why, even a
God-given right. (I must have missed the part in the Bible about the Arsenal of
Eden.)
Americans love
their guns, though, not because it’s a right or heritage. They love their guns
because of a mythology that has grown around them, a mythology inspired by
cheap novels and cheaper movies. Most of what Americans think they know of
their history is pure myth, and no where else in American history is there more
mythology than the history of guns in this country.
Myth #1: The
Second Amendment was written to protect the right to own guns.
Fact: The
original intention of the Second Amendment was not to protect gun ownership,
but to prohibit a standing army. Many of our Founding Fathers felt a standing
army would tempt future leaders to indulge in foreign adventurism. In this they
were right. Just think about Iraq.
Originally, the
first line of the Second Amendment was worded something like, “Congress will
make no provision for a standing army, but will rely on the militia of the
states for the country’s defense.” Because of this reliance on militias, it
continued, “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be
infringed.”
The amendment, as
originally written, was strongly opposed by George Washington and his
lieutenants. Washington was well aware of the failings of the militia. In 1754,
when Washington was a colonial militia officer, undisciplined militiamen under
his command killed a French envoy, setting off the French and Indian War. Nor
did the performance of rebel militia during the Revolution change his mind.
Because of
Washington’s opposition, the wording prohibiting a standing army was removed
from the Second Amendment, leaving just the last enigmatic line: “A well
regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right
of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”
In the end, the
Founders believed each state would maintain its own militia by requiring each
male citizen to serve a certain number of years in the organized militia. It
was essentially a military draft of sorts. Today, however, there is no
mandatory military service in the United States. Less than one percent of
Americans ever serve in the military, so a “well regulated Militia” cannot be
the answer to America’s love for guns.
Myth #2: A
ragtag Patriot militia beat the most powerful fighting force in the world, the
British Army.
Fact: After the
battles at Lexington-Concord and Bunker Hill, the militia played at best a
minor role in the Revolution. It was a well-trained, professional Continental
Army led by George Washington – and backed up by the French army and navy –
that defeated the British.
Contrary to
popular belief, Minutemen were not born of the American Revolution, but were
part of colonial forces since the mid-1650s. They were not ordinary militia,
but an elite force of well-trained military reservists capable of responding
instantly to attacks from hostile Indians or Frenchmen. Some American rebel
militia usurped the name “Minutemen” in the months leading up to the
Revolution, but the real pre-Revolution Minutemen actually ended up on both
sides of the war.
The Patriot
militia, on the other hand, was much less effective. In a 1776 letter to the
president of the Congress, Washington wrote: “To place any dependence upon militia
is assuredly resting upon a broken staff. Men just dragged from the tender
scenes of domestic life, unaccustomed to the din of arms, totally unacquainted
with every kind of military skill ... makes them timid and ready to fly from
their own shadows.”
And fly they did
– frequently. At the Battle of Camden, the militia that made up half the
Patriot force broke and ran at the first shot, causing a defeat for Maj. Gen.
Horatio Gates. Such performance was so much the norm that in the Battle of
Cowpens in South Carolina, Brig. Gen. Daniel Morgan used it to lure British
forces, including Tarleton’s legion, into a trap.
Morgan placed his
greenest militia at the front of his lines and, knowing they would break and
run, pleaded with them to fire just two volleys before retreating. Tarleton’s
forces chased the militia into the teeth of Morgan’s lines, composed of
Continental soldiers, including the general’s famed Morgan’s Rifles, and more
experience militia. Tarleton’s forces were annihilated.
In his article,
“Militia or Regular Army,” published in the European Journal of
American Studies, historian Tal Tovy points out that Washington’s early
strategy of hit-and-run tactics was based entirely on his need to rely on
militia with unreliable fighting abilities. It was only after he had time to
develop a professionally-trained Continental Army that Washington began
confronting the British head-on.
It was that
Continental Army, with the backing of several thousand French troops, which
brought about the surrender of the British Army at Yorktown, VA.
Myth #3: Our
Founding Fathers believed an armed citizenry was needed to defend liberty
against a tyrannical government.
Fact: As
discussed earlier, Washington and his lieutenants convinced Congress that
militias could not be relied on alone to defend the country against foreign
invaders. Why then would they think the same unreliable force would be able to
defend the Constitution against their own government, tyrannical or otherwise?
Furthermore, when
the Whiskey Rebellion erupted in 1791 – just three years after the Constitution
was ratified – it was harshly put down by an army composed of federalized state
militia led by President George Washington. The harsh response
to the rebellion was applauded by Americans and proved the new U.S. government
would brook no unrest among the states.
Several more such
rebellions were similarly suppressed. Most notable was John Brown’s attack on
Harper’s Ferry, also put down by well-trained federal forces (U.S. Marines) led
by U.S. Army Col. Robert E. Lee.
Myth #4: Gun
control is a modern liberal plot to take weapons away from honest citizen gun
owners.
Reenactment of the Gunfight at OK Corral. (c. James G. Howes, 2008) |
Far fewer cowboys
carried guns on the trail than you might expect. In fact, many cattle barons
prohibited their cow hands from carrying personal weapons to avoid violence
among their workers, and also to prevent an accidental gunshot that could
stampede the cattle.
Still, it was
conceivable that out on the range, a gun might be a necessity. But once in town
those guns had to be turned into the local sheriff’s office. Even in towns
without gun control laws, saloons normally wouldn’t serve you until you first
turned over your gun to the bartender.
Gunfights, in fact,
were relatively rare in the not so Wild West because of these strict gun
control laws. The most famous shootout, the gunfight at the OK Corral in
Tombstone, AZ, ironically was fought over Tombstone’s gun control law. The
Clanton gang refused to turn in their guns and the Earp brothers and Doc
Holliday set out to force the issue.
Gun laws in old
Tombstone, in fact, were stricter than they are in Arizona today where citizens
are allowed to carry handguns nearly everywhere they go. It makes you wonder if
the Clanton gang hadn’t actually won the OK Corral gunfight.
So where did all
this Old West gun lore come from? Dime novels written in the late 1800s to
entertain tenderfoots in the East were notorious for exaggerating the myth of
the cowboy and his six shooter. Self-serving books written by or about
legendary lawmen like Wyatt Earp and Pat Garrett added to the mythology. A
fledgling Hollywood added to it by making idealized cowboy movies a mainstay of
its early films.
But the worst
perpetrator of these gun myths is the National Rifle Association. The NRA and
the gun manufacturers it represents have pushed these myths down the throat of
Americans for decades. They call weapons like the Colt .45 revolver and the
Winchester repeating rifle the guns that won the West. And the massive amounts
of money they give to politicians make many a lawmaker a true believer.
In fact,
relatively few people in the Old West owned handguns. They were expensive and
hard to shoot accurately. Repeating rifles were also too expensive for most
folks. Rejected by the U.S. Army, repeating rifles largely ended up in the
hands of hostile Native American warriors. The most widely used gun the in the
Old West, in fact, was the unglamorous double-barrel shotgun.
But the NRA has
succeeded in making too many Americans believe you can’t be a good American
unless you’re heavily armed at all times. And that puts the lie to the last
great gun myth.
That the good
guys always win.