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Concealed Weapon Laws of the Early Republic: Dueling, Southern Violence, and Moral Reform

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Concealed Weapon Laws of the Early Republic: Dueling, Southern Violence, and Moral Reform

Contributors:

By (Author) Clayton E. Cramer

ISBN:

9780275966157

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Praeger Publishers Inc

Publication Date:

30th August 1999

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Social law and Medical law
Social and cultural history

Dewey:

344.730533

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

192

Dimensions:

Width 156mm, Height 235mm

Weight:

482g

Description

Cramer's work examines the motivations and legislative history behind the nation's first laws regulating the carrying of concealed deadly weapons and establishes a previously unexplored link between these laws and efforts to suppress dueling in the southern back country. Earlier attempts to analyze these laws focused upon efforts to maintain slavery by severely restricting the rights of free blacks: if free blacks could not possess arms and lacked other basic rights, slaves would be less inclined to seek their freedom. Cramer rejects such thinking by demonstrating that the concealed weapon laws of the early republic were not racially-motivated. He further supports the work of other scholars who have lately examined the role of Scots-Irish immigrants in creating a distinctive southern back-country culture of honor violence including dueling and brawling. It was the attempt to control such violence, Cramer argues, that led to the concealed weapons laws. Thus, rather than considering gun control laws primarily as legal or constitutional history, this study starts from a cultural and historical viewpoint. Southern state legislatures sought to improve the morals of their back-country population through increasingly severe punishments for dueling. When judges and juries regularly refused to convict duelists, these legislatures created extrajudicial punishments by requiring elected and appointed officials, as well as lawyers, to swear oaths of non-participation in dueling. Young men, obsessed with honor and reluctant to perjure themselves for fear of damaging their public reputation, soon took to carrying Bowie knives and handguns with which to kill those who insulted thema perfectly honorable action to much of the population. The state legislatures then severely regulated carrying of concealed deadly weapons in the hope of suppressing the bloody results of what had been, until then, an accepted practice.

Reviews

Concealed Weapon Laws makes for interesting reading for anyone interested in political history of the US during the early to mid 19th century.-Smoke & Fire News
Cramer has fashioned fairly solid explanation of the purpose of the earliest law...of concealed weapons.-Florida Historical Quarterly
"Cramer has fashioned fairly solid explanation of the purpose of the earliest law...of concealed weapons."-Florida Historical Quarterly
"Concealed Weapon Laws makes for interesting reading for anyone interested in political history of the US during the early to mid 19th century."-Smoke & Fire News

Author Bio

CLAYTON E. CRAMER works as a software engineer for a Northern California telecommunications equipment manufacturer. He has published extensively in the areas of American history and criminology. His previous publications include Black Demographic Data, 1790-1860 (Greenwood, 1997) and For the Defense of Themselves and the State: The Original Intent and Judicial Interpretation of the Right to Keep and Bear Arms (Praeger, 1994).

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