Culture | Going great guns

The AR-15 is a symbol of liberty or loss, depending on whom you ask

A new book, “American Gun”, explores the fraught history of a firearm

Gun rights demonstrators stage a rally at the Alamo.
Image: Eyevine

ONE OF THE first people to shoot an AR-15 was John Wayne in 1957. Wayne, then the face of American masculinity and the gunslinging West, was at a nearby shipyard repairing his boat when he heard that ArmaLite, a small gunmaker, was testing a new kind of firearm; he dropped by to try it. The AR-15 would go on to become one of America’s most famous and controversial weapons: the gun with which not just real war, but culture war, was fought.

This article appeared in the Culture section of the print edition under the headline “Going great guns”

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