by David Lewis » Tue Jun 15, 2010 3:45 pm
In England, or as Andy Griffith says, "back in the old country", there was a very old prohibition against carrying weapons in church, which included into the churchyard outside the church itself. This may have stemmed from common-law, or possibly from canon law. I've even heard this argument used currently to say that you can't carry a gun in a church, even with a permit, which is not true. It is true if the church posts, however. One could only carry on those premises if the weapon was sealed by a priest into the scabbard (usually edged weapons). Violating this was literally a 'breach of the peace."
My reading & limited research indicates that guns were generally carried by most of the male populace old enough to do so, and that they were responsible in carrying them. This included carrying into saloons, and even while drinking. One deterrent to stupid shenanigans was that everyone else was armed. Remember Heinlein's dictum: "An armed society is a polite society."
Elmer Keith (1899-1984) grew up in the last vestiges of what we generally consider the old west, was taught to ride & shoot by Union & Confederate veterans, and knew many of the men who "tamed the west", the famous, infamous, and unknown. In his book Sixguns and his autobiography, "Hell, I Was There", he relates many stories, some first-hand, some second-hand, of violence on the frontier. One story was of an easterner who thought the town would be easy pickings, & robbed the bank. The bank teller called the railroad depot, & the station agent came out & gave the robber both barrels from his shotgun. The robber holed up in his hotel, in a corner room on the second story. The townsfolk simply retrieved their guns and shot up the room from 2 sides, ending the threat...and the life of the robber.
Teddy Roosevelt, in Ranch Life and the Hunting Trail, also wrote of the daily fact of life that everyone carried guns. He also wrote of the attitude of individual responsibility that was prevalent in that society, as well.
Neither of these sources alluded to the celluloid practice of "leave your guns with the sheriff, & pick them up on the way out of town." They, & their contemporaries, would have laughed at such a suggestion.
David