![]() |
| . |
|
||||||||
| Enshrined on August
19, 1969
|
|
Annie Oakley was born Annie Moses on Aug. 13, 1860. She learned to shoot at the age of eight with her father’s old 40-inch cap and ball Kentucky rifle. In the fall of 1875, when she was 15, she was invited to take part in a shooting match in Cincinnati against Frank Butler, a champion marksman. Butler thought it was a joke, but he was more than convinced that it was no farce when young Annie beat him fair and square. A year later Miss Moses became, in private life, Mrs. Frank Butler. When Annie joined Frank’s shooting act, she became Annie Oakley. The
Butlers—Annie and Frank—joined the Four-Paw and Sells Brothers
Circus in 1880 as a shooting act. They met the great Sioux Indian
chief Sitting Bull in St. Paul, Minn. in 1882, at which time Annie was
adopted into the tribe as "Mochin Chilla
She
performed her magic with guns before seven crowned heads of Europe in
one day, and among her treasured trophies was a cup of solid silver
awarded by Edward VII, who was Prince of Wales After a near-disastrous train wreck while with the Wild West Show, Annie retired to private life in 1901. It was more than a year before she was able to leave the hospital and to resume some of her shooting activities. One
of Annie’s pet tricks at Pinehurst, N.C., where she taught hundreds
of women the art of marksmanship, was to lie on her back, have her
husband throw six glass balls in the air A car accident in 1921 left Annie in a brace for the rest of her life, but she still came back to break 100 clay targets the following year at Pinehurst. During her 30 years of shooting, Annie Oakley fired well over a million shells. She won over $100,000 and numerous trophies during her shooting career. A year before her death—at the 1925 Grand American—Annie obliged some of her friends and shot a race, breaking 97x100. She died in Greenville, 0hio on Nov. 3, 1926. |