HOW TO PREVENT ACCIDENTS It is no use carrying a pistol in your pocket for self-defence, and to have it go off and kill yourself, or much worse, shoot the person you are trying to save. The first, foremost, and last thing is never to point the muzzle towards anywhere you do not want a bullet to go. Never mind if the pistol is empty, treat it as if it were loaded. “I did not think it was loaded” or “he was cleaning the pistol and it exploded” are the stock excuses when an accident occurs. Firearms to the non-expert “explode” at odd moments, and nobody is to blame; he thinks it is the nature of a pistol to “explode” spontaneously. I cannot myself understand how a man can clean a loaded pistol, as by cleaning I understand getting the fouling, nickel, etc., out of the bore of the pistol, and the cartridge must first be extracted to do this. But I suppose a man not used to a pistol would mean by cleaning, polishing the outside, raising the hammer, and then putting a rag through the trigger guard and pulling it He of course does not first open the pistol to see if it is loaded; he leaves it for the inquest to decide “that he did not know it was loaded.” I am not writing for such people; they are better shot and out of the way, else they might hurt others. The second thing is never to load the pistol except when necessary. Most people buy an automatic, get the gunmaker to load it for them, and put it in a drawer or their pocket, and keep it like that for years, or worse, leave it lying about loaded. A pistol must be periodically cleaned. If it is kept loaded for years, it will probably jamb if any one attempts to fire it. A pistol kept loaded is a constant source of danger to everyone, including the owner. I knew of a case where a revolver was kept loaded by a bedside for twenty years and thrown into a trunk each time the owner went on a journey. After the owner’s death, I was asked to see if the pistol was safe. It was lying in its case beside the bed, and when I opened the case I found the barrel was lying so that it pointed at the head of any one sleeping in the bed. I found it loaded in all the chambers, the hammer let down on one of the caps so that its I took it into the garden and fired that cartridge. The hammer had during all those years rested on this cap and the least tap on the hammer would have fired it. Each time it was thrown into the trunk it was a mercy it had not gone off. If it had remained on the cap much longer, the sharp nose of the hammer would have reached the fulminate and fired the revolver. Here was a case of a loaded revolver, like the sword of Damocles, threatening the life of its owner all night long, every night, though it was put by the bed as a safeguard. The hammer should have been put down on an empty chamber. However, to repeat, never point a pistol under any circumstances at anything you do not want to shoot. Never have it loaded except when absolutely necessary. Now as to when it is necessary to have it loaded. Most people are much safer if they never load it. If you want a pistol to frighten burglars with or to carry in dark lanes at night, get a brightly plated nickel one. The larger you can carry the better. Do not buy any cartridges for it. If you get the gunmaker to render it impossible to fire it, even if loaded, so much the better. You can stop any but the most desperate man I know of a jeweller who stopped a highwayman by pointing the nickel plated pump of his bicycle at him. During the war a man took a number of the enemy prisoners by threatening them with his empty revolver. For people who know nothing of firearms it is much the safest plan not to have any cartridges. Never allow “ornaments” shaped like pistols to lie about. People get so used to playing with these that they at once point a real pistol when they can get hold of it. Even when a pistol has to be fired it only needs to be loaded just before being used, as a rule. When target shooting, it need only be loaded the moment before getting into position for shooting. If all the shots are not immediately fired from this position it should be at once unloaded. I saw a most disgraceful neglect of this precaution at a shooting meeting, which if the Range Officer had also seen, the man would have been expelled from all meetings. He was an expert revolver shot too! Several of us had made very good scores with the revolver at a stationary target. This man came up carrying a hand bag in which his revolver and cartridges were kept. “I have a few minutes to spare before my train Never touch an automatic pistol until you are expert with a single-shot pistol. I do not mean expert to make good scores, but absolutely safe not to point it at any one, and able to take out the cartridge with safety or to put the pistol at safe or half-cock. We will suppose you have the single-shot pistol and cartridges, and the target in front of you with a sufficiently large background that it does not matter where your bullet goes if you keep your muzzle always pointed in that direction. It is almost impossible to have a range absolutely safe against an accidental discharge putting the bullet over the butts. A man who swings his pistol over his head is almost sure some day to let off a bullet high over the butts if he does not blow his own brains out first. If the shooter pays attention all the time to keeping the muzzle of his pistol pointed towards the butt he will be safe even if his pistol goes off accidently. The barrel must be aligned towards the butt. Most beginners think that, if they see the muzzle of the pistol against the butt, it is aimed at the To aim a pistol, the breech (the part nearest the butt of the pistol) must be aligned with the muzzle on the target. Keep the pistol lying on a table before you and pointing at the butt, and when you lift it always keep it thus horizontal or slightly inclining towards the ground but always pointed at the butt. All single-shot breech-loading pistols open by pressing a lever, whether on top, at the side, or underneath the barrel. Press this and open the pistol, look through the barrel to see that there is no cartridge in it and that the barrel is clear, and then close it. Do this constantly for many days, so that you get into the habit the moment you take the pistol in your hand to look through it to see if it is unloaded, and no obstruction in it. To fire a pistol which has an obstruction in the barrel may burst the pistol. If any one asks to see the pistol, first open it in his presence, of course pointing away from him or any one else, and look through the barrel before handing it to him. If an automatic, first take out the magazine and open the barrel as well. Unless he is a shooting man do not hand him any cartridges. If he wants to see what your cartridges All this may seem super-caution but it is necessary, especially with an automatic, and unless you do this by instinct with the safer single-shot pistol, you may at any moment have a dreadful accident with an automatic for which you will be sorry all your life. Now, standing facing the butt, open the pistol, put a cartridge in it (an empty cartridge case, not a loaded one). Put the pistol, if it has an outside hammer, to full-cock, being very careful to keep it pointed at the butt, lower the hammer to half-cock, open the pistol and extract the cartridge, and close the pistol again; repeat this many times till you can cock and half-cock without the hammer slipping or falling by accident. If it had a loaded cartridge in it the pistol would go off should you let the hammer slip down, which is one of the most frequent causes of accidents with pistols having external hammers. Some hammer pistols have a rebound, that is, when the hammer falls it rebounds to half-cock. |