Missouri has been discussed and cussed for
many things over the years. Once fact does stand out about the State... it
produced some of the first pistolmen the Nation had ever seen. Called "The Boys"
by those who sympathized with them, they were known variously as "guerrillas,
bandits, outlaws and rebels" by those who did not. When I use the term "pistolmen"
I refer to the offensive use of the handgun, rather than the defensive
use of it as had been the practice until then. In the days that I speak of they
were not called "gunfighters". That term was coined by the writers of Dime
Novels of the 1880's. "They were called
pistolmen, and they referred to their weapon as a pistol, or by the make ... a
Colt's .44. The Missouri guerrilla was the first expert pistolman. According to
U.S. Army dispatches, the guerrillas used this 'new' war weapon with devastating
results."
(from Gone to Texas by
Forrest Cater, preface, page xii)
"Revolvers
were their weapons. They were the first to perfect pistol work. With reins in
teeth, a Colt's pistol in each hand, their charges were a fury in suicidal
mania..."
(from Gone to Texas page 8)
It is said "the Boys" each carried
from 6 to 8 pistols on their person and on their horses.
"The real secret to their
success in combat against a more numerous Union enemy, aside from their
guerrilla tactics, lay in their superior weapon, the Colt's revolving pistol.
The revolver was the primary weapon of Quantrill's men, and there is abundant
evidence that they were deadly with this frontier weapon. It became customary
for the guerrilla's to carry from two to eight revolvers in their belts and on
their saddles. These rapid firing five and six shot weapons, in addition to the
customary Sharps carbine, gave them a tremendous volume of fire power..."
(from The Grey Ghosts of the Confederacy
by Richard S. Brownlee, page 104)
Not only did "the Boys" have a lot of fire
power, they did not have to stop and reload like the Yankees with their
single-shot muskets and carbines. Having another pistol has always been the
fastest reload. Two or three more makes a lot of sense. Pistolmen of all ages
have known that. It has not been a secret. It is only in the last 30 years or so
this fact has been lost to the general shooting public. All the shooting "games"
have been designed around reloading a single pistol, and none if any has allowed
for the use of another one or two pistols. At least not until Cowboy Action
Shooting. But real pistolmen, those who used a gun seriously, have always known
it's a good idea to have one or two or three more hid on you someplace. Johnny
Hopper, a partisan during the Occupation of France in the 1940's, changed from
being a mild mannered mushroom farmer to a killer of Nazi's. He never carried
less than 2 and often had as many as 6 pistols on his person. Hopper was once
ambushed by the Chief of Police in Caan. The Chief had (according to the
newspaper) a dozen men with him. Hopper pulled his pistol, killed the Chief of
Police, jumped on a nearby bicycle and made a clean getaway. In an indignant
reply to the newspaper a few days later, one of the original ambushers claimed
there had not been 12 but only 3 with the Chief when Hopper shot his way clear.
(from Smithsonian, Vol. 24, Number 3, Sept. 1993)
Whatever the truth of the situation, like most who use a gun seriously Johnny
Hopper knew the value of having enough of them with you.
One of the lessons we should re-learn in
this day and age is the lesson of packing more than one gun. Even if it is just
into the woods to hunt Bambi. If you have ever been on a hunt and had something
break on your gun, and it was the only gun you had with you, you will sympathize
with my statement. And if you are carrying a pistol for more serious reasons the
consequences could be lethal.
That the revolver was used an offensive
weapon by "the Boys" in Missouri is shown by an account pieced together from
reports filed after the fight known later as the "Centralia Massacre". I quote
from Grey Ghosts of the Confederacy, page 219-220.
"Nearing the
Singleton farm, the Union forces topped the gentle rise and saw ... a line of
two hundred dismounted guerrillas standing silently to their horses... Major
Johnson was a brave officer... he calmly dismounted his company.....and formed
a twenty-yard line of battle. The guerrillas were astounded... John Kroger...
said... "the fools are going to fight us on foot." and then added, "God help'em."
... led by a screaming Bill Anderson they charged up the hill at the Union
infantry. Johnson's men fired one volley with their single-shot Enfield muskets.
That volley,
downhill, was high, and only three of the partisans were hit... In the next
minute the guerrillas, their terrible revolvers popping, had ridden into the
terrified Union infantry, through it, and had scattered their horses. Frank
James stated that some of the soldiers were desperately... attempting to reload.
In a few moments, most were dead... The guerrillas roared back into Centralia
and rode over Theis's men... in a little more than an hour the Thirty-Ninth
Missouri Infantry had lost 114 men and two officers killed, two men wounded and
six men missing."
The terrible efficiency of the Missouri
guerrillas with their handguns may account for some of the Government's fear of
guns in the hands of it's citizens. At least that may be one of the places where
the anti-gun sentiment in the Government got it's start. There is ample evidence
it did in Missouri.
Among the pistolmen of Missouri (though he
was born in Illinois and was only in Missouri a short time) was one James Butler
Hickok, more commonly known as "Wild Bill". Missouri and Mr. Hickok have the
distinction of one of the first "wild west" gunfights. Although I am sure such
duels took place before this time, Hickok's legacy being what it is has helped
fuel the legend. Not being adverse to publicity in any way did not hinder his
reputation either. Either way, the shoot-out took place July 21, 1865 on the
Town Square in downtown Springfield, Missouri. Apparently it was not uncommon at
the time to have armed men around the town.
"Springfield at the time had
more than its fair quota of belligerent heavily armed men...."
(from Triggernometry by Eugene Cunningham, page
160). The fight was with one Dave Tutt of Yellville, Arkansas. Most folks
feel it was over a woman who had been with Hickok and then had taken up with
Tutt. It may be, but she later showed up in Deadwood with Hickok and if she held
any ill feelings about him killing her lover she never showed it. Tutt and
Hickok had been in a card game on the night of the 20th and had quarreled. The
next day about noon they were on opposite sides of the Town Square and faced
each other. Walking with guns in hand, Tutt fired and missed. Hickok stopped and
in his own words "held up the pistol and pointed it at Tutt and fired." The shot
was through Tutt's heart which settled the matter. It is 75 or 80 yards across
the Square which
"...
would seem to place Hickok as a cool and deadly marksman. There was no question
here... of the 'quick draw'.... He saw Tutt coming across the square.... He
expected trouble... and challenged Tutt, ordering him not to cross the square.
When Tutt fired and missed, Hickok deliberately fired his shot."
(from Triggernometry page 161)
Hickok wound up in Court over the
shooting but was exonerated, the Court ruling that he acted in self-defense.
Hickok's favorite pistols by the way were the Colt's .36 Navy Models. Shortly
after this affair Mr. Hickok moved on to Kansas where he caused considerable ink
to be used in printing his escapades in the frontier towns, first at Fort Riley
and then more notably at Hays City and Abilene.
Missouri is also credited by some with the
invention of the "Border Roll" or "Road Agents Spin". It was said to be used to
extract oneself from a sticky situation where someone had "the drop" on you and
told you to hand over your guns. The pistol was offered, butt first to the other
person, except it is held upside down with the trigger finger in the guard and
the barrel in the hand. As Eugene Cunningham describes it in
Triggernomety page 415& 416,
"The spin is started by a slight jerk upward of the hand
accompanied by the release of the barrel. The forefinger is the pivot...the butt
comes upward from the horizontal, describes a half-circle... and smacks into the
waiting palm. The.. thumb drops to the hammer, cocks it while the forefinger
holds back the trigger..."
This little trick was used by pistolmen as notable as John Wesley Hardin in
later years. Forrest Carter credits the invention of it to the Missouri
guerrillas.
"It would
become known as the "Border Roll" in honor of the Missouri Border pistolmen who
had invented it..." (from Gone to Texas page 75)
Missouri has had the reputation of producing
some bad men. And it has. One of the more notorious being General William
Tecumseh Sherman. It has also produced more than it's share of good men. One of
the more notable was Elmer Keith, born in Hardin, Missouri in 1899. We need some
more like him.
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