Do You Remember Getting Your First Concealed Carry Permit?

Joined
Dec 31, 2010
Messages
11,375
Reaction score
28,193
Location
Atlanta area
I do. In 1979 I move from Ohio:( back to Ft. Rucker, Alabama.:) Along the road between Daleville and Enterprise there was a borrow pit where people had obviously been target shooting (old plywood w/targets, etc.). While doing some shooting, a fellow stopped to join me. During our conversation he asked me if I had my permit and recommended I go into town to apply. I went to the Sherriff's office (Coffee Co.) to tell them what I wanted and a Deputy handed me a one page form. At the bottom of the page was a question. "Have you ever been convicted of a crime involving Moral Turpitude?" He said they would run a check on me and to come back in a few days. That was the beginning of legal carry for me, other than Army stuff.
 
Register to hide this ad
Had to wait till we retired to SC. CC class was one of the first things I did after we established residence here. Got hubby a CC class gift certificate for Christmas that same year.
 
Had been waiting until Missouri passed the conceal carry law. Took an over ride of the governor's veto but we got it done. Went to sheriff's office and they told me what I needed to do. Took the class got finger printed and checked to see if I was a bad boy. Forked over $100 bucks and a few days later got a call to come pick it up. then to license bureau to get it put on my drivers license for which I had to pay to get a new license. Had it renewed once then missed the next renew date. By the time I noticed the late fees were so high I just said heck with it because by then Missouri had constitutional carry and only went to AZ now and then and they are also a free state.
 
When I left Ohio in 2001 there were no carry permits there, unless you had a very good reason for it.

My ex came to St. Augustine and found me a nice house to rent, and a storage place to keep my bike. Soon as I had an address, I had the conceal carry package sent to it. I arrived in Florida on Nov 19, 2001 and my carry package was waiting for me in my mailbox.

Not sure how it is now, but back then St. Johns county only had the classes once a month. I found a private investigator that was licensed to do the class. I mailed everything off on Dec 14, 2001.

I moved here, and my ex was flying back and forth till out house in OH sold. Only guns I brought with me was my Winchester 1200, and a AMT 380 Back Up with about a 15 pound trigger pull. I was sweating the shooting part with the 380, but passed.

Think it took about 50 days to actually get the permit.
 
1st time was about 25 years ago, had to sit thru a 6 hour class and take a written test. Then convince the Sherriff that you needed a permit. At some point I let the permit expire and didn't get it again for a few years. Iowa was "may issue" until 2011 and in some countries it was hard to get a permit.
Iowa goes to Permitless Carry July 1 this year but I will keep mine current.
 
Yep. 2006. In those years I was mostly in Japan but spent much of the summers in Hawaii where I owned a house and kept my US residency. I took a course there for a Utah non-resident permit as part of a three-day handgun self-defense course. The permit was/is not valid in Hawaii, but I liked having it.

I have an Oregon permit now but keep the non-resident Utah permit active as there are contiguous and nearby states which recognize it but not my Oregon permit: Washington, Wyoming and Nevada.

I've thought about adding a non-resident Florida permit, for my occasional Florida visits. It would also add New Mexico.
 
I remember doing the class, going to the Sheriff's office, filling out the forms, and waiting, and waiting...

In the county I lived in it took almost 6 months to get the card. Then you find out that the Oregon card is good in one state. No reciprocity with any of the 49 other states. So I got my Utah card, good in most western states, so I could actually drive across the border with a gun, without becoming a criminal.
 
.... Then you find out that the Oregon card is good in one state. No reciprocity with any of the 49 other states. ...

That's not quite correct. About 20 or so states recognize the Oregon CHL.

Unfortunately, of our neighboring states only Idaho is among those. I think this is mostly because Oregon has decided NOT to grant any other state reciprocity, which some (understandably) reciprocate.

If you plan your route right, you CAN actually legally drive from Oregon to the East Coast with an Oregon CHL and a loaded gun. Follow the green! ;)


attachment.php
 

Attachments

  • EA1FEF42-A440-4028-ACC7-4420850730D7.jpg
    EA1FEF42-A440-4028-ACC7-4420850730D7.jpg
    20.3 KB · Views: 554
Interesting question. In 1964 I started graduate school at Yale and applied for a Connecticut concealed carry permit. In those days you first had to get a permit from your local police chief that was only valid in his jurisdiction. You then sent that to the Connecticut State Police and they would issue a permit that was valid state-wide. I believe each of these permits was $1.00 and was good for 1 year. Since I lived in New Haven, I applied through the New Haven PD and underwent fingerprinting and a background check. About 3 weeks later I got a call telling me that I passed the background check, but since I was a Yale student, I had to go through the Chief of the Yale PD (an 8 man force at that time) to get my permit, which would require a personal interview. When I showed up, I was shown into his office and asked to take a seat. He was sitting behind a desk wearing a blue button-down shirt and a striped tie and was smoking a pipe. He looked more like a professor than a police chief. He made some very polite small-talk about my education and background and then said, "Do you like guns?". I said "Yes". He then pressed the intercom button on his desk and told his secretary to type up a pistol permit for me. She brought it in and he signed it and impressed a seal on it and handed it to me. I then sent it to the State Police and received my state permit about a week later.

A long answer to a very straightforward question, but the experience was so unusual and made a strong impression on me, so I thought others might be interested.
 
That's not quite correct. About 20 or so states recognize the Oregon CHL.

Unfortunately, of our neighboring states only Idaho is among those. I think this is mostly because Oregon has decided NOT to grant any other state reciprocity, which some (understandably) reciprocate.

If you plan your route right, you CAN actually legally drive from Oregon to the East Coast with an Oregon CHL and a loaded gun. Follow the green! ;)


attachment.php
Thanks for posting that. I see that Oregon recognizes no other state's CCL license. I was told that because of that no other states would recognize ours. Nice to know that's not the case.

We do plan on getting a trailer in the near future. When I actually retire, we would like to drive to other states including down to Texas to visit grandkids. Part of the reason for getting the Utah permit was to allow us to make that trip legally with our guns. I see now that with the Utah permit we don't have to go up over Wyoming to get there, and will be legal in Texas. New Mexico and Colorado are still no go territories even with both.

It's pretty messed up having all of these differing laws in each state. As citizens of this nation, we shouldn't have to deal with all this nonsense. We need a nation wide constitutional carry amendment. Never happen in the current climate, but hopefully some day we can get things cleaned up.
 
yep. Buit I was more than a little pissed that the badge didnt come with the card-you have to buy them yourself :mad:
Universal Badge and ID Holder with Concealed Weapons Badge | CWP Neck badge and ID holder

Those badges are hilarious. I suppose, if you have one around your neck, it gives you the right to carry concealed, just like carrying a shotgun along with your fishin' pole gives you the privilege to fish wherever you want, right?


I'm on my 4th CC renewal (every 5 years in NC, so I've carried for 20 years now). My initial class was held at the hospital where I worked and taught by two of the company police there. They had to meet us at the door and make sure we didn't bring a gun in, since weapons are banned on hospital property. We did our qualification shooting at a local indoor range.

They taught a good class, and when we did our qualification, I used my 4" M66 that I sold a few years later. I was using magnum loads, and made sure I went last. Everyone else was shooting some sort of 9mm semiauto. Most of the shooters were in body mass at 7 yards and one guy had a nice group about the size of a dinner plate; I had them all in the 10 ring and could cover the group with a coffee saucer. Everybody jumped when I fired my first shot, and the instructor came over to watch me shoot; after the last round, he looked at me, grinned and said, "show off."

I took the NC instructor's course 7 years ago, and taught CC for 3 years, but decided there was too much liability involved and quit doing it.
 
Indiana in early 1986. Had to walk from the college dorm to the police station; it came in the mail to the dorm in about a week. $20.
 
Last edited:
Got my first one in 1991. Before that I open carried a lot. But, in Montana that wasn't all that uncommon especial back then. Most trucks had gun racks with guns in them.
 
Back
Top