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Annie Oakley
Phoebe Ann Oakley Mozee was born on Aug. 13, 1860 in a town called
Patterson Township, Darke County, Ohio. Her parents Jake and Susanne Mozee
were farmers originally from Pennsylvania. Her Father died in 1866 from
pneumonia and overexposure in freezing weather.
Born in a log cabin on the Ohio frontier, Annie Oakley began shooting
game at age nine to support her family. She quickly proved to be a dead
shot and word spread so much that at age sixteen, Annie went to
Cincinnati to enter a shooting contest with Frank E. Butler (1850-1926), an
accomplished marksman who performed in vaudeville. Annie won the match by
one point and she won Frank Butler's heart as well. Some time later
they were married and she became his assistant in his traveling shooting
act. Frank recognized that Annie was far more talented and relinquished
the limelight to her, becoming her assistant and personal manager. In
1885 they joined Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show, run by the legendary
frontiers-man and showman Buffalo Bill Cody.
For seventeen years Annie Oakley was the Wild West Show's star
attraction with her marvelous shooting feats. At 90 feet Annie could shoot a
dime tossed in midair. In one day with a .22 rifle she shot 4,472 of
5,000 glass balls tossed in midair. With the thin edge of a playing card
facing her at 90 feet, Annie could hit the card and puncture it with five
or six more shots as it settled to the ground. It was from this that
free tickets with holes punched in them came to be called "Annie
Oakleys." In a celebrated event while touring in Europe, Wilhelm, Crown Prince
of Germany, invited Annie to shoot a cigarette held in his own lips.
She accomplished this challenge, as always effortlessly. In this period
Annie Oakley was easily recognizable by the numerous shooting medals
that adorned her chest.
In a train wreck in 1901, Annie suffered a spinal injury that required
five operations and even left her partially paralyzed for a while.
Although she recovered very well, Annie toured less frequently during the
latter part of her career. Nonetheless, her shooting expertise did not
wane and she continued to set records. In a shooting contest in
Pinehurst, N.C. in 1922, sixty-two-year-old Annie hit 100 clay targets straight
from the 16-yard mark.
Annie Oakley died of pernicious anemia on Nov. 3, 1926, in Greenville,
Ohio, at the age of sixty-six. A legend in her own time, the remarkable
life of Annie Oakley would be celebrated in the 1946 Herbert and
Dorothy Fields musical Annie Get Your Gun.
Skuld
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