I don't think most people practice their draw in anticipation of a duel.... they do so to be able to draw their weapon as quickly and effectively as possible regardless of the situation.
That's what I was thinking...!
I don't think most people practice their draw in anticipation of a duel.... they do so to be able to draw their weapon as quickly and effectively as possible regardless of the situation.
Another Bill Jordan truism, "Speed is fine, but accuracy is final"...
9mm - wounding the enemies of the state since 1903.
Life is too short to carry an ugly plastic gun in a weenie caliber.
The fact you omitted is both those in the examples you mentioned carried open and practiced hours each day.
Concealed carry is vastly different. Also Bill Jordan was a great man personally and wonderful to be around but he modified his equipment to suit his needs. The avg shooter will not modify a $200 holster with an exacto knife or leave it sitting in a bucket of dishwater so it will conform to the bun better.
In my long life, I have been on the scene of many, many shootings and present at the time of a few. Only once that I can remember that a man pulled on the badguy and won.
You left out "with the proper caliber."
Mr Jordan was not a fan of smaller calibers.
I would ask the resident historians around here just what gunslingers were killed in face to face fast draws.
There is none I know of.
I think you are getting your facts vs. rumors information confused here. There were numerous people killed in fact to face shootings that were not backshootings or prolonged gunfights. And even if not all of them were "man on man" the math works out the same.I would ask the resident historians around here just what gunslingers were killed in face to face fast draws.
There is none I know of. Most of the wild west people were shot in the back ambushed or else hit while in a prolnged gunfight where there was adequate concealment.
The days of Gunsmoke duels is something for television.
I think you are getting your facts vs. rumors information confused here. There were numerous people killed in fact to face shootings that were not backshootings or prolonged gunfights. And even if not all of them were "man on man" the math works out the same.
When you hear people, either informed or not, say the "Gunsmoke duels" didn't happen, they aren't referencing the face to face gunfight. It is the "duel" part they are talking about where the two gentlemen agree to meet on the street at noon and wait for the bad guy to shoot first. Which, there was supposed to have actually been one instance where it did happen somewhat like that, if I recall correctly.
Unfortunately most of these men didn't write books, unlike the plethora of experts that were never in a gunfight in their lives like we have now. And when they did, it usually wasn't about gunfighting, such as John Wesley Hardins autobiography or Wyatt Earps somewhat questionable biography written by Stuart Lake. But they both did happen to give some insight to the subject at hand. But what did they know?
We are not talking about duels. We are talking about people with guns drawn and someone else going for a gun. Few gunslingers were fast enough. Duels were among gentlemen. The person out to rob you will not be a gentleman and will pull a trigger before you can get to your gun.
And if he decides to shoot you anyway, for whatever reason, your advice is to stand there and take it like a man? There's a very good chance he'll miss, but for how long will depend on him. Wether or not you even get a chance to win depends on you.The person out to rob you will not be a gentleman and will pull a trigger before you can get to your gun.
They certainly did. There was some bad blood between them and people felt it was going to end in gunplay, which meant the death of Luke Short since he wasn't a gunfighter and "Longhaired Jim" Courtright was a good one. Unfortunately stories vary as to exactly what happened, as is usual with these old tales, but two versions I've heard are: 1) They drew about the same time with Short getting the first shot off, which went wild, but it managed to hit Courtrights right thumb removing it from his hand. Courtright tried the border shift technique to shift hands so he could cock his single action revolver to shoot Short, but Short had time to make sure his second shot hit Courtright with a fatal wound. 2) They were standing very close together when Courtright pulled a gun and tried to shoot Short, but the hammer got caught up in Shorts watch chain. Short then drew his own revolver and fired a shot which hit the cylinder in Courtrights revolver making it unusable. Short then emptied his revolver hitting Courtright several times, one of which was in his heart.Quoted from Nick B:
...didn't Luke Short and Jim Courtright also fight a face to face gunfight on the streets of Fort Worth.
NB