|
Elizabeth
Servanty was working in a big gun company's plant loading ammunition
when she was 18, but she never had fired a gun in her life until she
met her husband-to-be, Ad Topperwein, three years later. Mr.
Topperwein, appearing for the company in a fancy shooting act on the
vaudeville circuit, gave the charming Miss Servanty some shooting
lessons, and within a week’s time she was splitting playing cards
held edgewise at 25 feet. This started her on the way toward becoming
not only a pioneer trapshooter among her sex, but also one of the
greatest—if not THE greatest—woman marksman of all times.
Her deeds with the gun were not the only things
that spoke for her ability. She once was told by Annie Oakley that she
was the greatest shooter of all times.
The Topperweins worked as a team professionally,
making their first appearance as the famous "Husband and Wife
Team" at the St. Louis World’s Fair in 1904. It was during her
early shooting lessons that she acquired her nickname of
"Plinky." After several failures while shooting at a tin
can, she finally hit one and the bullet made a "plinking"
sound. Each time she would connect she would invariably say, "I
plinked it," and the nickname stuck.
Mrs. Topperwein’s style of shooting was one of
unstudied grace and ease, without any effort and apparently without
any thought as to where and at what angle the target would go. She
used a repeating shotgun and on many occasions, while giving her
exhibitions, would break four targets thrown in the air
simultaneously.
In 1904 she became the first woman to break 100
straight at trap, a feat which she was to accomplish over 200 times in
her career. She recorded fourteen 200 straights before the days of
registered shooting. Plinky set an endurance record at Montgomery,
Ala. in 1916 by breaking 1,952 of 2,000 targets thrown for her. Time
for the event—five hours and 20 minutes! She used a 7½-pound
gun and did not rest a minute despite the fact the barrel of the gun
became so warm a number of times that ice water had to be poured over
it. She suffered a blistered hand but still was shooting better at the
close than when she began. She broke 96 of her first 100 targets and
98 of the last 100. Her lowest score was 95 and her average for the
2,000 was a shade less than 98 percent. She compiled straight runs of
106, 111, 139 and 280.
Mrs. Topperwein was a member of a team of industry
reps that toured the South in 1904. When that team broke the world’s
record with 490x500 at Albany, Ga., she recorded 96. She constantly
would average 94 and 95 percent shooting against the best talent in
the world. She had nine century-runs in 1913, the longest being 165.
Shooting in a gale wind at Laramie, Wyo. for the Denver Post trophy
that year, she broke 94 from 21 yards, and at the 1913 Grand American
Handicap at Dayton, 0., where she was the only woman shooting, she
broke 94 from 20 yards. The Eastern Handicap at Wilmington, Del. found
her outfiring the entire field of 250 of the best shots in the country
with 98 from 19 yards.
Although trapshooting was her main interest, she
also was an expert with the rifle and pistol, and she won many
trophies with them, too. She retired in the 1920s after the birth of
her only child, a son. She died in San Antonio, Tex. in January of
1945.
|