December 8, 2001
Historian's Prizewinning Book on Guns Is Embroiled in a Scandal
By ROBERT F. WORTH
http://www.nytimes.com/2001/12/08/books/08GUNS.html
Only a year ago, Michael A. Bellesiles was well on his way to becoming an
academic superstar. He had just published a book with a startling thesis:
very few people owned working guns in colonial America. Stepping into the
ferocious national debate over guns and the meaning of the Second Amendment,
Mr. Bellesiles, a history professor at Emory University in Atlanta, caused a
sensation. Legal scholars said his prize-winning book could influence
federal court cases challenging gun laws; gun-control advocates championed
the research as proof that America's gun culture is, as Mr. Bellesiles put
it, "an invented tradition"; angry gun owners saw it as an insidious attack,
a calculated effort to prove that the Constitution's framers could not have
intended the "right to bear arms" to apply to individuals if so few people
owned them.
Now many of Mr. Bellesiles's defenders have gone silent. Over the past year
a number of scholars who have examined his sources say he has seriously
misused historical records and possibly fabricated them. They say the
outcome, when all the evidence is in, could be one of the worst academic
scandals in years.
Mr. Bellesiles (pronounced buh-LEEL) has denied that the errors in "Arming
America: The Origins of a National Gun Culture" are more serious than the
ones found in any lengthy and serious work of scholarship, and he has
repeatedly said the attacks against him are politically motivated. Mr.
Bellesiles, who owns five guns and likes to shoot skeet and target-shoot in
his spare time, said he never intended his book to become a cause cilhbre
for gun control advocates. "When I saw that the flap copy said, 'This is the
N.R.A.'s worst nightmare,' I was horrified," he said. "I feel like I'm a
historian who accidentally stepped into a minefield."
Indeed, after the National Rifle Association alerted its members about the
book, Mr. Bellesiles said, he began receiving hate mail and threats by
phone, e-mail, fax and letter. He was forced to get an unlisted number and
to change his e-mail address, he said. Earlier this year, two American
historical societies passed special resolutions condemning the harassment.
Without doubt, Mr. Bellesiles's research would not have received such
careful scrutiny if he had not stepped into the politically and
ideologically charged struggle over guns. Yet the scholars who have
documented serious errors in Mr. Bellesiles's book - many of them
gun-control advocates - do not appear to have any sort of political agenda.
They were struck by his claim to have studied more than 11,000 probate
records in 40 counties around the country. He found that between 1765 and
1790, only 14 percent of estate inventories listed guns, and "over half (53
percent) of these guns were listed as broken or otherwise defective." Those
claims are featured prominently in the book and were cited in many positive
reviews as the core of its argument.
But those who tried to examine the research soon found that they could not,
because most of Mr. Bellesiles's records, he said, had been destroyed in a
flood. The records they could check showed an astonishing number of serious
errors, almost all of them seemingly intended to support his thesis. In some
cases his numbers were off by a factor of two, three or more, said Randolph
Roth, a history professor at Ohio State University.
To use one example: in his book, Mr. Bellesiles writes that of 186 probate
inventories from Providence, R.I., recorded between 1680 and 1730, "all for
property-owning adult males," only 90 mention some form of gun, and more
than half the guns were "evaluated as old and of poor quality."
At least three scholars have independently examined the same archive and
found that 17 of the estates in question were owned by women; that some
estates lacked inventories, and that of those that had them, a much higher
percentage than Mr. Bellesiles reported contained guns; and that only 9
percent of the guns were evaluated as old and of poor quality.
"The number and scope of the errors in Bellesiles's work are extraordinary,"
Mr. Roth said. They go well beyond the probate record data, he added,
affecting Mr. Bellesiles's interpretation of militia returns, literary
documents and many other sources.
Confronted with serious errors in his research, Mr. Bellesiles has
acknowledged that there are problems with the way he used probate record
data, and he even made some changes in the paperback edition that came out
earlier this year. But he said that the data were only a small part of the
book. "I wish I had taken them out entirely," he said.
Jack Rakove, a Stanford University historian who has been supportive of
"Arming America," agreed: "The book raises a host of interesting questions
about the role firearms have played in American life and culture, and it
goes well beyond the probate data."
But Mr. Rakove conceded that he had not looked at the research that has been
questioned, and he said it was important that Mr. Bellesiles respond to his
critics more fully than he has so far.
Mr. Bellesiles's failure to explain himself has led to the most serious
accusations against him, which were outlined in The Boston Globe this fall.
Earlier this year, when the criticism of his book became more intense, he
asked Mr. Roth to help him defend himself. Mr. Roth wrote back, saying that
if Mr. Bellesiles would tell him what records he looked at in Vermont, he
would go to the archive on his own time, and that if the records matched, he
would defend him. Mr. Bellesiles never responded to that offer, Mr. Roth
said.
Those who have pressed him hardest for details say they have been led on a
bizarre scholarly car chase, with Mr. Bellesiles offering new memories about
where he got his records as soon as the old ones were discredited.
He has said from the start that he took notes on the thousands of
colonial-era probate records with tick marks in pencil on yellow legal pads.
That fact alone was surprising to many of his fellow historians, who tend to
use a database when working with such large amounts of information.
Almost all of those notebooks were destroyed when his office at Emory was
flooded in May 2000, Mr. Bellesiles said.
James Lindgren, a professor at Northwestern University Law School and by far
the most thorough of Mr. Bellesiles's critics, asked him last year where he
had done his research on probate records. Mr. Bellesiles responded with a
number of locations, including the San Francisco Superior Court, where he
said he had found probate records from the 1850's.
Mr. Lindgren, who has done extensive work in probate data, called the
courthouse and was told that all the records for that decade were destroyed
in the 1906 earthquake and fire. They were not available in two other Bay
Area libraries, either. Mr. Bellesiles now says he must have done the
research somewhere else and cannot remember where.
But Kathy Beals, former director of the California Genealogical Society, who
has worked extensively with probate records from that era, said: "Nobody
knows of those records being in existence, and if they are, there are
hundreds of people who would like to look at them."
In September, Mr. Bellesiles offered a new defense. Mr. Lindgren and a
reporter from The Globe, David Mehegan, found additional serious errors on
Mr. Bellesiles's Web site, where he had been posting probate records in an
attempt to replace what he said had been lost in the flood. He conceded the
errors and responded to The Globe, and later said someone had altered his
Web site, presumably a computer hacker.
But several scholars, including one of Mr. Bellesiles's colleagues at Emory,
said they doubted that story. Robert A. Paul, the interim dean at Emory
College, said, "I can neither independently confirm nor deny that Professor
Bellesiles's Web site was hacked."
In September, James Melton, the chairman of the Emory history department,
asked Mr. Bellesiles to write a "reasoned, measured, detailed, point by
point response to your critics" in an appropriate professional forum. Mr.
Bellesiles did publish a response in the November issue of the Organization
of American Historians newsletter, but it focused on harassment rather than
charges of serious misconduct.
Mr. Bellesiles's supporters have said they expect a fuller response to
emerge in a special issue of the William and Mary Quarterly to be published
next month.. A draft of the lengthy response Mr. Bellesiles wrote for that
issue, supplied by the journal's editor, concedes some mistakes and
challenges others, but leaves many serious errors unaddressed.
It is not clear what will happen to Mr. Bellesiles or his book if the
scholarly community reaches a consensus that "Arming America" is a seriously
flawed or even fraudulent book. The Emory College dean, Mr. Paul, said, "If
there were scholarly fraud, we would take that very seriously." Alan
Brinkley, the chairman of the history department at Columbia University,
said similar questions had never been raised about a book that had won the
prestigious Bancroft Prize in American History and Diplomacy. Although there
has been no discussion of disciplining Mr. Belles iles or revoking the
prize, a spokesman for Jonathan R. Cole, the provost and dean of faculties
at Columbia University, said he had distributed copies of the documents
detailing Mr. Bellesiles's mistakes to this year's three Bancroft jurors and
asked them to examine it.

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