• This community needs YOUR help today. We rely 100% on Supporting Memberships to fund our efforts. With the ever increasing fees of everything, we need help. We need more Supporting Members, today. Please invest back into this community. I will ship a few decals too in addition to all the account perks you get.



    Sign up here: https://www.muzzleloadingforum.com/account/upgrades

Bringing more African Americans to the hobby?

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Status
Not open for further replies.
See if they have any interest in their American Heritage as a "person of color" ? Perhaps...,

BLACK REENACTORS.jpg


Here is an article that may help a person with an invite to just try black powder, coupled with the fact that they are Americans of African heritage...,

Black Revolutionary War Reenactors Want to Set The Record Straight

Because of a lack of persons of African heritage in Rev War reenactment, the public sees a version of events that is not as accurate as it should be. Washington had the most integrated army until the 1950's, of any American conflict, but the public does not see nor know that. You don't have to recruit them for reenacting, but an appeal to history might at least get a person out to try the black powder muzzleloader. It was what got me to try muzzleloaders. Granted I don't fall into that particular minority, but to use a phrase "a person of color" may have as much interest in early American history as I do, right?

LD
 
I think the core issue is how do you get anyone interested in getting into this hobby, or any other hobby you are interested in. It's not easy. You need to start by talking to people and see if you can spike their interest enough to at least try it one time with you.
You think its hard to get people into this hobby, try whitewater rafting. Pretty much everyone I ever asked either thought I was crazy or would go one time and be so scared they never went again.
 
I met a black guy in Scotland. His family had been there for 300 years. Never been to either Africa or America. Would he be an African American? How a about a white guy from Africa that is now an American citizen?

Why would anybody whose family go back 300 years in Scotland be an 'African-American'? Scotland wasn't even part of the United Kingdom until 1707 with the Act of Union that was promulgated that year. Even today, black people are in a very small minority of ethnicity, with less than 7 in 1000 having some kind of black racial background. The vast majority of black people have arrived in what is now UK since the end of WW2, but there are historical references to black people - always male - from the end of the 15th C onwards.

As an aside - my old pal Piet de Vries, born in South Africa and a US citizen of some thirty years' standing, always refers to himself as Afro-American, just to see the looks on peoples' faces, he being around 6' 5" and a redheaded Boer.

Another aside - we have a number of black people from the Caribbean in our gun club, and undoubtedly a few moslems, too, since they are of Pakistani extraction, and a Hindu's, too. On guest days it can be VERY colourful!
 
Last edited:
Any idea on how to bring in more African Americans to muzzleloading? I have many friends who are in to modern guns but I personally have never seen, or heard of in my entire life, an African American person that is into traditional muzzleloading. I find that a bit odd and am wondering what you all think?

-Smokey
I think it'd be great! The NMLRA had one fellow on staff out in Indiana, can't recall his name, but more involvement would be nice. I always liked the old photos of Civil War Union Black Soldiers armed with the Springfield muskets. I'll bet back after the War they were good shots hunting to feed families with muzzleloading shotguns and re-purposed muskets for deer, etc.
 
I remember the time we were on a camping trip when my oldest grandson was just a baby. We camped near Gettysburg with my sons family. This was probably late 90s. One day a group of probably 30 or 40 buffalo soldiers thundered through the campground on horseback. Everyone stood there and saluted them as they rode by. It was an awesome sight.
 
Wow. I would've liked to have seen that!

I remember the time we were on a camping trip when my oldest grandson was just a baby. We camped near Gettysburg with my sons family. This was probably late 90s. One day a group of probably 30 or 40 buffalo soldiers thundered through the campground on horseback. Everyone stood there and saluted them as they rode by. It was an awesome sight.
 
I think the core issue is how do you get anyone interested in getting into this hobby, .....

I'm part of a growing unit, and we have one African-American lad, so far.
We've found the trick is to let them try the musket with a blank. And also to talk of family outings, etc.

The problem isn't from that point..., the problem is the audience for the reenactments tends to be always ethnic Anglo folks. Sometimes we see Hispanic folks, and often they are "floored" to discover that Spanish forces, with soldiers who were Hispanic and with some Spanish (there is a difference folks), fought on the side of the Continentals. We wish we could get more of the community as a "whole" out to our events....,



LD
 
There is another thread about women dressed as men in military settings, and if it should be part of living history
I feel the same way about people with darker skin tones then myself. American history, world history belongs to us all. Our doors should be open to anyone. And if that person wants to put on funny clothes, sleep on the ground, burn dinner over a fire, and shoot stinky short range guns that are a ton of work, bring ‘em on.
And welcome them to what ever part they wish to play.
min the Sci-fi movie Volcano a volcano goes off in down town LA. Tommy Lee Hones saves the day. In the end everyone is covered with ash and soot. A little kid looks at the crowd and says everyone looks the same..... so should it be in our camps.
 
I'm part of a growing unit, and we have one African-American lad, so far.
We've found the trick is to let them try the musket with a blank. And also to talk of family outings, etc.
I agree with LD. A couple of weeks ago another unit invited me to join them for a Boy Scout event. After a talk, the kids were allowed to come up and fire the weapons. One group was probably about a dozen, with almost half being black. Generally speaking, the black kids were more reluctant to come up. But once they did, they paid more attention to the safety aspect. Each kid was supposed to get one shot with each - Springfield and I was using a Sharps.

I had a bunch of them cycle back through for two and three shots. The ones that were in line for repeats the most? The black kids who were most reluctant. The first time through, they worked the block and cap, but I handled the cartridge. The second time through, I let them do it all.

Getting anyone to try it is the hardest part. I'd be surprised if the host unit doesn't get some members out of it.

Mike
 
I’m into most everything shooting related, and generally indifferent to what other folks do, but if they do what I do, or show interest in what I do, we automatically become hyphenated friends.
 
Last edited:
The reason some of these black kids might be hesitant, is probably some anti gun teachers screeching at them about how guns are bad. Oh and how white males are to blame for EVERYTHING.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
my club has several black members & many youth on the shooting teams.
 
The reason some of these black kids might be hesitant, is probably some anti gun teachers screeching at them about how guns are bad. Oh and how white males are to blame for EVERYTHING.

You are correct.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top