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The eldest of five
siblings, Bob Munden was
born
in Kansas City, Missouri, February 8, 1942,
to parents Robert Sr. and Dorotha Munden.
In the U.S. Army during WWII, Bob's father saw brief action in the
Philippines and was awarded a Purple Heart after fire from a Japanese
machine gun tore apart his left arm. Robert Sr. spent 4½ years in
different U.S. Veterans hospitals, where surgeons slowly constructed a new
elbow using grafts of skin from other parts of Robert's body. During this
time, the family moved to Southern California to be closer to him -- and
money was scarce.
Bob's first memories
of California are of living in an apartment in Los
Angeles and then a home in Anaheim, with his mother and brothers Dan, Phil
and Randy - and his sister Chery, the youngest. Robert Sr. made certain
Santa gave Bob a BB gun when he was six years old.
By working odd jobs around the neighborhood, it wasn't long before Bob
earned enough money to buy himself a pellet rifle. He spent every free
moment in the orange groves in Anaheim shooting crows to collect bounty
money. One day when he was busy hunting, Bob saw heavy equipment tearing
out his beloved orange groves in the spot that would become Disneyland. On
opening day, because the new park wasn't yet completely fenced off, Bob
was able to walk in through the Adventure Land Jungle Boat Ride to witness
Walt Disney cutting the tape for the grand opening on Main Street.
Whenever possible, Bob's family spent time at the beach, in
the desert or in the mountains of Southern California, where Bob spent
lots of time in the wilderness exploring and practicing his shooting
skills with guns and bow.
When Bob was in fifth grade, his father traded a shotgun for two
double-action revolvers. Bob practiced Fast Draw using a cap gun holster,
and entered his first Fast-Draw tournament, shooting live ammunition, when
he was just 11 years old. In 1953, the professional sport of Fast Draw,
sometimes called Quick Draw, was just a few men in the desert who met once
a week at a garbage dump to shoot. The entry fee was a dollar and winner
took all. Bob did not win his first tournament, but he was inspired,
partly by the love of
western movies,
and became a dedicated Fast-Draw enthusiast.
In 1954, Bob's family moved to Big Bear Lake, California, a resort area in
the San Bernardino Mountains. Bob attended junior high and then graduated
from Big Bear High School in 1960, where he had perfect attendance for all
four years, was voted Best Dressed all four years, wearing clothes he
bought at the Good Will store - and won the annual talent competition
three times playing trumpet and drums, in spite of not ever having music
lessons. In football, Bob played offense and
defense. His senior year, Bob helped the Big Bear Bears by blocking three
punts and intercepting 4 passes in a single game. As a result of this
performance, the school presented him with "The Silver Buckle Award." Bob
still has the engraved, oval-shaped buckle.
Bob also excelled at basketball. At 5' 7", he was the guard and ball
handler -- and the best free-throw shooter in the conference. Big Bear
High School was famous for its basketball program. Though the small-town
school was categorized as a C Class school, the basketball team sometimes
played AA Schools in tournaments -- and won. The Big Bear High School
basketball team won the state championship every year Bob played.
When he wasn't on the basketball court early in the mornings or late in
the afternoons, Bob fished and hunted deer, rabbits, ducks, quail and
other birds with a bow, with shotguns,
rifles and hand guns to help feed
his family. Shooting archery helped Bob develop his instinctive shooting
skills. He also practiced Fast Draw and became very proficient.
When Bob was still just a kid, Jeff Cooper, a retired U.S. Marine Corps
colonel and a famous gun writer who wrote for Guns & Ammo Magazine,
organized a shooting club in Big Bear. Bob began competing with his Iver
Johnson, breakdown, double-action .38-caliber revolver -- and cap-gun
holster. He raked pine needles, cut wood and did other odd jobs to buy
ammo. He also did yard work for Col. Cooper in exchange for using Cooper's
Colt .45 Single-Action Revolver in the tournaments. Bob won his share of
duels in the Leatherslaps.
Bob bought his own Colt single action in 1959 for $75.00 after making
payments on it all summer. While working in Los Angeles for his uncle the
following summer, Bob witnessed a Fast-Draw tournament where participants
used blank ammo. Having had experience shooting Fast Draw with real
bullets, at first Bob thought blank tournaments were silly. But then he
saw the place for that type of competition, which could be held safely in
many locations - and he saw the skill required. A naturally fierce
competitor, Bob took a keen interest in the sport for the challenge. Of
course the money prizes also appealed to him. After that, there was no
stopping him.
In the beginning, the only event shot was Walk and Draw Level with Blanks,
where competitors walked toward one another and reacted to a signal light
in the middle. They started approximately 110 feet apart. The difficult
skill was to react to the signal light, draw and fire your gun while
walking toward your opponent -- and shoot a level shot before your
competitor did. There were hand judges to make sure shooters did not touch
the gun prior to the draw. At that time, the gun hand had to be at least
six inches from the gun. There were also three level judges for each
shooter, to determine if the shot was level enough to hit a man between
the knees and neck.
Bob was used to thumbing the single action with live ammunition, which was
slower than the "fanning" style used by the fastest competitors. He
immediately began practicing and developing his own style of draw,
shooting thousands of rounds with blank ammunition every week. By 1961 Bob
Munden was winning just about every shoot he entered, and eventually set
18
world records,
including Fastest Time in Walk and Draw Level at .15 hundredths of a
second using a .45 caliber stock-weight Colt.
During this time Bob tore his gun apart and taught himself, with
determination and experimentation, how to build guns that could withstand
the rigors of Fast Draw. He also developed key innovations for the single
action that he uses today as a
master gunsmith, including his perfection
of the
Munden Premier Action Race Gun™.
Bob's wife Becky, who later became a champion in her own right and set a
world record of .27 hundredths of a second for Standing Reaction Balloons
with Blanks that was listed in one edition of the Guinness Book in the
late 1960s, went to a Fast-Draw tournament in 1961 to watch her brother
compete. Her brother, Bill Lewis, was an excellent Fast-Draw competitor.
While at the tournament, Becky saw Bobby Munden, as he was called then.
Shy Becky started participating in Fast Draw not too long after, and
married flamboyant Bob less than a year later. On their honeymoon they
went up to Concord, where Bob won the California State Championships and
brought home many trophies, money and guns.
By 1969 Bob and Becky had two daughters, Natalie and Mitzi. The family was
living in Bishop, California, and was contemplating their future. Bob and
Becky decided to try to make a living doing what Bob did best -- and that
was shooting. They developed a shooting show using blanks, and were hired
by an agency that booked school assembly programs. Bob and Becky packed up
their two little girls in a 1969 Plymouth station wagon and toured the
western states performing at grade schools and high schools, where they
entertained students with Fast Draw, talked about the myths of the Old
West and taught
gun safety.
After the first year, Bob and Becky bought a motor home, which made life
on the road easier. They performed two to three shows a day, usually in
different towns. It was a grueling schedule, but they enjoyed entertaining
and traveling. After two years of school assemblies, they quit and Bob
started booking shows himself. They made significantly more money, cut
their expenses and experienced a lot less stress. Today, people frequently
approach Bob and Becky after performances and say they saw the show when
in grade school. Often these fans have their children or grandchildren
with them.
In 1975 Bob and Becky headed east to work at amusement parks like Six
Flag's Great Adventure, in shopping malls and at auto dealers. In 1976,
the American Can Company, which made Dixie Cups, was developing Guinness
Book of World Records cups. The company needed an angle to promote the
product, and an agent out of New York contacted Bob. A Dixie Cup featured
a drawing of Bob and listed his World Record of 21/100ths of a second at
21 feet, hitting a man-size silhouette target with live ammo, as well as
his five-shot, total time with blanks at eight feet in 1.06 seconds.
As part of the promotional tour, Bob appeared at the opening of the first
Guinness Book of World Records Exhibit Hall, which opened in the lower
level of the Empire State Building in New York in 1976. During the grand
opening festivities, Bob, in front of the cameras, set a new speed record.
He drew his single action from the holster, cocked and fired it in less
than two one-hundredths of a second - or less than one half of one half,
of one tenth, of one second.
Bob and Becky toured the country, appearing on local and national
television talk shows. Bob promoted the Dixie Guinness World Records Cup
by using it during exhibitions. He would place the cup on his fanning hand
and mention that it was a Dixie Guinness World Record Cup -- and then blow
it apart before it dropped. The promotion was very successful.
In 1978 the Mundens moved to Butte, Montana, where they could buy a home
and allow their daughters, then ages 13 and 12, to remain in one school
district through 12th grade - and where the family could live close to
hunting and fishing resources while Bob and Becky continued to tour
nationally and overseas with their stage show, which, because they use
blanks, is safely performed indoors or at outside venues.
Soon after their move to Big Sky Country, Bob and Becky brought the
sport of combat shooting to Montana, developing and hosting in Butte The
Montana State Practical Handgun Championships, otherwise known as The
Great Northwest Shootout. Due to heavy promotion, the multiple-event
competition drew sponsors and featured man-against-man competition,
trophies and great prizes -- and amenities for spectators including
bleachers, a lunch truck and outhouse facilities. The Great Northwest
Shootout drew competitors from across Montana and several western
states.
A few years later in the mid-1980s, Bob and Becky developed a shooting exhibition to include
shooting Fast Draw with blanks as well as live ammunition, inventive,
trick shots (that are no trick at all, but very difficult and
entertaining) -- and extreme accuracy and long distance shots that are
featured on
DVD. The Mundens have performed
their exhibition show at various shooting clubs, at the Steel Challenge
and Bianchi Cup Tournaments -- and at
End of Trail, the premier event of Cowboy Action Shooting (CAS.)
When Bob realized the new sport of CAS would not grow if the participants'
guns weren't customized to hold up, he started doing gun smithing for
other shooters using the skills he developed and honed during his Fast
Draw competition years. Bob and Becky launched Munden Enterprises and Bob
became Cowboy Action Shooting's first gun smith.
Bob has appeared on countless television shows over the years, a few of
which include The Steve Allen Show, Ripley's Believe It or Not!,
You Asked For It!, Ordinary, Extraordinary; David Frost's
Guinness Book of World Records Special, The World's Most Awesome
Acts, To Tell the Truth, CNN News, American Shooter
and Shooting USA's Impossible Shots. Bob and Becky have
appeared on television programs shown around the world -- and on hundreds
of local news broadcasts across America. They also have
performed
in person at fairs and shopping malls, amusement
parks, at car dealerships, conventions, sport shows, banquets, grand
openings and private affairs. Visit the
Schedule of Appearances
section of
this site to check upcoming dates and locations.
In 1990, producers of the television program American Shooter contacted
Bob and signed him to be one of their featured exhibition shooters.
The show gave Bob the opportunity to showcase other skills besides Fast
Draw, and he did - by making all kinds of incredible shots with live
ammunition like shooting an aspirin off the head of a nail without hitting
the nail, splitting a playing card in flight, doing all kinds of other,
absurdly-difficult aerial shooting like shooting the tobacco out of a
cigarette and numerous other exhibition shots that had never been done
before - all with handguns. Bob does incredible, seemingly impossible
shots with all types of guns, including rifles and shotguns. Currently,
Bob appears Wednesdays on
Shooting
USA's
Impossible Shots on The
Outdoor Channel.
Fans frequently call or write with
suggestions for more types of outrageous shooting they would like to see
Bob attempt.
In 1993, Bob introduced
Munden's School of the Fast Gun™, which takes
place annually in Butte, Montana. Students from all over the country
attend, some coming back year after year.
In 2000, Bob was able to capture on
video his successful hunt of an Alaska
Brown Bear with an iron-sighted hand gun, the .454 Casull by
Freedom Arms.
In 2004, Bob showed Bond Arms, Inc. what their double-barrel derringer can
do. Using the .45-calibur, 2 ½"
Bond Derringer, Bob split a playing card,
shot a clay disk in the air, hit a 10" balloon target 50 yards away - and
shot two small, balloon targets (eight feet away) so quickly that the two
shots sounded like one. This with a derringer. This footage may appear on
an upcoming
DVD!
Bob and Becky continue to
perform
live and on television, and are busy
producing new DVD's and adding other items to the
Online Store such as
souvenir coins Bob has shot out of the air -- and t-shirts featuring
some of Bob's outrageous quotes.
Bob's
phone rings off the hook; so, while he is in his work shop every day, he
finds himself talking on the speaker phone with all kinds of people and
answering questions about the trends in the shooting sports, about the
history, of Fast Draw, CAS, Mounted Shooting and Cowboy
Fast Draw. He
discusses hunting, gun safety, gun rights, shares his strongly held
beliefs about what it means to Shoot With Honor in competitions - and
reminisces about the western movie heroes he and Becky grew up with.
Bob Munden is in his shop nearly every day doing action and trigger work
on single actions, Smith & Wesson double actions, Bond Derringers -- and builds strong, dependable and beautiful
custom
Munden Premier Action Race Guns™
for shooters all over the world. He is at the gun range several times a
week, occasionally with his two grown grandkids, sighting in guns for clients and having a great time with his family
doing what he loves to do: Shoot.

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