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This looks like a lot of fun to me! Well I thought it was neat!

COWTOWN, ARIZONA THE CRADLE OF COWBOY ACTION SHOOTING BY ALAN GARBERS

The original Cowtown had some whimsical stages including a gallows and a two-story hotel. Photo: “Deadeye Al”

Cowtown! The name itself makes a person want to don a pair of spurs and a 10-gallon hat! Just about everyone involved in cowboy-action shooting has heard of Cowtown. In fact, it is one of the cradles of the sport and continues to generate countless champions. So how did Cowtown start? Well, pull up a chair to the mesquite-wood fire and listen …

The Fire & Ice match at Cowtown is very popular and always
draws shooters from around the world. Photo: Alan “Cholla” Garbers

History

 

In the 1970s, Hollywood stuntman Ron Nix started building an 1880s movie set north of Peoria, Ariz.

Cowtown was born as the saguaro-studded hills and canyons made the perfect location for filming. The town was also a school to teach the craft of being stuntmen (or women). Historians say over 200 movies and television episodes were shot at Cowtown, including the classic Billy Jack films, the little-known film Knight Rider 2010 and Dead Man, an “acid” western starring Johnny Depp. There were even rodeo and rappelling events.

The location was the perfect backdrop for Civil War reenactments and provided an Old West experience for tourists, complete with staged shootouts and gun-

handling demonstrations. Nationally known fast-draw artists Bill Waller and Jim Martin frequently put on fast-draw shows in front of Cowtown audiences.

Waller, Martin and a group of friends were also enjoying frequent informal competition shooting “cowboy” guns in staged scenarios in the open desert not far from the small town of Cave Creek. As the group grew, they realized they needed to organize and become a proper club. In 1982, the Arizona Cowboy Shooters Association was born.

With the growing local excitement of cowboy-action shooting, it wasn’t long before Cowtown owner Ron Nix became aware of the Arizona Cowboy Shooters Association. It seemed like a perfect match to invite the group to compete at Cowtown.

An area was cleared in a canyon below the movie set for a shooting range. It was simple at first but kept growing. False-fronted buildings were erected and Nix donated other items to complete the ambiance. When the match was over, the shooters could celebrate their successes or drown their sorrows in the active saloon and restaurant in the movie set.

Along the way, there were a few growing pains and a new name was chosen — the Cowtown Cowboy Shooters Association.

The flooding in 2014 twisted and broke the buildings as well
as buried targets, tables, and props under many feet of debris.
Some were washed away. Photo: “Hells Comin”

The gates of Cowtown still commemorate shooter and caretaker Don Snow. Photo: Alan “Cholla” Garbers

Joining Forces

 

Lady Luck also played a hand in Cowtown. A group of shooters from California was looking to organize a cowboy-action shooters club in which people around the country and even the world could participate.

The two groups compared notes and decided to work together for mutual benefit. The Single Action Shooting Society (SASS) was born. The first sanctioned SASS match was held at Cowtown in September 1987. In a trend that continues today, many Cowtown shooters — including the top female shooter Gail Snow, aka Barbwire — dominated the top positions.

Gail and her husband, Don, became caretakers of the range. They made sure it was done if something needed doing, from setting up targets to writing stages. Through their hard work, Cowtown Shooters continued to grow.

The sport of cowboy action shooting kept growing and Cowtown became the location for the Arizona State Championships. Other big matches blossomed in the Sonoran Desert but things weren’t always coming up poppies and saguaro blossoms for Cowtown.

he author tries to live up to his alias “Cholla” at Cowtown.
Photo: Dianna Garbers

Tragedy and Triumph

 

In the late 1990s, a fire swept through some of the buildings. The City of Peoria had recently incorporated the area and condemned the remaining movie set buildings as they had not been built to code. Gone were the shops, the restaurant, the saloon and wide-eyed tourists. From the remains, a wooden cowboy — forever caught in agony — was pulled down to the range to remember what had once been.

In 2000, tragedy struck the Cowtown Shooter family. Don Snow passed away after a prolonged illness and the range had lost a guiding light. In memorial the cowboy range was rededicated as Fort Snow.

In 2014 torrential rains sent a flash flood raging down the canyons of central Arizona. The deluge engulfed the Cowtown range and decimated the mock buildings comprising the stages. Ironically, a church brought down from Nevada was the only building still standing.

Once the shock of the devastation wore off, SASS clubs from around the state and beyond pitched in to clear the rubble. Alums from around the world sent their support. Buildings used in the SASS Winter Range match were donated to Cowtown. Gail and the Swiss Kid worked to design new stages and a better flow pattern for the big games. Pulling together, Cowtown Alumni rebuilt the setting into what is seen today.

The cowboy-action range wasn’t the only thing changing. Under new ownership, Cowtown branched out. Now, hardly a day or night goes by when there isn’t some competition or training. From long-range matches to USPSA events, from steel matches to multi-gun matches, they even host John Wick-inspired Excommunicado events.

The gates of Fort Snow have seen shooters come and shooters go, but the camaraderie — and passion — for fun and excellence remain the same. While Cowtown has expanded to become one of the premier multipurpose ranges in the Southwest, it will always be remembered as the cradle of cowboy action shooting.

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All About Guns

John Olin’s Favorite Double Gun: The Winchester 21

The late owner of Winchester had an affinity for the indestructible 21 despite its high manufacturing costs and low profitability

John Olin’s Winchester Model 21. NRA Museum

I didn’t grow up wealthy, and having spent decades writing about shotguns, I won’t retire that way either. But I will spend what’s left of my duck-hunting career shooting what I consider to be one of the most well-made double guns ever constructed—the Winchester Model 21.

Though Connecticut Shotgun Manufacturing Company still makes this gun, and there are used versions of it that will fetch exorbitant prices, I was able to acquire one in my younger days. My uncle had passed away and left a piece of land to me, which I sold. I used the money to buy a used Winchester 21 Duck model. It had been lovingly restored, but I could tell it had a previous life in many a duck blind.

It has fixed full chokes, and I have shot it on ducks in Canada to clay birds at my home range here on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. It’s one of the best American break-action shotguns ever built, and it will never leave the comforts of my gun closet…except when I take it afield of course.

It was also the favorite double gun of John Olin, owner of Winchester. It was said that he loved this gun so much that he kept it in the Winchester lineup despite its high cost of construction and low profitability. Here is the story of one of the most iconic doubles in gun history.

Buying the Winchester 21

The author with his own Winchester 21. John M. Taylor

Being an ardent waterfowler, my first thought after the sale of my uncle’s land was to buy an A. H. Fox HE-Grade Super Fox, the gun made famous by the late Nash Buckingham.

Along with duck scribe Gordon MacQuarrie, Buckingham is my favorite author. The Super Fox has overbored barrels, tight chokes, and weighs more than 9 pounds. It is a fine gun for the duck blind, but I also wanted a double gun that I could carry in the uplands and break clays with.

An old friend, the late Michael McIntosh, wrote about the Winchester Model 21 in the early days of steel shot. He detailed its hard steel screw-in chokes that could handle the “new” non-toxic shells (21s with bored chokes are not safe for steel) and that the 21 only weighed 7 to 8 pounds (depending on the gauge and barrel length), making it a truly versatile double gun. So, I narrowed my search to a used Model 21, though I was never able to find one with the screw-in chokes.

The History of Winchester’s Model 21

Designed by J. T. Johnson, Edwin Pugsley, and George Lewis, the 21 was first marketed by Winchester in 1930 with double triggers and extractors and sold for $59.50.

The issue for Winchester at the time was it was on the brink of bankruptcy and had little money for advertising, much less the infrastructure to set up for production of the 21.

Much of this problem was solved when Franklin Olin and his sons Spencer and John, who owned the Western Cartridge Company, purchased Winchester at the bankruptcy sale and gave the company (and the 21) new life.

It has been long been said that the 21 might not have stayed long in production without John Olin’s persistence. This was further amplified by the rumors that Winchester never made much of profit on the Model 21 due to the high cost of production. But John Olin kept it in the lineup because it was a magnificent side-by-side without equal. And he wasn’t about to discontinue one of the most well-made firearms in American history.

Over the life of the Model 21 about 30,000 guns were made with an additional 1,000 or so from Winchester’s custom shop. It was chambered in 12-, 16-, 20-, and 28-gauge, plus .410. When Winchester’s name was licensed from the Olin Corporation by Browning, Connecticut Shotgun Manufacturing (CSM) was sold the rights to manufacture Model 21s in their New Britain, Connecticut, facility, which they still do today.

The 21 was built to last. It was constructed of Winchester’s Proof Steel, a chrome-molybdenum alloy with a tensile strength of over 90 tons per square inch. During its development, a total of nine design patents were issued.

Unlike many other doubles of the day, the 21 does not have a rib extension but rather locks up by means of a thick, sturdy underbolt that is able to be tightened as the gun begins to shoot loose.

The barrels are forged as chopper lump barrels instead of being brazed. They are machined at the breech into a vertical dovetail design that are then pinned together, each carrying a half locking lug, that when joined and combined with the underlug, forms the ultra-strong lockup.

An Unbreakable Side-by-Side

Few guns are as durable as the Winchester 21. NRA Museum

One of the hallmark designs of the Model 21 is the flat junction of the barrels and action between the breech face and hinge pin. To further reinforce this area where the breech face meets the flats, there is an exterior arrowhead that’s part of the forging.

It wasn’t necessary for this work to be done in order to increase the life of the gun, but it is another indicator of Winchester’s desire to make a shotgun for the ages. The joining of the action and barrel was so strong that Winchester’s salesmen, who toured the major sport shooting events in the 1930s, would remove the top lever and locking bolt and simply hold the gun shut with their hands, or tie it closed with a piece of string, to showcase its strength.

John Olin went even further, directing the company to purchase one model each of the competing American doubles and British imports of the day, then subjected them all to a torture test.

The test included repeatedly firing proof loads—known as “blue pills”—loaded to one-and-a-half times the pressure (19,800 psi) of the hottest load on the market. The best competing gun lasted 305 shots. The 21 fired a total of 2,000 blue pills with no measurable damage.

The Single-Trigger Redesign

The original 21s had double triggers that were eventually replaced by an inertia-driven single-selective trigger. The major hurdle was all the existing single triggers didn’t work well, if at all. It took five iterations of a trigger design by Winchester’s Louis Stiennon before a truly reliable trigger was manufactured, for which he was awarded a patent for in 1931. From then on, every 21 came with this excellent single-selective trigger that was both reliable and highly functional.

All the 21s were mostly built the same, though some models did have receiver engravings and high-end wood for the stock and fore-end. They did make models labeled Trap, Skeet, and Duck, but they were all fairly similar except for stock dimensions and 3-inch chambers for the Duck version. Barrels were offered in lengths or 26, 28, 30 and 32 inches, and while the majority were choked Modified and Full, a customer could order one to their own choke specifications. The 21 was only made available through custom order starting in 1960 before being discontinued in the early 1990s.

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Enjoying Black Powder Episode 3: The Martini-Henry MkIV

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“Aw shucks Allies Well I thought it was funny!

Which country never ruled by the British? by Daniel

Here are the members of this 22 exclusive club, the countries that Britain hasn’t invaded (and that should maybe be a little wary now):

Andorra
Belarus
Bolivia
Burundi
Central African Republic
Chad
Congo, Republic of
Guatemala
Ivory Coast
Kyrgyzstan
Liechtenstein
Luxembourg
Mali
Marshall Islands
Monaco
Mongolia
Paraguay
Sao Tome and Principe
Sweden
Tajikistan
Uzbekistan
Vatican City

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Ammo

💥 LA BOMBA 12ga Exploding Shotgun Slug – We TEST them!

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1853 Enfield Replica

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All About Guns Real men Soldiering

Gurkha (World War II)

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Uncategorized

The Spanish arquebusier BY MSW

1568. Battle of Jemmingen. Spanish arquebusiers. Angel García Pinto for Desperta Ferro magazine

Gonzalo de Córdoba, (1453-1515).

“el Gran Capitan.” Castilian general who reformed the tercios, reducing reliance on polearms and bringing more guns to reinforced pike formations that could operate independently because of their increased firepower. He fought in Castile’s civil war that attended the ascension of Isabel to the throne. Next, he fought in the long war to conquer Granada. He was sent to Naples from 1495 to 1498 to stop the French conquest. He lost to Swiss mercenary infantry at Seminara, but adjusted his strategy and slowly pushed the French out of southern Italy.

He used the same tactics in Italy that worked in Granada: progressive erosion of the enemy’s hold over outposts and the countryside, blockading garrisons, and avoiding pitched battles where he could. He fought the Swiss again, and won, at Cerignola (1503), handing them their first battle loss in 200 years.

He beat them again that year at their encampment on the Garigliano River. Between fighting the French and Swiss he fought rebellious Moriscos in Granada and against the Ottomans in behalf of Spain and in alliance with Venice. He retired in 1506, well-regarded as a great general of pike and arquebus warfare.

tercio.

“Third.” The name derived from the tripartite division common to early modern infantry squares, especially the main infantry unit in the 15th-16th-century Spanish system. Tercios started at 3,000 men, but heavy tercios could have up to 6,000 men each, formed into 50 to 60 ranks with 80 men to a file.

They were super-heavy units of armored and tactically disciplined pikemen, supported by arquebusiers and lesser numbers of heavy musketeers on the corners. To contemporary observers they appeared as “iron cornfields” which won through shock and sheer mass rather than clever maneuver.

Others saw in the tercio a “walking citadel” whose corner guards of clustered arquebusiers gave it the appearance of a mobile castle with four turrets, especially after the reforms introduced by Gonzalo de Córdoba from 1500. He wanted the tercios to better contend with the Swiss so he added more pikes at the front but also many more gunmen to replace the older reliance on polearms.

These formations might have only 1,200 men. The new tercio was still heavy and ponderous on the move, but it was a more flexible unit with much greater firepower that could dig in for defense or advance to destroy the enemy’s main force as circumstances suggested.

This reform first paid off at Cerignola (1503). At Pavia (1525), tercios destroyed the French under Francis I. For two generations after that most opponents declined battle against the tercios whenever possible, and they became the most feared infantry in Europe.

They remained dominant for nearly a hundred years. Their demise came during the Thirty Years’ War when more flexible Dutch and Swedish armies broke into more flexible, smaller regiments. These units smashed the tercios with combined arms tactics that also employed field artillery and a return to cavalry shock.

arquebus.

Also “arkibuza,” “hackbutt,” “hakenbüsche,” “harquebus.” Any of several types of early, slow-firing, small caliber firearms ignited by a matchlock and firing a half-ounce ball.

The arquebus was a major advance on the first “hand cannon” where a heated wire or handheld slow match was applied to a touch hole in the top of the breech of a metal tube, a design that made aiming by line of sight impossible.

That crude instrument was replaced by moving the touch hole to the side on the arquebus and using a firing lever, or serpentine, fitted to the stock that applied the match to an external priming pan alongside the breech.

This allowed aiming the gun, though aimed fire was not accurate or emphasized and most arquebuses were not even fitted with sights. Maximum accurate range varied from 50 to 90 meters, with the optimum range just 50-60 meters.

Like all early guns the arquebus was kept small caliber due to the expense of gunpowder and the danger of rupture or even explosion of the barrel. However, 15th-century arquebuses had long barrels (up to 40 inches). This reflected the move to corning of gunpowder.

The development of the arquebus as a complete personal firearm, “lock, stock, and barrel,” permitted recoil to be absorbed by the chest.

That quickly made all older handguns obsolete. Later, a shift to shoulder firing allowed larger arquebuses with greater recoil to be deployed. This also improved aim by permitting sighting down the barrel. The arquebus slowly replaced the crossbow and the longbow during the 15th century, not least because it took less skill to use, which meant less expensive troops could be armed with arquebuses and deployed in field regiments.

This met with some resistance: one condottieri captain used to blind and cut the hands off captured arquebusiers; other military conservatives had arquebusiers shot upon capture. An intermediate role of arquebusiers was to accompany pike squares to ward off enemy cavalry armed with shorter-range wheel lock pistols.

Among notable battles involving arquebusiers were Cerignola (April 21, 1503), where Spanish arquebusiers arrayed behind a wooden palisade devastated the French, receiving credit from military historians as the first troops to win a battle with personal firearms; and Nagashino, where Nobunaga Oda’s 3,000 arquebusiers smashed a more traditional samurai army. The arquebus was eventually replaced by the more powerful and heavier musket.

Arquebus vs archery

In terms of accuracy, the arquebus was extremely inferior to any kind of bow. However, the arquebus had a faster rate of fire than the most powerful crossbow, had a shorter learning curve than a longbow, and was more powerful than either. An arquebusier could carry more ammunition and powder than a crossbowman or longbowman could with bolts or arrows.

The weapon also had the added advantage of scaring enemies (and spooking horses) with the noise. Perhaps most importantly, producing an effective arquebusier required a lot less training than producing an effective bowman. During a siege it was also easier to fire an arquebus out of loopholes than it was a bow and arrow.

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Art

Park the space speeder, throw up a tarp and read the paper. All that’s missing is a visit from the Swedish Bikini Team!

From the Daily Timewaster!

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Shooting a Model 1917