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Enshrined on August 19, 1969
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Capt. Bogardus’ first public shooting was in a series of Capt. Bogardus’ flair for the unusual in shooting also pitted him against the time element in several matches. Among his earliest such performances was one in 1869 in which he was to kill 500 pigeons in 645 minutes for $1,000. Doing his own loading, he accomplished the feat in 528 minutes. Later he broke 501 clay birds in 34 minutes, 7 seconds. And at one time, it took him two trials of an allotted three to win a $1,000-to-$100 wager in which he had to score 100 straight hits. On the first try his gun had broken. Another of Capt. Bogardus’ great feats was his
performance of shooting at 5,000 glass balls in eight hours and 20 minutes,
breaking 4,844 of them. He accomplished the feat at Madison Square Soon after the invention of the Ligowsky clay pigeon in
1880, Bogardus joined Doc Carver in a tour of the country for the purpose of
introducing the new target to trapshooters. A series of 25 matches of 100
targets from 18 yards was shot, with Bogardus winning just three and tieing
in three others. This was his greatest defeat, since he consistently won
when matched against other A man of many talents, Capt. Bogardus was the inventor of one of the early forms of glass ball traps and of an improved glass ball. Rules formulated by Capt. Bogardus soon became in general use. Capt. Bogardus was also the author of a book called Field, Cover and Trapshooting. He died in 1913 at the age of 80. |