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  • ANNIE OAKLEY


    Born
    August 13, 1860
    near Willowdell (formerly Woodland) Ohio


    Died
    November 3, 1926 (aged 66)
    Greenville, Ohio


    Spouse(s)
    Francis E. Butler (1850–1926) (m. 1882–1926)


    Parents
    Susan Wise (1830-1908)
    Jacob Mosey (1799-1866)


    Occupation
    Exhibition Sharpshooter


    Mini-Biography
    Annie Oakley (born Phoebe Ann Mosey}
    was an American sharpshooter and exhibition shooter.
    Oakley's amazing talent and timely rise to fame led to a starring role
    in Buffalo Bill's Wild West show, which propelled her to become
    the first American female superstar.
    Using a .22 caliber rifle at 90 feet (27 m), Oakley reputedly could
    split a playing card edge-on and put five or six more holes in it
    before it touched the ground.


    Early life
    According to the Annie Oakley Foundation, she was born in
    "a cabin less than two miles northwest of Woodland,now Willowdell,
    in Darke County", a rural western border county of Ohio.
    The village of North Star has a road sign stating it is near her place of birth.
    Her birthplace log cabin site is about five miles eastward of North Star.
    There is a stone-mounted plaque in the vicinity of the cabin site,
    which was placed by the Annie Oakley Committee in 1981, 121 years after her birth.
    The committee misspelled her birth surname on the cast bronze plaque,
    incorrectly ending in an "s" instead of "y".


    Annie's parents were Quakers from Hollidaysburg, Blair County, Pennsylvania:
    Susan Wise, age 18,and Jacob Mosey, age 49,married in 1848.
    A fire burned down their tavern in Hollidaysburg,
    so they moved to a rented farm
    (later purchased with a mortgage) in Patterson Township, Darke County.
    The move occurred sometime between sister Elizabeth's Hollidaysburg
    birth in 1855, and sister Sarah Ellen's Darke County birth in 1857.


    Born in 1860, Annie was the sixth of Jacob and Susan's eight children.
    Her father, who had fought in the War of 1812, died in 1866 at age 67,
    from pneumonia and overexposure in freezing weather.
    Her mother married Daniel Brumbaugh, had a ninth child,
    Emily, and was widowed a second time.


    When Annie was eight or nine years old, she was put in the care
    of the superintendent of the county poor farm, where she learned to sew and decorate.
    She spent some time in near-slavery for a local family
    where she endured mental and physical abuse
    (Annie referred to them as "the wolves")
    When she reunited with her family at age 13 or 14,
    her mother had married a third time, to Joseph Shaw after 1868.



    Because of poverty following the death of her father,
    Annie did not regularly attend school.
    Later she received some additional education.
    Apparently, she could not spell her family's name,
    since she later rendered it ending in "ee".
    Her family's surname, "Mosey", ending in "y", appears on her father's gravestone
    and in his military record; it is the official spelling by the Annie Oakley Foundation
    maintained by her living relatives.


    Annie began hunting at age nine to support her siblings and her widowed mother.
    She sold the hunting game for money to locals in Greenville,
    as well as restaurants and hotels in southern Ohio.
    Her skill eventually paid off the mortgage on her mother's farm when Annie was 15.



    Debut and marriage
    Oakley soon became well known throughout the region.
    During the spring of 1881, the Baughman and Butler shooting act
    was being performed in Cincinnati.
    Traveling show marksman and former dog trainer Francis E. Butler (1850–1926),
    an Irish immigrant, placed a $100 bet per side
    (roughly equivalent to modern US$2,000) with Cincinnati hotel owner Jack Frost,
    that Butler, age 31, could beat any local fancy shooter.
    The hotelier arranged a shooting match with Oakley, age 21,
    to be held in ten days in a small town near Greenville, Ohio.
    Butler later said it was "18 miles from the nearest [train] station"
    (about the distance from Greenville to North Star).
    After missing his 25th shot, Butler lost the match and the bet
    — a serendipitous irony that led him to become a well-known winner in backstage life.
    Butler began courting Oakley, and they married on June 20, 1882.


    Career and Touring
    Oakley and Butler lived in Cincinnati, Ohio, for a time,
    and she is believed to have taken her stage name from
    the city's neighborhood of Oakley, where they resided.


    They joined Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show in 1885.
    At 5 feet (1.52 m) tall,
    Oakley was given the nickname of "Watanya Cicilla"
    by fellow performer Sitting Bull, rendered "Little Sure Shot"
    in the public advertisements.



    Wild West show poster


    During her first Buffalo Bill's show engagement,
    Oakley experienced a tense professional rivalry
    with rifle sharpshooter Lillian Smith.
    Smith promoted herself as younger and therefore more billable than Oakley.
    Oakley temporarily left the Buffalo Bill's show
    but returned after Smith departed.


    Oakley had initially responded to the show's age rivalry
    by removing six years from her promoted age.
    She could not remove any more years without making
    it seem that she was born out of wedlock.
    As it was, her promoted age led to perennial wrong calculations
    of her true age and the dates for some of her biographical events.
    For example, the 1881 spring shooting match with Butler
    occurred when she was a 21-year-old adult.
    However, that event is widely reported as occurring
    six years earlier in the fall,
    which also suggests a mythical teen romance with Butler.



    Annie Oakley performing at an amateur circus
    in Nutley, New Jersey, in 1894,
    to raise funds for the Red Cross



    The Little Sure Shot of the Wild West


    [extendedmedia]

    [/extendedmedia]
    Annie Oakley's 1894 "exhibition of rifle shooting
    at glass balls, etc", in an Edison Kinetoscope movie


    In 1894, Oakley and Butler performed in Edison's Kinetoscope film,
    The "Little Sure Shot" of the "Wild West," exhibition of rifle shooting at glass balls, etc.
    Filmed November 1, 1894, in Edison's Black Maria studio by William Heise
    (0:21 at 30 frame/s; 39 ft.)] it was about the 11th film
    made after commercial showings began on April 14, 1894.


    Oakley's early movie star opportunity followed from
    Buffalo Bill and Thomas Edison's friendship,
    which developed after Edison personally built for the Wild West Show,
    what in the 1890s was the world's largest electrical power plant.
    Buffalo Bill and fifteen of his show Indians appeared
    in two Kinetoscopes filmed September 24, 1894


    In Europe, she performed for Queen Victoria,
    and other crowned heads of state.
    Oakley had such good aim that, at his request,
    she knocked the ashes off a cigarette held by the Prince of Prussia,
    the future Kaiser Wilhelm II. The Annie Oakley Foundation
    suggests that she was not the source of a widely-repeated sarcasm
    related to the event, "Some uncharitable people later ventured that if
    Annie would have shot Wilhelm and not his cigarette,
    she could have prevented World War I."



    Oakley circa 1899


    Oakley promoted the service of women in combat operations
    for the United States armed forces.
    She wrote a letter to President William McKinley on April 5, 1898
    "offering the government the services of a company
    of 50 'lady sharpshooters' who would provide their own arms
    and ammunition should the U.S. go to war with Spain
    ."The Spanish-American War did occur,
    but Oakley's offer was not accepted.
    Theodore Roosevelt, did, however, name his volunteer
    cavalry the "Rough Riders" after the "Buffalo Bill's Wild West
    and Congress of Rough Riders of the World" where Oakley was a major star.
    The same year that McKinley was fatally shot by an assassin, 1901,
    Oakley was also badly injured in a railway crash,
    but she fully recovered after temporary paralysis and five spinal operations.
    She left the Buffalo Bill show and in 1902 began a quieter acting career
    in a stage play written especially for her,
    The Western Girl. Oakley played the role of Nancy Berry and used a pistol,
    rifle and rope to outsmart a group of outlaws
    Following her injury and change of career, it only added
    to her legend that her shooting expertise continued to increase into her 60s.


    Throughout her career, it is believed that Oakley taught upwards of
    15,000 women how to use a gun. Oakley believed strongly
    that it was crucial for women to learn how to use a gun,
    as not only a form of physical and mental exercise,
    but also to defend themselves Libel cases



    1902


    In 1903, sensational cocaine prohibition stories were selling well.
    The newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst published a false story
    that Oakley had been arrested for stealing to support a cocaine habit.
    The woman actually arrested was a burlesque performer who told
    Chicago police that her name was "Annie Oakley".
    The original Annie Oakley spent much of the next six years
    winning 54 of 55 libel lawsuits against newspapers.
    She collected less in judgments than were her legal expenses,
    but to her, a restored reputation justified the loss of time and money.


    Most of the newspapers that printed the story had relied on the Hearst article,
    and upon learning of the libelous error they immediately retracted
    the false story with apologies.
    Hearst, however, tried to avoid paying the anticipated court judgments
    of $20,000 ($300,000, adjusted for inflation in 2008 dollars)
    by sending an investigator to Darke County with the intent of collecting
    reputation-smearing gossip from Oakley's past.
    The investigator found nothing.


    Later Years and Death
    Oakley continued to set records into her 60s,
    and she also engaged in extensive, albeit quiet,
    philanthropy for women's rights and other causes,
    including the support of specific young women that she knew.
    She embarked on a comeback and intended to star
    in a feature-length silent movie.
    In a 1922 shooting contest in Pinehurst, North Carolina,
    sixty-two-year-old Oakley hit 100 clay targets from 16 yards (15 m)]


    In late 1922, Oakley and Butler suffered a debilitating
    automobile accident that forced her to wear a steel brace on her right leg.
    Yet after a year and a half of recovery, she again performed and set records in 1924.


    Her health declined in 1925 and she died of pernicious anemia in Greenville, Ohio
    at the age of sixty-six in 1926. She was buried in Brock Cemetery in Greenville, Ohio.
    Butler was so crushed by her death that he stopped eating.He died just 18 days later.


    After her death it was discovered that her entire fortune
    had been spent on her family and her charities.


    Her incomplete autobiography was given to Fred Stone, the stage comedian.


    Edited And Compiled by ethanedwards
    Information And Photographs From Wikipedia

    Best Wishes
    Keith
    London- England

    Edited 20 times, last by ethanedwards ().

  • Calamity Jane may not have been a nice looking woman but, I think Annie Oakley sure was. The photos from back then did not do anybody justice when it came to looks. I think if Oakley had lived in this time with modern photo technology, we would see that she was very good looking. She sort of reminds me of the actress Nancy McKeon, who used to play on The Facts Of Life years back. And don't forget, Gail Davis, who was the tv Oakley, had alot of makeup on to make here look her best onscreen. I don't thihnk Annie Oakley had that luxury.

    Edited once, last by WaynamoJim: add content ().