
The National Firearms Museum
Son of a Methodist preacher, John Wesley
Hardin was only 15 years old when he first had a price placed on
his head. Before he went to prison, upwards of 40 men had fallen
to his guns, including one he shot through a hotel wall for snoring.
Like many on the outlaw trail in the percussion era, Hardin usually
carried more than one Colt revolver, as reloading a cap-and-ball
handgun under fire was not a quick or easily completed task.
While becoming adept at handling his Colts, Hardin is said to have befriended
and backed down Wild Bill Hickok, then marshal of Abilene, Kan.,
by demonstrating a quick reversing twist of his six-guns when asked
to hand them over. But his days of dodging the law were numbered,
and a 17-year stint in prison, ended by a pardon from the governor,
seemed to have made John Wesley Hardin a changed man. After passing
the bar, he began practicing law as an attorney in Gonzales, Texas,
and later El Paso. Yet drawn back into his old ways, on Aug. 19,
1895, while drinking and playing dice with his back to the saloon
door, Hardin fell to .45 slugs fired by John Selman, an officer he
had argued with earlier over the arrest of his prostitute girlfriend.
This Colt revolver carried by Hardin is one of many historic firearms
on loan to the National Firearms Museum for the special exhibition,
Guns West, opening in May 2008.
The National Firearms Museum is open daily and admission is free (donations gratefully received). Arms enthusiasts of all ages are welcome. For more information, please call (703) 267-1600 or visit nationalfirearmsmuseum.org