The People Were Armed

Virginia Company arrived at Cape Henry on April 26, 1607 and fired a pistol at Indians who attacked the first landing party.Smith, J. 1608. "A True Relation...". Southern Literary Messenger. February 1845;11(2):5. MacFarlane & Sons 1845 Richmond Virginia. Available HERE. Archived by University of Michigan HERE.

The Charters for Virginia, Acadia, Rhode Island, New England, Massachusetts Bay, Carolina, and Pennsylvania all sanctioned the acquisition, transport, and use of firearms for defense of settlements. Read the Charters HERE or HERE.

For 182 years prior to ratification of the Constitution, American colonists regularly and constantly used firearms for defense, hunting, fighting, enforcing civil order, social functions, and militia training.Percy, G. 1608. "A Discourse of the Plantation..." - excerpts. Archived by the National Humanities Center HERE.Andrews, JC. Militia of Jamestown Colony, 1607-1622. Military Collector & Historian; 2008, Vol. 60 Issue 4, p280.Philbrick, N. Mayflower: A Story of Courage, Community, and War. New York:Penguin Books; 2006:88., Sons of the American Revolution. Watertown's Military History. Boston:D. Clapp & Son; 1907:1-3. Available HERE or HERE.Morgan, ES. American Slavery, American Freedom. New York: WW Norton; 1975:240. 

Colonial towns and villages offered communal safety, but the frontier offered land ownership and wealth. More than 90% of Colonial Americans lived rural. Westward expansion was incessant.Trewartha GT. Types of Rural Settlement in Colonial America. Geographical Review. 1946;36(4):568–596., Friis HR. A Series of Population Maps of the Colonies and the United States, 1625-1790. Geographical Review. 1940;30(3): 463–470. Rural life required guns for hunting and defense of self, property, and neighbors.Shalhope RE. The Ideological Origins of the Second Amendment. The Journal of American History. 1982;69(3):599-614.

From 1670 to 1770, Hudson's Bay Company alone traded over 140,000 guns to North American Indians in exchange for furs.Smith SK. Firearms Manufacturing, Gun Use, and the Emergence of Gun Culture in Early North America. 49th Parallel. 2014;34.

The American frontier was hostile and disputed. Frequent wars were interspersed with constant smaller conflicts.See: Powhatan Wars, Pequot War, Dutch War, Peach War, Esopus Wars, Metacom's War, Bacon's Rebellion, King William's War, the Protestant Revolution, Queen Anne's War, Ginck's Riot, Tuscarora War, Yamasee War, Father Rale's War, King George's War, French and Indian War, Pontiac's War, Lord Dunmore's War, Revolutionary War, Shay's Rebellion. People regularly owned and used firearms.See Thomas Church's account of his father's experiences ending Metacom's War: Church T. Entertaining Passages Relating to Philip's War. Boston: B. Green; 1716. Available HERE or HERE or HERE. It is worth the effort to read this document. Its stark realities are astounding.For a comprehensive, evidence-based, unchallenged historical account of early American firearm ownership, see: Cramer, CE. Armed America: The Remarkable Story of How and Why Guns Became as American as Apple Pie. Nashville: Nelson Current; 2006. Available HERE., That colonial men wanted to keep a gun and feared to be without one: Morgan 1975. p.240., Benjamin Franklin's preamble to the 1755 Pennsylvania Miltia Act describes a normally armed citizenry. LINK., "Besides the advantage of being armed, which the Americans possess over the people of almost every other nation,..." James Madison, Federalist No.46 available HERE and HERE.

There was no police protection or professional military force in Colonial America. Citizen militias fulfilled those functions.French, LA. The History of Policing America From Militias and Military to the Law Enforcement of Today. 2018. Lanham, MD:Rowman & Littlefield; 2018. Colonial militia laws varied according to location and evolved over time.Shy, JW. A New Look at Colonial Militia. The William and Mary Quarterly, vol. 20, no. 2, 1963, pp. 176–185. Available HERE., Millett AR, Maslowski P, Feis WB. For the Common Defense, A Military History of the United States from 1607-2012. New York: The Free Press; 2012.

One characteristic of Colonial militia service was universal: no militia law ever mentioned or implied any restriction on the citizen right to own and use firearms for legitimate non-militia purposes.An archive of New York militia laws is kept HERE., Virginia Militia laws are available HERE and HERE., Benjamin Franklin's Pennsylvania “Militia Act, 25 November 1755,” Founders Online, National Archives. Available HERE., Bowling Green State University keeps an archive of Colonial laws for 13 colonies HERE., A list of militia laws for all Colonies plus New Haven and Plymouth, with source citations, has been compiled by Cramer, CE: Colonial Firearms Regulation; April 6, 2016. Available at SSRN - http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2759961., The texts of original State Constitutions are archived at the Yale University Avalon Project.

A study of colonial probate records suggests a rate of 50% to 79% private ownership of firearms in latter Colonial America.Lindgren J, Heather JL. Counting Guns in Early America. Wm & Mary L. Rev, 2002;43:5,2, p.1838. Available HERE.

“…it is clear that early Americans owned guns. They owned a lot of them.” Robert Churchill. Churchill RH. Gun Ownership in Early America: A Survey of Manuscript Militia Returns. The William and Mary Quarterly. 2003;60(3):642.