Annie Oakley was an American sharpshooter and is considered America's first female superstar
@Sharpshooter, Family and Childhood
Annie Oakley was an American sharpshooter and is considered America's first female superstar
Annie Oakley born at
In 1903, William Randolph Hearst published a false article on Annie Oakley, mentioning that she was arrested for stealing to support a cocaine habit. Outraged, she spent a lot of time and money throughout the next few years and eventually won 54 of the 55 lawsuits she had filed against various newspapers.
Annie Oakley and Butler remained married for fifty years, till her death on November 3, 1926, in Greenville, Ohio. She died of pernicious anemia, at the age of 66. Reportedly, her husband, Butler, was so depressed that he starved himself to death 18 days after her death.
The couple did not have any children, and her fortune went to charities that she was affiliated to. Spending a good deal of her childhood in foster care, she was compassionate towards children and donated to support orphans.
Annie Oakley was born as Phoebe Ann Mosey on August 13, 1860, in rural Darke County, Ohio, to Susan Wise and Jacob Mosey. She was the fifth of her parents' seven surviving children.
When she was six, her father died of pneumonia after being out in the blizzard once. Her mother got married again, but her second husband, Daniel Brumbaugh, also died soon. Unable to support all her children, her mother sent her and her elder sister, Sarah, to the Darke County Infirmary in 1870.
While living with the Edingtons, the superintendent of the infirmary and his wife, Annie Oakley helped them around the infirmary and learned to sew. She was later sent to a local family to take care of their newborn child in exchange for an education. However, the family forced her to do heavy menial work and even abused her for a long time. She eventually managed to escape and returned to the Edingtons, who sent her back to her mother.
In 1874, her mother got married for a third time, but her marriage to Joseph Shaw was not enough to revive the family's financial conditions. Annie, eager to help her family, started hunting for game with her father's rifle, selling those to the local shopkeepers, hotels and restaurants. At the age of 15, she paid off the mortgage on her mother's farm with her earnings.
In 1875, on Thanksgiving Day, a local hotel owner arranged a shooting match between Annie Oakley and Frank E. Butler, a traveling show marksman. Butler placed a $100 bet per side with the hotel owner that he could beat any local fancy shooter. Annie Oakley won the bet, as well as Butler's heart, who married her the following year after months of courtship. Some sources point out that the shooting match might have happened in 1881, followed by their marriage the next year.
Butler continued to perform on shows for some time, often teaming up with a male partner. However, once his partner fell ill during a show in 1882, Annie replaced him and immediately charmed the audience with her performance.
Soon after, she started to perform professionally and took the stage name "Oakley", apparently from the town of Oakley, Ohio. Butler helped her gain exposure and began to act as her manager. Instead of wearing risqué outfits worn by other female performers, she put her sewing skills to use and created her own costumes.
In 1884, during an event in St. Paul, Minnesota, she impressed legendary Native American warrior Sitting Bull, who gave her the nickname "Watanya Cicilla," or "Little Sure Shot". She later became known by the nickname as it started to appear on advertisements of her shows.
In 1885, Annie Oakley and her husband joined 'Buffalo Bill's Wild West', a circus-like touring show. She started to show off her remarkable skills as a sharpshooter and continued to entertain the audience as part of the company for almost 17 long years.
During a show at the American Exposition in London in 1887, she charmed Queen Victoria with her performance. In spite of that, her success was marred by a rivalry with another sharpshooter, Lillian Smith, which eventually forced her to quit the company after the show.
She toured with a rival 'Wild West' show for some time, but returned to 'Buffalo Bill's Wild West' after Smith left the show. In 1889, she began a three-year-long tour of Europe, starting with Paris.
After a train accident in 1901, she was partially paralyzed for some time. Upon recovery, she left the 'Wild West' show and started a career as a stage actor in a play written on her. She played the 'cowgirl' Nancy Berry in the play named 'The Western Girl'.