Showing posts with label sharpshooter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sharpshooter. Show all posts

August 13 - Happy Birthday, Annie Oakley

  Posted on August 13, 2022     


This is an update of my post published on August 13, 2011:


She was perhaps the world's greatest female sharp-shooter and America's first female superstar!

She could repeatedly split a playing card, edge-on, and put several more holes in it before it hit the ground.

From 90 feet away!

Born on this day in 1860, in a little cabin in Ohio, Annie Oakley's real name was Phoebe Ann Mosey. Her family was quite poor because Oakley's father died, and Oakley started to hunt with a rifle for food at age 8. (She began trapping for food even younger.) She didn't get much education, and at age 9 she was “bound out” to family who promised to give her 15 cents a week plus an education in exchange for babysitting services. The family broke this promise and kept Oakley in near slavery for two years, heaping mental and physical abuse on the girl. I'm not sure how Oakley escaped, but when she did, she went back to hunting for her mother and sibling, and she sold the excess meat to restaurants for money. By the time Oakley was 15, she had helped her mother pay off her mortgage.

People in Ohio began to realize what a good shot Oakley was. A hotel owner arranged a shooting match between Oakley and a male show marksman named Francis Butler. Butler lost the competition, lost the $100 he had bet (worth about $2000 today)—but he won something far more important: He courted and wed Oakley!

Even though Annie Oakley was only five feet tall, Buffalo Bill Cody hired her for his popular Wild West show. That's how, at age 25, she became popular and famous. She performed all over and even toured Europe with the show. She met Queen Victoria and Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany. The latter was so impressed with Oakley's aim that he asked her to knock the ash off his cigarette with a bullet, and she successfully did the stunt.

(People later thought, oh, wow, if ONLY she had missed and hit the Kaiser, World War I would never have happened! After the outbreak of the war, Oakley sent a letter to the Kaiser requesting a second shot. He did not reply.)


Historians estimate that Oakley taught more than 15,000 women how to use a gun. She believed it was important for women to learn to shoot to defend themselves. Before the Spanish-American War broke out, Oakley wrote to President William McKinley offering the government the services of herself and 49 other “lady sharpshooters” if the war did occur. She promised that they would provide their own arms and ammunition. McKinley did not accept the offer.


In 1901, Oakley was badly injured in a train wreck. Much later, in 1922, Oakley was in a bad automobile accident. Both times she worked hard to recover and got back to performing and setting records. Having to come back from injury (she had to have FIVE back surgeries!) only made Annie Oakley more of a legend to her adoring fans.

Another event from Oakley's life is that a burlesque performer who was arrested for stealing to support her cocaine habit told Chicago police that she was Annie Oakley. The newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst published the false story, and other newspapers picked up the “news” and printed stories of their own about the incident. The real Annie Oakley spent six years with 55 libel lawsuits against these falsehoods. Most newspaper publishers quickly realized that the story was incorrect, and they immediately retracted it and apologized to Oakley. However, Hearst didn't do that. He figured, if he had admitted his story was wrong, he would be liable for court judgements (estimated to be around $20,000, which today would equal about $300,000). So he sent an investigator all around to dig up some “dirt” – or at least some gossip that would tarnish Oakley's reputation. The investigator came up empty, and Oakley won 54 out of the 55 libel suits!


Above, some of the inaccurate headlines.
Below, an example of a retraction.

By the way, the word "Negro" appears in
some of these old-time headlines, but it
is now offensive to many Black people and
therefore almost never used nowadays.

Use, instead, African American or Black.




Oakley paid more in court fees than she collected in judgements, but she felt that her restored reputation were worth the loss of time and money.

In her 60s, Annie Oakley continued to set records. She also donated money and her efforts to women's rights and other important causes. She supported individual women who she met and felt were worthy of financial aid. When she died at age 66, from pernicious anemia, her husband Francis Butler was so depressed that he quit eating and died just 18 days later.


Also on this date:


















Birthday of artist Margaret Tafoya





International Left Handers' Day









(2nd Saturday in August)



Plan ahead:


Check out my Pinterest boards for:

And here are my Pinterest boards for:




August 4 - Happy Birthday, Lillian Frances Smith

Posted on August 4, 2018

Annie Oakley
If you asked me to name a female sharp shooter, I'd immediately think of the "Old West" of the late 1800s - and Annie Oakley.

But Oakley had a rival: a girl eleven years younger than Oakley...
...a "champion California huntress"...
...today's famous birthday, Lillian Smith!



Lillian Smith
Both Oakley and Smith were trick shooters who performed in Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show. Even though Smith, who was born on this date in 1871, was younger than Oakley, both of these sharp shooters got their shot at fame at age 15. I wondered why I had only heard of one of them...?

It turns out that the two were not very similar. Lillian Smith was quite the braggart, and she even announced, incorrectly, that Oakley "was done for." Not surprisingly, the two didn't become friends. 

Smith was into flashy clothes and flirting with men - and even marrying and divorcing a handful of them. (She married and divorced at least five men and was romantically involved with at least one more.)

On the other hand, Oakley was a conservative dresser who married marksman and performer Frank E. Butler and stayed married to him her whole life.


This 19th-Century engraving
portrays Smith showing her rifle to
English Queen Victoria.
Apparently, when Smith and Oakley traveled to Great Britain with the Wild West Show, Oakley performed well but Smith did not. Both the British press and London crowds were unimpressed with Smith. When a friend of Smith's tried to publicize the performance in the U.S. as a triumph for Lillian Smith, the "fake news" was refuted very publicly, by trustworthy sources. 

Of course, that made Smith look bad.

Smith left the show soon after that. She ended up moving to
Oklahoma and performing as Princess Wenona, a fictional Sioux princess, in the Miller Brothers Ranch Wild West Show. 





Smith's grave was unmarked from her death in 1930 until 1999, when an Old Timers Association marked it with a monumental headstone complete with photos and shooting records!






Also on this date:









U.S. President Barack Obama










Sandcastle Day
(First Saturday in August)












Plan ahead:


Check out my Pinterest boards for:

And here are my Pinterest boards for:




August 13, 2011 - Happy Birthday, Annie Oakley


She was perhaps the world's greatest female sharp-shooter and America's first female superstar!

She could repeatedly split a playing card, edge-on, and put several more holes in it before it hit the ground.

From 90 feet away!

Born on this day in 1860, in a little cabin in Ohio, Oakley's real name was Phoebe Ann Mosey. Her family was quite poor because Oakley's father died, and Oakley started to hunt with a rifle for food at age 8. (She began trapping for food even younger.) She didn't get much education, and at age 9 she was “bound out” to family who promised to give her 15 cents a week plus an education in exchange for babysitting services. The family broke this promise and kept Oakley in near slavery for two years, heaping mental and physical abuse on the girl. I'm not sure how Oakley escaped, but when she did she went back to hunting for her mother and sibling, and she sold the excess meat to restaurants for money. By the time Oakley was 15 she had helped her mother pay off her mortgage.

People in Ohio began to realize what a good shot Oakley was. A hotel owner arranged a shooting match between Oakley and a male show marksman named Francis Butler. Butler lost the competition, lost the $100 he had bet (worth about $2000 today)—but he won something far more important: He courted and wed Oakley!

Even though Annie Oakley was only five feet tall, Buffalo Bill Cody hired her for his popular Wild West show. That's how, at age 25, she became popular and famous. She performed all over and even toured Europe with the show. She met Queen Victoria and Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany. The latter was so impressed with Oakley's aim that he asked her to knock the ash off his cigarette with a bullet, and she successfully did the stunt.

(People later thought, oh, wow, if ONLY she had missed and hit the Kaiser, World War I would never have happened! After the outbreak of the war, Oakley sent a letter to the Kaiser requesting a second shot. He did not reply.)

Historians estimate that Oakley taught more than 15,000 women how to use a gun. She believed it was important for women to learn to shoot to defend themselves. Before the Spanish-American War broke out, Oakley wrote to President William McKinley offering the government the services of herself and 49 other “lady sharpshooters” If the war did occur. She promised that they would provide their own arms and ammunition. McKinley did not accept the offre.

In 1901, Oakley was badly injured in a train wreck. Much later, in 1922, Oakley was in a bad automobile accident. Both times she worked hard to recover and got back to performing and setting records. Having to come back from injury (she had to have FIVE back surgeries!) only made Annie Oakley more of a legend to her adoring fans.

Another event from Oakley's life is that a burlesque performer who was arrested for stealing to support cocaine habit told Chicago police that she was Annie Oakley. The newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst published the false story, and other newspapers picked up the “news” and printed stories of their own about the incident. The real Annie Oakley spent six years with 55 libel lawsuits against these falsehoods. Most newspaper publishers quickly realized that the story was incorrect, and they immediately retracted it and apologized to Oakley. However Hearst didn't do that. He figured, if he had admitted his story was wrong, he would be liable for court judgements (estimated to be around $20,000, which today would equal about $300,000). So he sent an investigator all around to dig up some “dirt” – or at least some gossip that would tarnish Oakley's reputation. The investigator came up empty, and Oakley won 54 of the libel suits.

Oakley paid more in court fees than she collected in judgements, but she felt that her restored reputation were worth the loss of time and money.



In my eyes, Annie Oakley was a true heroine. In her 60s, she continued to set records. She also donated money and her efforts to women's rights and other important causes. She supported individual women who she met and felt were worthy of financial aid. When she died at age 66, from pernicious anemia, her husband Francl Butler was so depressed that he quit eating and died just 18 days later.