Our HS Principal carried when he took my dad's class on their SR Trip to Galveston back in 1962.

Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
I vividly remember lots of folks having rifles and shotguns in the gunracks in pickups when I was a kid, even through the 80s. But once I left for the USAF, and came back some years later to visit, it seemed like that had just about dried up. Some folks told me that too many people were getting their windows busted out and guns stolen during broad daylight even in small towns, so people just quit carrying them around like that. Just seems like another piece of "Texiana" that went away...but we've got concealed carry now, so I'll take that trade.AEA wrote:I'd like to see someone put a EBR (with 30rd "clip") in a pickup rifle rack and drive around today. Legal of course, but might get charged with "enticing a riot".......![]()
And you would have to take it out of the truck every time you got out and carry it openly in order to keep it from getting stolen!
Wonder how that would work out if you were visiting the Capitol? Go thru the "Special line"? Explain the Law to the law makers?
When Whitman started shooting, UT students went to their vehicles to get their hunting rifles. This was at the behest of police on the scene who told people "If you have a rifle in your car, go get it". These civilians who retrieved their hunting rifles returned fire, keeping Whitman pinned down, which allowed the Austin police officer and civilian (who was also armed) to gain entry into the tower.JALLEN wrote:I have no idea what the law was, but I do recall an incident at Wurstfest in New Braunfels, probably in the late 60's-early '70's.
A man, likely drunk, was harassing folks arriving to park in the Knights of Columbus parking lot across the road from Wursthalle. Apparently he got too enthusiastic interacting with a woman in the passenger seat of one vehicle, and her husband shot him to death with a pistol taken from the glove compartment. The Grand Jury no-billed the husband. I would assume if having a weapon like that was illegal that would have been charged as well. There may be circumstances I'm not aware of, of course.
I also recall that when Charles Whitman started popping folks from the UT Tower, a bunch of guns came out and returned fire, ineffectively of course, until an Austin cop and civilian managed to sneak into the Tower and finish Whitman off. That was in 1966, IIRC.
When I was in high school, having a rifle in the rack across the back of a pick up was as common as boots. Nobody paid any attention whatsoever.
I understand your sentiment, but I think your a little over the line with that statement....being white and Christian has nothing to do with the right to carry.Bullwhip wrote:Like somebody said its been illegal since reconstruction, just wasn't enforced against the "right people".
When the law started treating everbody the same and good white Christian folks got scared of being arrested for carrying, we finally got a chl law.
You beat me to it, Kythas. They didn't killed him, but they threw up some effective suppressing fire.Kythas wrote:When Whitman started shooting, UT students went to their vehicles to get their hunting rifles. This was at the behest of police on the scene who told people "If you have a rifle in your car, go get it". These civilians who retrieved their hunting rifles returned fire, keeping Whitman pinned down, which allowed the Austin police officer and civilian (who was also armed) to gain entry into the tower.JALLEN wrote:I have no idea what the law was, but I do recall an incident at Wurstfest in New Braunfels, probably in the late 60's-early '70's.
A man, likely drunk, was harassing folks arriving to park in the Knights of Columbus parking lot across the road from Wursthalle. Apparently he got too enthusiastic interacting with a woman in the passenger seat of one vehicle, and her husband shot him to death with a pistol taken from the glove compartment. The Grand Jury no-billed the husband. I would assume if having a weapon like that was illegal that would have been charged as well. There may be circumstances I'm not aware of, of course.
I also recall that when Charles Whitman started popping folks from the UT Tower, a bunch of guns came out and returned fire, ineffectively of course, until an Austin cop and civilian managed to sneak into the Tower and finish Whitman off. That was in 1966, IIRC.
When I was in high school, having a rifle in the rack across the back of a pick up was as common as boots. Nobody paid any attention whatsoever.
Without these civilians and their rifles in their vehicles, which were obviously parked on campus, Whitman probably would have killed more people as police would have not been able to gain entry as quickly as they did.
I assume y'all are as familiar with the area, and the Tower, as I am. I was a a student there 64-68, and had been up in the Tower countless times. The Observation Deck where Whitman was was almost perfect for his purpose. It would be almost impossible to hit someone up there from the ground. But, those guys with their hunting rifles did manage to distract Whitman while the Austin PD officer and civilian managed to get up there and put a stop to it.C-dub wrote:You beat me to it, Kythas. They didn't killed him, but they threw up some effective suppressing fire.Kythas wrote:When Whitman started shooting, UT students went to their vehicles to get their hunting rifles. This was at the behest of police on the scene who told people "If you have a rifle in your car, go get it". These civilians who retrieved their hunting rifles returned fire, keeping Whitman pinned down, which allowed the Austin police officer and civilian (who was also armed) to gain entry into the tower.JALLEN wrote:
I also recall that when Charles Whitman started popping folks from the UT Tower, a bunch of guns came out and returned fire, ineffectively of course, until an Austin cop and civilian managed to sneak into the Tower and finish Whitman off. That was in 1966, IIRC.
When I was in high school, having a rifle in the rack across the back of a pick up was as common as boots. Nobody paid any attention whatsoever.
Without these civilians and their rifles in their vehicles, which were obviously parked on campus, Whitman probably would have killed more people as police would have not been able to gain entry as quickly as they did.
It was the yankees and their lapdog, Governor Edmund Davis who was responsible for eliminating Texans' right to defend their own lives: http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/40 ... 40016.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;Texas
The first Texas law against concealed and open carry was "An Act to Regulate the Keeping and Bearing of Deadly Weapons, Law of April 12, 1871, ch. 34, §1, 1871 Tex. Gen. Laws 25" passed as part of the Reconstruction. That law was not substantially modified until 1995.
It has nothing to do with the right but it had a lot to do with being able to practically exercise that right fifty or even thirty years ago.talltex wrote:I understand your sentiment, but I think your a little over the line with that statement....being white and Christian has nothing to do with the right to carry.