An illustration of Annie Oakley shows the sharpshooter on the back of a horse while aiming a rifle.

EDITOR’S NOTE: This story was originally published on Aug. 10, 2021 by the Ohio History Connection. Ashland Source has entered into a collaborative agreement with the Ohio History Connection to share content across our sites. This story originally appeared in the July/August 2018 edition of Echoes Magazine, the OHC’s member publication. For info about membership, visit ohiohistory.org/join.

In the 1935 movie Annie Oakley, the title character, played by Barbara Stanwyck, enters a shooting contest against Toby Walker, “the greatest shot in the world.” She’s about to beat him, too, until she deliberately misses her last shot, letting Walker, the man, win.

More than 80 years later, the scene still rankles Annie Oakley scholars and fans, who claim it was not merely inaccurate, but also preposterous.

“The idea of Annie intentionally missing a shot to let a man win is, well, complete nonsense,” says Jeremy Johnston, curator at the Buffalo Bill Center of the West in Cody, Wyoming.

“The Walker character is based on Frank Butler, who became Annie’s husband and business manager. Frank was never jealous of Annie’s talent, and both understood that Annie was the star of the show.”

Karen Besecker and Nancy Stump both work at the Garst Museum’s National Annie Oakley Center. Stump has a pet peeve of her own about the perception of Oakley as it’s evolved over the years.

“Some people compare Annie to Calamity Jane,” she says. “But, no, she was not like Calamity Jane — not at all. Annie always wore dresses and never wore pants. She was not wild in the way we think of Calamity Jane being wild. Annie was always a lady.”

In 1903, Oakley’s image was severely damaged when two of William Randolph Hearst’s Chicago newspapers printed a story with the headline “Famous Woman Crack Shot Steals to Secure Cocaine,” which was subsequently picked up and run in hundreds of newspapers across the country.

As it happened, Maude Fontenella, who had once performed in a burlesque Wild West show, had used Annie’s last name when she was arrested. Oakley was enraged by the damage done to her reputation, eventually suing 55 newspapers, and winning or settling with 54 of them.

The libelous newspaper article slowed Oakley down, but ultimately her public persona triumphed over the lie.

Fees said men who grew up on the Wild West shows admired Annie because she fit the so-called feminine ideal –– “petite, athletic and exceptionally demure.”

Sorting out the public image of Annie from her private life is nearly impossible.

AN INSPIRATION TO WOMEN

But Oakley represented something else entirely for the women who’d grown up watching the sharp-shooter and reading about her exploits in newspapers and magazines.

“Annie was liberating for a great many women. She was a wildly successful entertainer. And she was really on the order of an Olympic athlete. She was only five feet tall but was incredibly strong,” Fees says.

“She had to be strong. Her rifle was 6 ½ pounds, and she’d shoot it at targets hundreds of times a day, thousands of times during the run of a show, all the while running and riding her horse and doing handsprings.”

Near the end of her life, Oakley said something that endears her to this day to the proud citizens of Darke County:

“After traveling through 14 foreign countries and appearing before all the royalty and nobility, I have only one wish today,” she told a reporter from the Newark Star-Eagle. “That is when my eyes are closed in death that they will bury me back in that quiet little farmland where I was born.”

She is buried in Darke County, in Brock Cemetery in York Township, about eight miles from her birthplace.

LEARN MORE:

For more information about Annie Oakley and Frank Butler and Buffalo Bill’s Wild West show, visit garstmuseum.org, centerofthewest.org and annieoakleycenterfoundation.org.

Books about Annie Oakley are many, but historian Paul Fees recommends Annie Oakley: Woman at Arms by Courtney Ryley Cooper (published in 1928) because it was the first biography and was written by a contemporary who had first-hand sources.

Historian Jeremy Johnston recommends two more recent biographies, Annie Oakley by Shirl Kasper and The Life and Legacy of Annie Oakley by Glenda Riley.

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