Guns An Age-Old Part Of Family Culture In Appalachia
By Andre Teague/Bristol Herald Courier
Todd Sutherland of Gunslingers in Kingsport shows a selection of revolvers and semi-automatic handguns that are popular for home-defense and concealed-carry use.
The first thing Karla Schmutzler did after shooting her first deer was text message her friend, Todd Sutherland, who was in his Kingsport gun store with a customer at the time.
“I got hooked. Big time,” Schmutzler said. “You know, all the guys would go hunting, and it never really occurred to me to ask to go along. Because, you know, it’s a guy thing.”
But then she went with them.
In Appalachia, guns are an age-old part of family culture. “Down here, we’re mostly pro-gun. It’s part of who we are,” said Sutherland, who owns the Gunslingers store on East Stone Drive in Kingsport.
“There is nothing more fun than going to the range on a Saturday morning and plinking away with your kids,” he said. “It’s good clean fun.”
Bill Miller, a local National Rifle Association board member and gun club president, estimates that 85 percent of folks in Appalachia are in some way involved in a firearms sport. And, he said, Schmutzler represents the fastest-growing demographic: women.
By the handfuls, women are joining one of the oldest, richest and most cohesive communities in the region. “Women are saying, ‘We’re gonna take care of ourselves,’ ” Miller said.
In recent months, the thriving community of gun enthusiasts has been rattled by the election of President-elect Barack Obama and what it might mean for their favorite pastimes. Gun enthusiasts across the nation are stocking up on ammunition and guns, citing concerns about higher taxes and fearing future bans on some of their favorite weapons.
On the second full weekend after the election, more than 4,000 people attended a gun show at the Meadowview Conference Resort & Convention Center in Kingsport.
“We had an extremely large crowd compared to normal,” said Jeremy Pearson, manager of the RK gun show held Nov. 15-16. “It was the best one we’ve had here this year.”
And on Tuesday of that week, a group of old friends sat together in the clubhouse at the Kettlefoot Rod and Gun Club, sipping Styrofoam cups of coffee and exhaling laughter in toasty puffs of air. At the mention of Obama, one said: “Don’t even get me started.”
Perhaps most frustrating to local enthusiasts isn’t the upcoming threat, but that the frenzy is a mere symptom of the deep-seated frustration gun lovers have felt for decades of what they call a lack of understanding and prejudice from anti-gun camps.
“All through history, people have been afraid of what they don’t understand,” Sutherland said. “Taking guns away from us, all you effectively do is disarm honest people, because the criminal isn’t going to turn in his gun.”
At the Kettlefoot club, friends Wayne Wills and Terry Lovins, both lifelong members, talked about their club and the role it plays in their lives. Wills carried a manila envelope holding printouts of his favorite Thomas Jefferson quotes on the Second Amendment. He also brought National Security Council statistics that ranked hunting as one of the safest sports around.
“See, you’re more likely to get injured playing basketball,” he said.
Kettlefoot is the area’s largest gun club, stretching over 400 acres of wooded, mountain land in Washington County, Va. The club has about 800 members, 100 of whom have been there more than 20 years. The club boasts facilities for practically every avenue of the sport – a virtual playland for archers, hunters and competitive shooters, to name a few. Once a month, the club hosts a shooting event where families gather over warm meals and friendly competition.
“You come out here and you say, ‘I’m gonna shoot skeet today.’ And there’s four or five guys out there with you. One of them is a businessman, like me – we both run body shops,” Wills said. “And the other guy is a brain surgeon.
“Shooters are just people,” Wills said. “They’re just people with their hobby.”
At Sutherland’s Kingsport store, the owner is trying to keep up with increased business that has nearly tripled in recent weeks. He’s enjoying the profits, he said, but not the reason behind them.
“It’s good now, but it could hurt later,” he said.
“We’ve got regular guys who come in here often, and they don’t buy something every time,” Sutherland said. “It’s a community. They like coming here because they’re part of something. And everybody likes to feel a part of something. There’s nothing wrong with that.”
Schmutzler and her husband took a hunting trip to Texas to celebrate their wedding anniversary this year. Not only does she enjoy the sport with her husband, but it’s a family affair. Between them, they have eight children – girls and boys – and all of them hunt, she said. All but one of their kids have grown up and moved away.
“We go with our teenage son, and we laugh at all the weird stuff the animals do,” she said. “Half the fun is just calling the animals and seeing them. It’s not just about shooting.”
Yet across the board, the overriding sentiment is not that a hobby is under attack, but what the hobby means to the people who love it. The Second Amendment is part of American heritage and freedom, many said. When folks attack guns, they attack a way of life.
“Every freedom we have today was won by someone who knew how to use a firearm,” Sutherland said. “The Second Amendment is the one that stands when all the others fail.”
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Reader Reactions
I wager that Eddie is proud of his tolerance, understanding, and acceptance of all cultures—-except this one.
It is wonderful to see someone so filled with love for his fellow creatures,—-except for those nasty Troglodytes .
No doubt this enlightened learned soul is a vegan who shuns all fur and leather—which after all is only bald fur.
I do find it amusing he attempts to assert the superiority of the urbanites. Do we really need to compare the residents of city slums with the rural poor ? The education—-I need only mention Washington D.C. schools. The illegitimacy rate ? Drugs ? Crime ? Forget the inner city poor—-I will take Loretta Lynn over Britney any day.
I can almost hear the banjo plinking from your front porch. Do you love your white haired little Brother/Uncle? Why would it be a crime for some one to pop a chunk of lead in his head, when there are creatures with far greater faculties trying to make a living in the world?
The article talks of how killing creatures is fun and brings families together. What kind of moron puts blood, suffering and death with the word “Fun”???? That is where I have a BIG problem.
I was raised in a very poor home in the mountains. I ate many meals that were brought from the forest. But the Troglodytes that drive the gargantuan pick-up trucks that blow black smoke in everyones faces, while they chew their tobacco with the 4 teeth they have left, then talk of the multitudes of creatures they have killed just makes me sick.
ANYONE who kills for FUN, is a pathetic piece of garbage that has no business trying to include themselves in what could possibly be labeled as a “Advanced Civilization”.
Logic obviously plays no part in your reasoning, so perhaps I can paint a picture for you which can convey to you how the people who have awakened see you. Do you think that hillbillies are poked fun of because they are so smart and learned? You might want to mull that one over for a while.
Do you think “God” is on your side?? Think again Dirtbag, if there is a “God” she cringes every time you walk into the forest looking for something to murder.
I know that people have a hard time here and a few of them actually eat the meat that is taken, but 98% of you are buying bullets with welfare money that your sister is getting for the 6 fatherless brats that she has. And the meat that you take and put in the freezer, just winds up getting thrown away. The parts that you try to get rid of by giving to your neighbors? That gets throw away too. Your kids wont eat it. They have McDonald’s twice a day.
Dont try to hide behind the poor little me, I am so poor crap. I guarantee the money that you spend on your hunting garbage, could feed your family for a year. So not only are you a murderer, but you are a lier too.
Like I said before, Every serial killer ever known started out the same way, “Killing helpless animals”. They have no respect for life, and neither does anyone who kills for “Fun”.
Eddie107: So,you are against hunting . I take it you are a committed vegetarian.You must be. If your heart breaks everytime I kill a deer and eat it then it must be true.
You may disagree with hunting in gereral, but to call us stupid for doing so, just shows your immaturity and ignorance.
“Baby Boomer: The people who own guns and hunt are far from inhuman. They are perfectly normal.“
The act of stoning a 14 year old girl to death is considered “normal in some places too.
Isn’t it funny how we can see things that are so horrible and monstrous, yet there are those who are so stupid they cannot see.
The act of taking the life of any creature who has emotion, can feel pain or fear “just for the sake of Fun” proves that we are purely the product of nature.
Were we a product of any divine nature, we would not feel the lust for blood, and find pleasure in winning the challenge when another creature tries to hold on to its own life.
Yes wildlife would run rampant with out people, but it was people’s stupidity that upset the balance in the first place.
Anyone with any respect for nature would never ever take a life for “Fun”. That is where serial killers are spawned.
Baby Boomer: The people who own guns and hunt are far from inhuman. They are perfectly normal.We shoot these animals for sport and for food. If we did not take a certain number of these animals every year, we would be overtaken by them.It’s not like they are shot and left laying.
Just where did you grow up in this “area” that guns and hunting wasn’t a part of life?
Baby Boomer
Just because you do not understand it does not mean its wrong. I do not understand many things with other cultures but that would never make me want to actively try and restrict their freedoms.
I have owned guns all my life and actively carry one at all times. Protecting myself and my family is important to me. I have Military, police and private training with weapons and can handle them properly and accurately.
I have owned (and carried) firearms for my entire life. Everyone should know how to handle and safely use guns!
ALL WOMEN should know this also.
I have been an avid shooter and collector of firearms for nearly thirty years. I have never shot an animal, but I respect those who enjoy the sport of hunting. All of the hunters I know personally, have deeper love, knowledge and respect for nature and wildlife than the non-hunters I know. Please don’t stereotype. Diversity makes this world a more tolerable place, and yes, I can, could and would hunt if I were so inclined. In addition, I thank God that I live in a country that supports hunting and gun ownership. Let’s keep it that way.
I grew up in this area and we never owned guns. I think people who shoot and kill defenseless animals for “good clean fun” are inhuman. Does it make them feel big and important, to take the life of an innocent creature?


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