The
All-American Gun
by
John R. Lott, Jr.
by John R. Lott, Jr.
DIGG THIS
Armed
America: The Remarkable Story of How and Why Guns Became as American
as Apple Pie,
By Clayton Cramer, Nelson, 320 pages, $26.99
Did you know
that in New York City, through 1969 virtually all the public high
schools had riflery teams?
Thousands of
students carried their rifles on subways, buses and streets on their
way to school, when they went to practice in the afternoon and on
their way home. And until 1963, all commercial pilots were required
to carry guns and were allowed to carry guns until 1987.
Gun laws have
certainly changed over time.
Today towns
such as Kennesaw, Ga., Greenfeld, Idaho and Geuda Springs, Kan.,
which all require residents to own guns, are considered the oddity.
But Clayton Cramer’s terrific new book, "Armed America," shows that,
in fact, gun ownership has been deeply woven into this country’s
history since the colonial period.
Cramer shows
that guns aren’t inherently the problem. In our day, criminals may
have replaced Indians as a danger facing most citizens, but it may
also shock many readers to learn how comfortable Americans once
were with their guns.
In colonial
times, as Cramer argues, people didn’t own guns just for hunting.
Numerous laws mandated that people have guns for personal defense
and defense of the community, at home, while traveling and even
in church.
Heads of households,
whether men or women, were required to have a gun at home and fines
of up to a month’s wages were imposed on those who failed to meet
this requirement.
In some states
such as Maryland, fines were paid directly to inspectors so that
authorities had a strong incentive to check. The only people exempt
from these rules were Quakers, some indentured servants, or, in
the South, blacks.
Fear
of attack by Indians and England’s European enemies meant that people
were required to own and carry guns when traveling, though sometimes
older people were exempted.
At
least six colonies required people have guns with them at church.
Church officials were required to check parishioners when they arrived
for services to ensure they had a gun. Clergymen were required to
have guns, too. Contrast that with the political firestorms that
erupt these days when states merely let churches decide whether
concealed handgun permit holders can carry guns on church property.
In our day,
only about 45 percent of households own a gun, whereas gun ownership
in colonial America was much higher, as measured by probate records.
Guns were bequeathed to the next generation in about 70 percent
of cases.
The
fascinating firsthand historical accounts that Cramer provides indicate
that guns were cheap, readily available and essentially everywhere.
Given America’s historical amnesia, Cramer’s book helps to remind
us about that part of our history many now find improbable.
This article
was originally published Sunday, March 11, 2007, in the New
York Post.
March
12, 2007
John
Lott [send him mail] is the author
of The
Bias Against Guns (Regnery 2003).
Copyright
© 2007 John Lott
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