Elmer Keith: The Forgotten History of the Firearms Author and Father of Big Bore Handgunning

Elmer Keith: The Forgotten History

There’s really no two ways about it: They don’t make them like Elmer Keith anymore. He was known for wearing big Stetson hats, smoking big cigars, and hunting big game with handguns long before anyone else did. In Keith’s day, handgun rounds were either big and slow or fast and small. Confronted with this kind of ballistics market, Keith sought to make bigger rounds go faster. This is how Keith became the father of the magnum cartridges that we use today: the .357, the .41 and the .44.

Keith was perhaps most associated with the .44 magnum, with which he could dispatch a mule deer at 600 yards. He was also a prolific wildcatter of both pistol and rifle rounds, who was always looking for ways to make big rounds bigger. Indeed, Keith was very vocal about his distaste for smaller rounds, and would even express it to contemporaries such as Jack O’Connor who championed the 270 Winchester.

Keith was born and raised in Hardin, Missouri, right on the Western frontier, and had the opportunity to meet many gunfighters and Civil War veterans. He claimed, in fact, that it was the town barber, a former gunfighter, who taught him how to shoot using linoleum in back of the shop.

The Hotel Fire That Changed Everything

In 1911, Keith was burned very badly in a fire in Missoula, Montana. These were scars that he wore for the rest of his life and the fire would likely have killed just about any other man. But Keith refused to die. It was so bad that his chin became fused with his right shoulder and his left hand was turned completely upside down. His father contacted several doctors in the area to perform a surgery to fix his hand, but they all refused, saying that he probably wouldn’t even live to see 21 anyway.

It finally fell on Keith’s father to break his hand and reset it. After a trip down to the local liquor store to get a bottle of 100-proof Old Granddad, Keith told his father to break and set his hand no matter how much he passed out or screamed. Keith was then fitted with a special glove, and over the course of two years, regained the normal use of his hand through a lot of painful use. The hand was deformed, but Keith could use it to both rope steer and shoot pistols.

He became one of the most famous gun writers of all time and regularly responded to his own correspondence without the help of a secretary. He received, on average, between 300 and 500 letters every month. Among the dedicated six gunner community, these letters are held as prized mementos.

America’s Most Prolific Gun Writer

Keith was a prolific gun writer throughout the early part of the 20th Century. His first published work was a humble letter written to American Rifleman in August 1925. His final original manuscript was written in the 1980s.

Keith was not the tinkerer that many wildcatters are. He was a simple man: When he found something that he liked, he stuck with it. However, when the thing that he wanted didn’t exist, he figured out a way to make it. This is how he arrived at the 44. Magnum.

In 1945, he exploded a .45 Colt SAA and switched over to the .44 Special. Up until that point, Keith had never even seen a 44 Special. But once he got his hands on one, the world of firearms was about to change forever. He created the Keith bullet, which has become somewhat genericized today, but had very specific specifications when Keith first designed it. Thousands of six gunners today still make Keith bullets to his original instructions.

Before the advent of the 44 Magnum, Keith spent years custom loading his 44 Specials to make them more like the 44 Magnum that was to come. However, Keith still wanted something better and so he approached Smith & Wesson, who then collaborated with Remington to give birth to what would become one of the most iconic rounds in American firearms history. Remington was in charge of the ammo and Smith & Wesson was in charge of the weapon, which was the Model 29.

Dirty Harry Changes the Game

It’s worth briefly reflecting on just how iconic the Model 29 was, because this was a large part of what drove sales for the .44 Magnum. In 1971, Dirty Harry was released. And can you imagine Harry Callahan with a Colt 1911, a Luger, or another equally iconic but semi-automatic weapon? Of course not. Demand for the Model 29 was so sharp after the release of that film that people were easily paying three times the list price because gun shops simply could not keep them in stock.

The 44 Mag led to a revolution in ammunition and sparked a drive for greater and greater stopping power among the American public. We have Elmer Keith to thank for it. He was also instrumental in the development of truncated cone solid ammo, the 41 Remington Magnum and the 357 Magnum.

Keith had a debilitating stroke in 1981, which effectively ended his career. His books include topics like six guns, hunting big game, shotguns, and his own life story – the last of which is a fascinating read if there ever was one.

But his legacy lives on as anyone who has ever hunted with a handgun can tell you. Try dropping a deer or a wild boar with a 357. It’s simply no match for the .44 Magnum, which is, at least in the world of firearms, as iconic an American creation as Coca-ColaLevi’s and Harley-Davidson. Keith was a man with a total inability to quit – and we have him to thank for it.

Elmer Keith: The Forgotten History of the Firearms Author and Father of Big Bore Handgunning originally appeared in the Resistance Library at Ammo.com.

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Author: Sam Jacobs

Sam Jacobs is the lead writer and chief historian at Ammo.com. His writing for Ammo.com's Resistance Library has been featured by USA Today, Reason, Bloomberg's Business Week, Zero Hedge, The Guardian, and National Review as well as many other prominent news and alt-news publications. Ammo.com believes that arming our fellow Americans – both physically and philosophically – helps them fulfill our Founding Fathers' intent with the Second Amendment: To serve as a check on state power. That the rights codified in our Bill of Rights were not given to us in a document, but by our Creator. That an unalienable right is God-given. It isn't granted by a president, a king, or any government – otherwise it can be taken away.

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29 Comments
Aodh Macraynall
Aodh Macraynall
March 9, 2020 8:36 am

I knew the story of the Keith 44 magnum but I love me some details. This is a great article.

Cow Doctor
Cow Doctor
March 9, 2020 8:51 am

Great article. I didn’t know Mr. Keith’s whole story. Amazing individual that definitely made history.

M G
M G
March 9, 2020 9:06 am

This was a great summary. I had no idea about Keith!

A great Missouri tie-in for my own Bootheel blogitorium.

M G
M G
March 9, 2020 9:17 am

Great article, Sam. I shared it to my hillbilly blog and if anything will get people from around here interested in TBP, it’s an article about a guy from Missouri with an inability to quit.

There is a reason they call us stubborn mules from Misery.

I linked the article from your own page, by the way. Diablogging is not about page views… it is about conveying information to people who trust the “bloggers” to find and provide it.

My husband told me he learned another new word: Infodemic.

We are in the midst of an Infodemic and we all need a way to filter that information through reliable filters.

I’ve recommended Sam Jacobs as gun and ammo expert recommendation for my 1300 or so hillbilly friends in the Southeast Missouri Bootheel Community. Just as they will get updates from the Biking Biologist, they will get updates from Sam I Am the Gun Man. (Hope you don’t mind the silly name Sam… my readers are used to me being a Hoot.)

TS
TS
March 9, 2020 9:46 am

I was introduced to the .44 when I was 14, in ’71. I didn’t know any better, and cranked one off one-handed. It was a plow-share handled Ruger single-six and slipped back in my hand enough for the hammer to dig into my hand a bit. It was immediate love at first sight. It joined my love of big rifle cartridges as a worthy gun to shoot.

Francis Marion
Francis Marion
March 9, 2020 10:05 am

Wish we could hunt with handguns here. I’d give it a go.

In the meantime I’m more of a Jack O’Connor adherent. I’ve killed critters both large and small with the 270 Win (and similar rounds – mostly 6.5×55 Swede) and it does just fine. Bullet placement is more important than caliber choice by and large -unless you’re hunting dangerous game like buffy. Then anything smaller than a howitzer will seem ‘too small’.

TS
TS
  Francis Marion
March 9, 2020 10:13 am

I agree; shot placement is critical. In my mis-spent youth I killed mulies and elk with a .22. Didn’t even think about. One shot in the right place in the head, and lights out.
I’ve killed lots with -06, which I personally considered one of the best all around cartridges available, and .270. Too many people poo-poo the .30-.30, but it’s more than enough in the right hands. I shot my first legal buck with an 1895 .303 Savage at about 300 yds, a gun that I still have.
If I can shoot it, I can put meat on the table with it.

Just Sayin'
Just Sayin'
  Francis Marion
March 9, 2020 1:29 pm

Shot placement and an honest assessment of equipment and self limitations. 30 years ago I wouldn’t hesitate to take a shot at 400 yard plus with my 30-06. Now, not so much. I limit myself to 150 to 200 yards max, though I have switched over to black-powder. There’s just something about lighting off a .50 cal and knowing what you hit isn’t running far. 😉

TS
TS
  Just Sayin'
March 9, 2020 1:41 pm

I still do some of the longer range shooting. I popped a badger last year with my -06 at about 380 yds, and took a coyote that spring at about 450. Of course, my scope has gotten bigger. When I finally went to one, about 30 yrs ago, I had a fixed 4 pwr. I went to a variable 4 to 12 about 3 yrs ago, after I re-bedded my stock.

Donkey
Donkey
  Francis Marion
March 9, 2020 6:40 pm

Francis,

What would you hunt with a handgun?

WeeWee'd up
WeeWee'd up
  Francis Marion
March 9, 2020 9:55 pm

shot placement wins the day every time, for sure.

I’m a long range shooter and I hand load everything. If I hunt, I typically use my 300 winmag…. basically because it’s the rifle I know inside out. With a leica 2000b rangfinder and a ballistics kestrel, I can typically hit a 4″ skeet on a berm at 500yds cold bore so, I don’t mind taking the 600+ yard poke but, that’s ONLY because I know where that bullet is going to land.

I typically shoot at a local range in the DFW area and I can shoot all the way out to 2000yds there. I also have a 375 CheyTac custom that will launch 390gr bullets at 2900+fps…. it makes that 2000yd shot at an IPSC waist up steel target not difficult to do.

I’ll typically shoot a 308 out to about 1000yds…. I’ll shoot my winmag out to 14-1500 if I feel like it but, I typically don’t shoot the 375CT inside of 1000yds… seems like a waste of ammo…. 1000yd shot with that rifle is a chip shot.

Spud
Spud
March 9, 2020 10:29 am

Fantastic! Great article!

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
March 9, 2020 10:35 am

A must read is Keith”s book, “Hell, I Was There!” he details his life and all the people he must nd which famous people were heroes and which were villains. He despise author Zane Grey for example. He told stories about his time as an inspector at an arsenal during WW2. How the Winchester people tried to assassinate him over refusal to pass defective M-1’s and many amazing tales from the Northwest to Africa.

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
  Harrington Richardson
March 9, 2020 1:05 pm

Should read as “all the people he met and which famous people.” These damn autocorrects are a nuisance, especially when they correct nothing! I don’t need any help screwing things up. I imagine the “despise” instead of “despised Zane Grey” was all me. Mondays!

Zulu Foxtrot Golf
Zulu Foxtrot Golf
March 9, 2020 10:39 am

Wildcat cartridges are my favorite. My 25-06, Grendel and 458 socom are full freedom boner inducing. I do have a special love for my 30-06 though. First bolt action I bought and hunted with stationed in OK. Shot placement is a lot easier when you have a great BC and lots of speed. 6.5mm and some of the new 6mm bullets are currently where the ultra performance is at. But if I am looking at cost versus performance for hunting then I am slinging 7mm mag or 300 mag.

357 mag is still my choice for wheelgun. Autos dont really matter so it is 9mm+P and 45acp. Rounds are pretty cheap and effective on both.

Wildcatting is still where it is at for top tier performance in hunting and target competition.

TS
TS
  Zulu Foxtrot Golf
March 9, 2020 10:50 am

Here’s a link to a good friend’s business here in Harney County. They’ve been developing, and getting customers that use them, extreme-custom 6.5 Creedmores. They’re doing the red-mist thing on sage rats at over 1,000 yds, consistently, for several years now.

Home

WeeWee'd up
WeeWee'd up
  Zulu Foxtrot Golf
March 9, 2020 10:04 pm

I see a lot of people fawning over the 6.5 but honestly, I’d take a 260rem over the 6.5…. it shoots the same bullet and has more case capacity so you can run it hotter than a 6.5 cm… As with shooting long range for performance, you have to hand load to get performance out of your rifle.

My performance rifles aren’t the 260 or 6.5… I typically shoot my 300wm if somebody’s shooting a 6.5 or 260 or whatever…. if we’re going further than that, I’ll take out my 375 CheyTac custom build and we can get out way past 2000yds.

WeeWee'd up
WeeWee'd up
  WeeWee'd up
March 9, 2020 10:08 pm

I think I may build out an AR10 platform in 260 Rem…. that rifle would be a hell of a lot of fun at 1000plus with a semi-auto.

Donkey
Donkey
March 9, 2020 12:11 pm

Did I read that rught…600 yards with a handgun?

Come on man.

Donkey
Donkey
  Miles Long
March 9, 2020 6:42 pm
TS
TS
  Donkey
March 9, 2020 12:47 pm

True. I personally have killed many hundreds if not thousands of jackrabbits at over 200 yds with a .22 pistol, and a nice buck at just over 400 with a .44 mag with a scope. And a big 6-point bull at somewhere over 700 yds with an open-sight .30-06. Don’t knock what you don’t know. If the bullet will reach that far – which a .44 most certainly will do – you can hit the target. All depends on your accuracy, ballistic knowledge and experience.

22winmag - TBP's bloviating Yankee Mormon
22winmag - TBP's bloviating Yankee Mormon
March 9, 2020 1:17 pm

This thing has some drop, but is perfectly capable of direct fire.

View post on imgur.com

TS
TS

Ah, yes, your autobahn special.

Anonymous
Anonymous
March 9, 2020 2:36 pm

So the hold-over for a .44 mag pistol at 600 yards is what, 30 feet? He must have had some strange looking rear sights. I think they call those mortar shots. Not saying it can’t be done, but it’s rare enough that the kill was recorded.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
March 9, 2020 3:21 pm

He had worked out a way to use the sights at extended ranges by pushing the front site up past the normal position in relation to the rear sights and using a six o’clock hold. On one of his pistols he talked about adding additional horizontal inlays across the front sight for ranges beyond 100 yards. He’d raise the front sight till the inlay was level with the rear sight and hold at six o’clock on the target and get hits. I’ve tried it at moderate ranges with various pistols and it works.

TS
TS
  Anonymous
March 9, 2020 3:55 pm

It took some ‘walking up’ – 4 or 5 shots -, but I shot a tree stump across a pond with my .45 ACP Colt at about 400 yds. I was holding pretty high by then. That was the same day I first shot a .460 Weatherby Mag. We were shooting at a 5 gal bucket of tar. The .45 barely made it quiver, but that .460 picked it up and threw it off of the little berm. The first shot was a target load, and kicked pretty good. The second was his full deal hunting load and it kicked like a dirty bastard.

Foot in the Forest
Foot in the Forest
March 9, 2020 4:56 pm

I started using a handgun for hunting mule deer on the front range of Colorado in 1992. I do still on occasion use a rifle but the go to hand guns are a Ruger Redhawk equipped with a 2X Burris scope and a Desert Eagle with iron sights. Ruger for over 100 yards and the Eagle for the short stuff. Ruger X 2 furthest at 155 yards Eagle X7 furthest at 65 yards. I love Elmer Keith and I and every one else that hunts with a handgun owe him a large Thank You FOOT

Martel's Hammer
Martel's Hammer
March 9, 2020 6:22 pm

My bear gun while bow hunting in MT is an S&W .460v which conveniently doubles as a boat anchor for any large ships that need anchoring. I am going back to the .44 because I will carry it more than the 460. Lots of folks carry a 10mm, hoping to make a kill on volume….