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| Enshrined on August
18, 1981
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In 1920 he was a member of the gold-medal U. S. trapshooting team at the Olympics, breaking the third-high score on the six-man team. The first Grand American trophy McNeir earned was for heading the Edgewater Special on prelim day of the 1920 meet after a five-way tie at 100 straight. He was also runnerup for the Columbus, GA High-Over-All Cup that year with 759x800, while finishing high on 300 singles targets during that Grand with 295. Five years later he won the Consolation Singles, and in the 1928 Clay Target Championship he finished as Class A titlist. McNeir ended as runner-up in the 1934 CTC, was on the winning West team in the East-West race, and was also a member of the runnerup Texas five-some in the State Team Race. He secured runnerup spot in the 1935 Champion of Champions race after a five-way tie at 199, two years later earning the 18-yard trophy in the Grand American Handicap as a friend assisted him in loading his gun. When McNeir ended as Class A high in the Class
Singles Championship of 1938 after 199, McNeir earned Texas State singles championships in 1917, 1935 and 1936, and he captured the handicap crown in 1942. In 1948 he was the Southwestern Zone veteran champion. McNeir received national recognition outside the
trapshooting fraternity, being awarded the Carnegie
Hero Award Gold Medal in 1910. (From the inception of the award in
1904 to 1980, just 19 Carnegie Gold Medal awards had been made.)
According to Carnegie records, McNeir rescued McNeir was one of the pioneers in establishing the ATA permanent headquarters at Vandalia, 0H and as a life member of the ATA, he carried card No. 79. He had competed in 40 states and 13 foreign countries, attended the Grand American 47 times, and registered 74,715 singles targets (after records were begun in 1923) before passing away at his Houston home in May, 1957 at age 81. |