Utah Becomes First State to Honor a State Gun

March 19th 2011
ALLGOV

By -Noel Brinkerhoff, David Wallechinsky
 

After participating in the pursuit of famed bandit Pancho Villa in the early 20th century, the Browning M1911 automatic pistol is again making history—becoming the first-ever official firearm of a U.S. state.

In deciding to establish a state firearm, Utah lawmakers settled on the M1911 pistol because its creator, legendary gun maker John Browning, was born and lived a large part of his life in the state. Browning also founded his company in Utah.

The 100-year-old handgun was adopted by the U.S. Army in 1911 and used by an expeditionary force that invaded Mexico five years later to hunt down Villa. It remained standard issue until 1985.

Utah has unusually lenient gun ownership laws, attracting revenue from out-of-state gun owners. Of the 67,000 concealed-weapon permits issued in Utah in 2010, 51,000 were sold to non-residents.

Utah already had 23 other state symbols, including the state vegetable (Spanish sweet onion), state historic vegetable (sugar beet), state rock (coal), state insect (honey bee), state cooking pot (Dutch oven) and state fossil (allosaurus).

In addition to Utah, Arizona also wants to designate a state firearm: the Colt revolver. But that decision has been mired in controversy, coming so close after the Tucson shootings in January that killed six people and seriously wounded U.S. Representative Gabrielle Giffords.

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Utah Becomes First State to Adopt Official Gun

Utah Governor Gary Herbert, left, holds a Browning automatic pistol given to him by Christopher Browning, right, great-grandson of John M. Browning.
(AP Photo/The Salt Lake Tribune, Scott Sommerdorf)

Browning M1911 pistol gets the honors

By Luke Kelly-Clyne

March 19th 2011

(Newser) – What do a Dutch oven, a honeybee, and an eight-round M1911 pistol have in common? All three appear on the 25-item list of Utah state symbols. The M1911 semi-automatic pistol became a state identifier this week after Gov. Gary Herbert signed the measure into law, making Utah the first state with an official gun, reports CNN. The designation honors its Utah-born designer, John M. Browning.

Lawmakers took flak for pushing the measure through in the wake of the Tucson shooting spree. "There was more controversy than I anticipated, but it really passed with bipartisan support," said the GOP lawmaker who sponsored the measure. "Certainly meaning no disrespect to the tragedy in Arizona, we moved forward in doing this because it's the only opportunity that we had."

 
 

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