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Montana
Below you are links to
informational sites related to the Montana Gun laws and regulations. (
Legal lawyer stuff as follows:
Center-fire- Greenfield Industries are not responsible nor
endorses any information found on listed links. blah, blah,
blah. You get the picture. Take everything you read with a
grain of salt.) We have even included some
comical links such as the
Brady Campaign , because everybody enjoys a little
fictional reading from time to time. Illinois does not allow
it's private citizens the right to carry a firearm for
self-defense.
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The United States through
the Louisiana Purchase acquired the territory that would
become Montana in 1803. The acquisition included the region of
west central North America between the Mississippi River & the
Rockies, approximately 885,000 square miles (2,301,000 square
kilometers), at the time an unexplored wilderness. Thomas
Jefferson, exercising questionable constitutional authority,
paid Napoleon Bonaparte $15 million dollars for the entire
area, about three cents an acre. The sum was nearly twice the
entire federal budget. Thirteen states or parts of states have
been carved from the Louisiana Purchase. They are as follows:
Louisiana, Arkansas, Missouri, Iowa, North Dakota, South
Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Wyoming, Minnesota, Oklahoma,
Colorado and Montana. Lewis & Clark and the Corps of Discovery
conducted the first organized expedition into the area.
Montana was admitted to the Union (became a state) on November
9, 1889, by presidential proclamation, the 41st state. Prior
to becoming a state Congress made Montana a territory (a part
of the U.S. not included within any state but organized with a
separate legislature) in May 1864. In December the first
legislative assembly met in a dirt-roofed cabin in Bannack
City. Virginia City was selected as the territorial capitol.
Montana remained a territory for 25 years. In 1894 Helena out
bid Anaconda to become the state capitol, the result of a
infamous battle in the "War of the Copper Kings."
The original state constitution was ratified in 1889. By 1969
the document had become outdated. Montana voters called for a
constitutional convention. One hundred elected delegates met
in 1972 to rewrite the document.
The Montana Legislature has 50 senators and 100
representatives elected from single-member districts. The
legislature meets at regular biennial sessions for 90 days in
odd-numbered years. Montana is governed by its constitution,
and its laws are administered by its executive branch officers
and various boards and commissions.
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