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There were many gunfights
in the Old West, right? Well, not exactly. The closest thing in history to
what the movie industry made us believe was a common occurrence in the
gunslinger days, a face-off on Main Street at sundown, was probably the
O.K. Corral incident in Tombstone, Arizona, in which Wyatt Earp, his
brothers and Doc Holliday got in a shoot-out with the Clanton and McLaury
brothers on October 26, 1881. However, even that event did not involve
what we would think of today as Fast Draw. Dime novelists, the tabloid
writers of the time; western genre authors and movie producers actually
invented the concept of Fast Draw.
During Bob and Becky Munden's
performances
all over the world and on
television shows like the Outdoor Channel's Shooting USA, Ripley's Believe
it or Not! -- and many others, Bob points out that
gunslingers in the Old West could not draw their guns quickly because
stock, single-action guns were not designed to withstand fast cocking, and
explains that the holsters of the time were designed to hold the gun
securely and protect it from the elements. This meant shooters could not
pull a gun out of the holster with any great speed. Also, to become as
good with a gun as the heroes supposedly are in western movies, a
gunslinger would have had to practice for months and months -- and use up
tons of ammunition. He would have had to travel with a Conestoga wagon to
carry the amount of ammunition required!
Was it all a myth? No. In the wild days of the Old West people lost their
lives at card tables, outside saloons and in dark alleys. They just didn't
face off in the street and offer the other guy a chance to draw first!
In the 1950's, westerns dominated prime time television. Practicing Fast
Draw, sharing this activity with friends, forming clubs and starting
competition was irresistible to a generation that cut its teeth on movies
featuring stars like Roy Rogers, Gene Autry, Lash LaRue, Hopalong Cassidy,
Randolph Scott, John Wayne and others. Today, the idea of quick draw
continues to delight fans of recent movies such as Tombstone, Wyatt Earp,
Unforgiven, Pale Rider and Open Range.
Fast Draw became a professional shooting sport in the 1950s. Clubs sprang
up across the country, beginning in Southern California. Club members in
the Mid-west tended to shoot wax bullets in tournaments shot indoors. The
clubs in the West shot mostly blanks outdoors in an event called, Walk and
Draw Level, Man-against man. Man-against-man means two opponents shoot
against an electronic timer. The shooter with the fastest timed draw,
under one second, wins. Later, the sport evolved to include several
different events, some using blanks, others using wax bullets. The up and
coming sport of Cowboy Fast Draw uses wax bullets with powder.
In blanks, a paper wad is used to hold black powder in the cartridge. At
Bob
Munden's School of the Fast Gun™, held annually in Butte, Montana,
students learn how to load blanks -- and using
Race Guns
built to
withstand the stresses of Fast Draw, they live out the child-hood fantasy
of being a gunslinger in the Old West.
Note:
Don't ever assume that blanks are not dangerous. Firing a gun means
creating an explosion, which is not something to mess around with. Never
point a gun at anything you do not want to shoot, even when using blanks.
Always think about gun safety.
In 1953, Bob Munden,
age 11, competed in the Southern California desert
with a group of men shooting Fast Draw using live ammunition. Bob used a
cap-gun holster, tied on with a sash from a bath robe. In his teens, Bob
began setting
world records
that stand to this day, and became a master
gunsmith.
Back in the 1950s, participants shot at balloon targets attached to a tip
stick. When the fastest shooter broke his balloon, the stick would tip up,
thereby designating the winner. These contests were called pot shoots,
because everyone threw a dollar into the pot and the winner took all. At
Knott's Berry Farm in Buena Park, California, a man named Dee Woolem, who
worked as one of the bandits pretending to rob train-riding tourists
several times a day, practiced Fast Draw in between performances. He and
his fellow bandits devised a self-start timer to help decide who was the
fastest.
Competitions started up around the area in which shooters used primers
instead of live ammunition, and then blanks against the self-start timer
that timed a shooter's draw. Bob Munden thought, at first sight, that
competition with blanks was child's play. But he soon realized the extreme
skill involved in drawing and shooting with truly radical speed.
When self timers entered the scene, they eliminated the time lost when
someone else operated the timer, sometimes called the clock. Favor Company
and then Chrondek, companies that made drag race timers, made a Fast-Draw
dueling timer, which made it possible to have tournaments that were
man-versus-man -- including measuring a reaction time! The new technology
allowed the sport to progress, and the event Walk and Draw Level was born.
Contestants mainly shot outdoors in the parking lots of shopping centers,
car dealerships, restaurants, etc. This public access resulted in
sponsorships from businesses, who wanted their parking lots filled with
potential customers. Fast Draw was, in a word, booming!
Bob started shooting Walk and Draw Level events in 1959. At that time,
Curt Blakemore was the one who shot the fastest times. Bob developed his
own draw to challenge for Top Gun and soon dominated the sport with his
fastest times.
The
Mundens left Fast Draw competition in 1975 to concentrate on their
shooting exhibitions and because the sport began allowing the use of
Funny Guns and Funny Holsters. Bob coined the term Funny Guns to describe
guns some competitors used that were lightened with aluminum and titanium
parts. They reminded Bob of the Funny Cars used in drag racing which look
like regular cars but are really light-weight rails in disguise. Some
shooters also started using outlandish, spacey-looking holsters that stuck
far out from their bodies and even bounced as the shooters walked. To Bob,
this was "shooting with no honor." He still believes that today and
encourages organizations hosting tournaments for newer games, like Cowboy
Action Shooting, to create separate categories for shooters using smaller
calibers or light loads, to keep it fair.
On the live-ammunition side of the sport, in the 1970s enthusiasts
progressed to the world-wide sport of action shooting and formed the
International Practical Shooting Confederation, or "IPSC," under the able
leadership of the late
Jeff Cooper. A lot of people don't know that I considered Jeff
my mentor. In fact, when I was a high-school kid, he let me use his Colt
single-action revolver to compete in Jeff's famed "Leatherslap"
tournaments in Big Bear, California.
Since the mid 1980s, the fast-growing sports of
Cowboy Action Shooting, Cowboy Mounted Shooting (in which shooters ride horses)
and Cowboy Fast Draw best represent
the legends and lore of the Old West. More and more people, literally all
over the world, are becoming involved in these fun and challenging
shooting sports, in which participants dress the part of the Old West in
authentic costumes and use single-action revolvers, lever-action rifles
and double-barreled or early-pump shotguns.
The spirit of the Old West is alive and well!
WARNING:
Shooting Fast Draw with live ammunition (real
bullets) is VERY dangerous. Don't ever try it -- even once!

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