GUNS Magazine Western Holster Evolution: - GUNS Magazine

2022-05-29 21:43:14 By : Mr. Alex Chen

Mexican Loop holsters have a broad skirt or “fender” behind the pouch and slits in the skirt create loops which hold the body of the holster in place. This one was made by Karla Van Horne of Purdy Gear.

Western holsters are some of the most beautiful, stylized and iconic pieces of gunleather in existence — especially those from the 1910s. The West was still in full wild swing, but the guns had evolved into things we still use today, like 1911 pistols, pump shotguns, etc. But a “Western holster,” no matter what the silver screen shows us, is not a singular thing, and much of the history is lost in the mist and, in many cases, myths of time.

The earliest holsters were attached to saddles so cavalry troopers could carry a brace of single-shot flint or percussion “pistols” strapped across their saddles. As the guns got smaller and became repeaters, these ungainly creations were replaced by belt-mounted flap holsters carrying a soldier’s percussion revolver, often butt-forward. This design held steady for military use until relatively recent memory.

The need for the flap to protect cap-and-ball revolvers lessened as the wearers moved into the arid climate of the West. There, a powder-dampening rainstorm wasn’t as likely, not to mention, as Skeeter Skelton helpfully pointed out, in anything other than a short cloudburst, that flap was going to get soaked. Nothing good can come from soggy leather holding its moisture near the charged cylinder of your blackpowder gun.

Other changes came because the settlers were moving into a world where most manufactured goods had to be transported from the east. This meant things like hardware were in short supply. Jack Weaver once told me about going into ghost towns where settlers had roofed the buildings with the tin left over from canned goods. They had unrolled the cans flat — after melting out the solder to cast bullets!

The “Cheyenne” version of the Mexican Loop has a distinct bump between the loops acting as a detent, holding the holster pouch in place. The Cheyenne also has a stitched in teardrop-shaped toe plug. Holster by Karla Van Horne of Purdy Gear.

Snaps, buckles and studs likewise were among the items in slim supply, so the first indigenous holster style was, unsurprisingly, very much a minimalist design. The California or “Slim Jim,” was a narrow, form-fitting scabbard closely following the contours of the long-barreled black powder revolvers of the era — such as Hickok’s favored Colt 1851.

The mouth of the holster is usually cut in an S-shape, exposing part — or all — of the trigger. Unlike wartime where one had some expectation of when a gun might be needed, a man in the West was likely to need his pistol in a hurry.

With time, the Slim Jim evolved into the Mexican Loop, beginning what most of us picture as a traditional Western holster. The pouch holding the gun maintains the same lines as the Slim Jim, but the back part of the pouch continues upward in a large flap folded downward, creating a wide skirt or “fender” behind the pouch. Slits are cut into the skirt, with each pair of slits creating a “loop” into which the pouch is pushed. The loops hold the body of the holster in place and the fold at the top creates a broad belt tunnel.

In addition to minimizing the need for hardware such as rivets, the broad skirt and belt loop of the Mexican Loop help distribute the weight of a big sixgun across the belt. The loops themselves, though (the number of which varied) did not necessarily present enough friction to keep the pouch firmly in place.

A later regional variation called the “Cheyenne” has a distinct bump between the loops acting as a detent to hold it in place. The Cheyenne also has a stitched-in teardrop-shaped toe plug to keep debris out of the muzzle, helping to maintain the shape of the holster.

The popular money belt is made of a wide piece of soft leather with a smaller, narrow chape and a matching billet stitched to the other end of the belt. It was often closed with a square clipped-corner California buckle such as this one on Galco’s 1880 gunbelt.

Fancy Ranger-style buckle sets include a metal belt loop and tip for the chape. Photo: Karla Van Horne

More a product of Hollywood than the authentic West, the formfitting, low-slung buscadero rig is still a thing of beauty. This one was crafted for President Reagan by Don Brown. Photo: Shelley Brown

With the change from percussion to self-contained cartridges came the cartridge belt, lined with loops for holding extra rounds. The most popular version, the money belt, is made of a wide piece of soft leather folded down its centerline and stitched to create a surreptitious place to hide cash, gold or silver coins or papers. Rather than closing the belt with a massive buckle the full width of the belt (which could easily be 3″ or more), a smaller buckle was often attached to a narrower piece of leather called a chape, and a matching billet was stitched to the other end of the belt. Buckles tended to be square with the corners clipped, a design called the California, but the fancier Ranger-style buckle sets incorporating a metal belt loop and tip for the chape also made their appearance.

The so-called “buscadero” rigs dispensing (or flouting) justice on a thousand silver screens, however, was utterly unknown — it’s a Hollywood creation. Instead of a separate belt with a holster sliding over it (and riding comparatively high), the buscadero has a broad belt dipping down near the holster, cut with a horizontal slot through which the folded-over top of the holster fits.

Beautiful, but hard to make well, it puts the gun in a very low ride along the thigh. It looks great in movies but would have been quite uncomfortable on horseback, and fairly likely to dump the gun out while riding. Impractical though it may be, it makes for an impressive visual.

Texas Ranger Kiowa Jones wearing his Colt SAA in a Brill-style holster. That ’95 Winchester isn’t looking too shabby, either. Photo: Courtesy of Texas Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum, Waco, Texas

One of the distinctives of the Brill is its stitched toe is sewed directly to the trimmed down skirt folding down behind the pouch. This is a 1930 Austin from El Paso Saddlery.

The next milestone is the creation of the Brill holster, so named because of its best-known maker, A.W. Brill of Austin, Texas. In addition to its distinctly Western style, the Brill added the element of concealability. The alert mind will recognize Austin as the headquarters of the Texas Rangers who, shortly after the turn of the century, found themselves stabling their horses and saddle scabbards. Instead, they were walking around in cities where their frontier appearance, bristling with all the hardware required to survive alone in whatever one riot to which they were summoned, wasn’t exactly socially acceptable. They needed to hide their guns.

Though clearly an evolution of the Mexican Loop design, the Brill accomplished its concealment goals by being made of lighter leather, riding higher than traditional loop holsters and streamlining the rear skirt to reduce bulk.

Like most things, though, the Brill did not simply spring into being fully formed. Around the turn of the century the King Ranch, known for providing horses to the Rangers before there were Ford trucks, created a Mexican loop variation with many of the features later defining the Brill. The multiple loops were replaced with a single, broad cuff, and the toe of the holster pouch was stitched to the skirt, which was trimmed somewhat.

In 1907, at the request of Texas Ranger N.J. Rabensburg, the basic design changed into the canonical Brill, whose skirt was further trimmed down to the profile of the holster pouch.

The end result is a practical holster keeping the gun tucked up close against the body, tilted at an FBI-like rake for concealment and a fast draw, but still with an unmistakably Western flair. Of all the Western designs, it and its stripped-down progeny, the Threepersons, are probably the most practical for modern use.

It was well received by the Rangers. Tellingly, most of the contemporary makers were located relatively close to Austin, and modern reproductions are often named with some reference to the Rangers.

Nor is the Rangers’ love of the Brill simply a matter of history. H. Joaquin Jackson, one of the most famous Rangers of my lifetime, who was depicted on film by Nick Nolte in Extreme Prejudice and Jeff Bridges in Hell or High Water, preferred the Brill. In 2005, Jackson said it had “never been surpassed in efficiency, utility and beauty.”

No less than Skeeter Skelton described his first “real” holster as a Brill given to him for his 4 3/4″ Colt SAA by a retired Texas Ranger. Interestingly, though, four years before, in 1968, Skeeter wrote his first good holster was a Myres Threeperson, and the emphasis on good may explain the apparent contradiction. He felt it was entirely unnecessary for a holster’s backflap to be “flaring out fore and aft like Aunt Mattie’s sunbonnet.”

A Threepersons modeled after one carried by Tom himself. The original lives in a museum and is well documented. As is the case with the real “gunfighter” rigs, note the cutaway trigger guard area. It was all about accessing the gun fast, not about protecting it. Holster is by Red Nichols. Photo: Roy Huntington

Note the minimalist design and the flap sewn to the back of the same holster body. The stamp is of Tom Threeperson’s “Prohibition Officer” badge. Holster by Red Nichols. Photo: Roy Huntington

The Threepersons is a much-simplified derivative of the Brill that is lighter, easier to make and more efficient, but with a little less of the Western flair of earlier styles. Photo and holster: Mike Barranti

Barranti offers several Threepersons holsters built using the original Myres sheet copper patterns. Primarily available for revolvers (both single and double action) they’re available with a variety of stamping or carving treatments. Photo and holsters: Mike Barranti

To turn a Brill into a Threepersons, legendary lawman Tom Threepersons completely removed the skirt from the Brill and brought the gun up higher on the belt, still at an angle comparable to the FBI rake. Instead of the skirt and cuff serving as the belt-loop tunnel, the top of the holster was folded backward and stitched to the body of the holster, where the cuff would usually be, instead of down at the toe. Simpler and requiring less skill to make than the complicated Brill, it also weighed less, addressing one of Elmer Keith’s criticisms of the Mexican Loop design.

It’s appropriate to refer to Tom Threepersons as “legendary,” since there’s very little definitively known about him. Cherokee by self-report, the best that can be sorted out is he took the name of a Canadian Blood Indian who was the first to win at a rodeo in 1912. He then enlisted in the U.S. Army under the name, where he reportedly served as a scout for later-General George S. Patton in 1916 during Pershing’s Punitive Expedition into Mexico. He subsequently worked in law enforcement for a brief but shockingly violent seven years during which he “plowed his way into tight holes and very calmly shot his way out,” according to the El Paso Times. It says a lot the Times wrote the description in 1922, only two years into his tenure as an officer.

It was in El Paso Samuel Dale “S.D.” Myres, holstermaker extraordinaire (and oddly a reputed confidante of Pancho Villa) produced a simplified Threepersons holster. Some of the original copper patterns used by Myres are now owned by holstermaker Mike Barranti, who uses them to make his faithful Threepersons holster.

Ed McGivern, Bill Jordan, Elmer Keith and many others appreciated the simple, fast design principles of the Threepersons, and those principles were clearly discernible in duty-holster design right up to the current Kydex era. What it gains in simplicity, though, the Threepersons gives up in style, which in a sense makes the Brill the last of the distinctively Western holsters. It’s fine with me, since it still carries easily under a jacket. 

Texas Ranger Hall Of Fame And Museum www.texasranger.org (254) 750-8631

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