Ohio
Shot through the heart: fast draw is alive and well in Ohio
Many of the traditions of the American West are lost to us now. Most will never know what it’s like to ride a wagon train, move a herd of cattle out of state or die of consumption.
But there’s still one great cowboy pastime that can be enjoyed, and Ohio is at the heart of it.
The sport of fast draw is thriving, and Ohio has the oldest still-running organization that specializes in this unique activity that is as much art and performance as it is sport.
Drag racing with a firearm
The Ohio Fast Draw Association (OFDA) holds events in cities across the state, often renting out spaces that are suited to their specific needs.
At a recent event in Bellefontaine, Ohio, a small city north of Dayton, they rented out the Logan County Fish & Game hall, a remote one-story building off Route 68.
The room was harshly lit by fluorescents, the smell of sulfur, from the gunfire, hung in the air and conversation was regularly punctuated by the sound of two shots.
Brian “Doc” Hric is Vice President of the Buckeye Rangers, a fast draw club out of Willoughby, as well as secretary for the Ohio Fast Draw Association.
“Well, the sport of fast draw – because we say fast draw, people think, ‘Oh, you must be some kind of an artist.’ Well, technically we are, but we don’t draw anything,” said Hric.
Western fast draw as a sport isn’t nearly as old as the activity it recreates. In the 1800s, fast draw was a life or death situation with two people facing each other and the faster draw shooting, and often killing, the other person first.
The sport of fast draw started in the late 1950s at a well-known California tourist attraction, Knott’s Berry Farm, according to Hric.
“That’s where it originally was created by a couple of workers there … and it kind of grew and went on from there. In the ’60s and ’70s, there was fast draw clubs all over the United States. They used to put contests on at casinos in Las Vegas, where some of the actors would go, like Clint Eastwood and Glenn Ford and people like that, and actually participate in those,” said Hric.
Ohio Fast Draw Association, which started in 1960, is the nation’s oldest sanctioning body in the sport. They set up events every month in cities all over the state and clubs like Buckeye Rangers and others come to compete.
The sport, of course, has lower stakes than the historical version of gunfighting; nobody is shooting at anything but a target. In the sport of fast draw, competitors line up side by side and on an activated signal, they both draw their six shooters and fire, with the target reading their speeds. A really quick speed can be between three tenths and four tenths of a second, while the elite can go even faster.
“What I like to refer to this as: this is like drag racing. But instead of a car you’re using a firearm,” said Hric.
Showdown in Bellefontaine
One of the fastest shooters of the day in Bellefontaine was Laura Campbell, of Quincy, Ohio. She’s been shooting since 2007, when she and her husband picked up the hobby.
There used to be a women’s division, but a lack of participants led the association to fold the divisions together, so now Campbell goes up against her husband and all the other men.
“This is, this is like the second contest that I’ve competed with the men and the contest we had the beginning of the morning. I won that contest, so, yeah … I beat him. I beat them all,” Campbell said with a laugh.
Campbell relished the opportunity to go back home to Quincy with a victory under her belt.
“I have a group of ladies that I go out to lunch with once a month, and that’s the first thing they say, ‘Hey, Quickdraw, how you go? Have you got a contest? Did you win? Did you win? Because if you didn’t win, we won’t make fun of you, you know?’” Said Campbell.
Campbell said she and her husband were never into guns before discovering the sport, which was inspired by their abiding love for Western film and TV.
Respecting the iron
Like many sports that include an element of danger, the sport of fast draw is highly focused on safety. In their case, gun safety is the name of the game, and one of their guiding principles.
“We do not shoot live ammunition. There is no live ammunition shot in the sport of fast draw. We use what is called as a wax bullet,” said Hric.
Competitors assemble their own shells with wax loads and a shot shell primer, that uses no gunpowder, to propel them. It’s important that the wax mixture is just right; too soft and the load won’t make it to the target in one piece, too hard and it will bounce off and possibly fly back at the shooter.
Tony Wisen is the chairman of the Ohio Fast Draw Association.
“So we we have race guns and we have stock guns. So stock guns can still shoot live ammunition, which you don’t do in competition. And you’re not allowed to have live ammunition anywhere near a competition,” said Wisen.
Race guns are modified with lighter barrels and other parts made out of aluminum for a faster draw time. Those guns can’t shoot real bullets.
A western tradition
Perhaps the most important part of the sport is its reverence of the American western tradition. The act of fast drawing revolvers is itself an homage to the Wild West, but beyond that, competitors don’t just show up to competition in the same garb — or persona — that they’d wear into work at an office on Monday.
“Western wear is mandatory. Now to what degree you want to take that Western wear, that’s up to the individual. We’ve had people dress in all buckskin fringes,” said Hric.
It doesn’t stop at the clothes. Most of the competitors at these events are old enough to have grandchildren. And much like their kids and grandkids do at comic-cons and cosplay gatherings, many fast draw competitors show up to events in character.
“In Ohio fast draw, you do not have to have a character or take a handle. There are other organizations that do, and that’s what they go by. People don’t know what a shooter’s real name is. They know them by their handle, or their character, which is kind of neat,” said Hric.
Though OFDA does not require one, many choose to still come to events in character. For Hric, a retired fire department paramedic with a touch of asthma who already went by the nickname “Doc,” an immediate parallel presented itself in the form of one of the most famous figures of the Wild West era.
“Okay, I chose Doc Newberry, who is an offshoot of Doc Holliday,” said Hric, referencing the famed ally of Wyatt Earp. Holliday fought with Earp in the gunfight at the OK Corral, perhaps the most famous gunfight in American history, suffered from tuberculosis and notably was also in the medical profession.
As Doc Newberry, Hric competes and also shares his love of history and the American west with other competitors and spectators.
“I didn’t feel like dressing up as Star Wars and shooting lasers, so I decided to do this instead,” said Hric.
A deep abiding love for cowboy culture is the bolo tie that binds all the spectators and competitors at fast draw events, even more than shooting or competition. And one cowboy figure towers above the rest in terms of influence.
“John Wayne is my absolute hero. I love my John Wayne,” said Laura Campbell.
“I’m a big John Wayne fan … I grew up with Westerns, the Don Knotts comedy westerns. Yeah, the John Wayne, Clint Eastwoods. So I was really into Westerns,” said Wisen.
“I wanted a large loop lever put on my rifle like John Wayne. Because John Wayne was my hero. That’s the guy that I love watching his Westerns,” said Hric.
The shadows of figures like Wayne, Eastwood, and other cowboy movie legends, like Glenn Ford (who was notable for being the fastest draw in real life, not just his films) loom large over the sport and all the gatherings.
As much as fast draw is a competition, it’s also a performance, an oral history session and a chance to gather with friends.
At the end of a loud day of shooting and living out their childhood—and sometimes adulthood—dreams, the cowboys and cowgirls of Ohio Fast Draw always seem to have a blast reliving history in their own unique way.