Historic Pelham

Presenting the rich history of Pelham, NY in Westchester County: current historical research, descriptions of how to research Pelham history online and genealogy discussions of Pelham families.

Tuesday, February 07, 2017

A Grand Pigeon Shooting Match Over Washington's Birthday Weekend in Pelham on February 22, 1889


As part of the celebration in Pelham of the anniversary of George Washington's birthday in 1889, the Country Club hosted a grand, two-day pigeon shoot on its grounds at Bartow along Shore Road.  The New York Times published two detailed descriptions of the two-day event that together shed meaningful light today on what such a sporting spectacle was like in Pelham during the early days of the evolution of the sport known today as Trapshooting.

I recently wrote an article on the history of trapshooting in Pelham that explained live pigeon shooting and the role it played in that history.  See Wed., Jan. 18, 2017:  A History of Trap Shooting in Pelham, Including Amateur National Championships.  

Though live pigeon shoots today seem brutal and shock modern sensibilities, the competitions played an important role in the sporting history of Pelham Manor.  That sporting history, in turn, shaped perceptions of the beautiful community on the Sound at precisely the time it was beginning to develop into a bedroom community and an early railroad suburb of New York City.  Understanding such sporting events and how they influenced our forebears can help us better understand how our community evolved and became what it is today.

During February, 1889, anticipation was building among those who planned to attend the pigeon match on the grounds of the Country Club at Bartow.  The event was listed as part of the "Social Calendar" in New York City.  One publication noted that it was among the events "where fashionable folks" would gather over the Washington's Birthday weekend.  Indeed, the same publication, The Daily Graphic, made much of the fact that the "Pelham aristocracy" would be in attendance and that a ball at the clubhouse would close the festivities.  Clearly the pigeon shoot at Bartow was viewed as a social spectacle where the "aristocracy" would gather as part of the social season.  Once again, Pelham Manor and its Country Club would be a focus of the social elite of New York City and the surrounding region.  Such events shaped perceptions of Pelham Manor as an exclusive and affluent community that served as a playground for the wealthy.

The Country Club treated the pigeon shoot as a grand and important social event.  It built a "gayly-colored" grandstand for spectators next to the shooting box.  It paused the event in the midst of the first day for a lovely and social luncheon.  It hosted a ball in the evening after the first day of shooting and a "private dinner" at the end of the second day of the event.  

Though it may have been, principally, a two-day social event, the importance of the actual shooting match should not be underestimated.  In addition to the live pigeon shoot, there were sweepstakes shooting events at the end of each day's pigeon shoot.  All who participated were charged an entrance fee of $5.  The Country Club offered a silver urn trophy cup fashioned by Tiffany & Co. worth $500 as first prize.  It offered cash prizes for second and third places.

Shotgunners competed in teams of two shooters.  Representatives of the following nine clubs were invited to compete in the pigeon shoot portion of the shooting matches (although it appears that not all nine clubs sent teams to the competition):   the Country Club (at Bartow), Tuxedo Club, Westminster Kennel Club, Carteret Gun Club, Rockaway Hunt Club, The Meadow Brook Hunt Club, Philadelphia Country Club, Riverton Country Club, and the Country Club of Boston.  Each club sponsored two teams of two shooters, specified as Team 1 and Team 2.  Half of the teams competed on Friday, February 22, 1889.  The other half competed on Saturday, February 23rd.

The rules were simple, and were enforced by Referee John G. Hecksher.  Each man would be presented with fifty live pigeons released from traps ahead of them.  The released birds were to be allowed to rise for thirty yards and then had to be shot and dropped to the ground before reaching a boundary fifty yards away.  Any birds that fell outside the fifty-yard boundary were deemed "lost" birds.  The kills and misses of each teammate in a pair would be added to determine the team's total score out of the 100 birds presented to the pair of teammates.  In the event of a tie score between teams, there would be a five-bird shoot-off.

The pigeon match began in front of a "large assemblage" of spectators on the Country Club grounds at 11:00 a.m. on Friday.  The shooting was thrilling and the conditions were good so that the shooters that day performed well.  At about 1:00 p.m., the shotgunners took a "recess" for a luncheon, but continued the match thereafter.  At the end of the first day of the match, there was sweepstakes shooting in front of the spectators.  According to one account, a ball was scheduled in the clubhouse that evening.

Shooting conditions the next day were poor due to high winds.  The pigeons were difficult to shoot as the wind whipped them in the cold air.  Consequently, the scores were far worse that day.  When the match ended, the scores for the two days were tallied and the initial results were:

Westminster Kennel Club, Team No. 1:
     W. Chauncey Floyd-Jones, 41; Dr. Knapp, 38; total, 79

Riverton Country Club, Team No. 1:  
     Dando, 39; Handy, 37; total, 76.  

Carteret Gun Club:  
     Pearson, 40; Smith, 36; total, 76.  

Riverton Country Club, Team No. 2:  
     Randolph, 42; Dolan, 33; total, 75.  

Westminster Kennel Club, Team No. 2:
     G. Floyd-Jones, 36; Wilmerding, 38; total, 74.  

Country Club (Westchester,) Team No. 1:
     Thebant, 34; Iselin, 35; total, 69.

Country Club (Westchester,) Team No. 2:
     Page, 36; Gladwin, 33; total 69.

With the score tied for second place, a shoot-off was required with five live pigeons presented to each of the two members of each of the two teams that were tied (Riverton Country Club Team 1 and Carteret Gun Club). The tie was shot off, five live birds to each man, and was won by the Cartaret Gun Club, killing 9 out of 10 birds to the Riverton's 8.

The first place team (Westminster Kennel Club Team 1) received the silver urn Tiffany trophy worth $500.  The second place team (Carteret Gun Club) received a cash prize of $180.  The third place team (Riverton Country Club Team 1) received a cash prize of $80.  

That evening, a private dinner was hosted in the clubhouse to end the two-day event.



"THE PARKER GUN MANUFACTURED BY PARKER BROS.
MERIDEN CONN." This 1893 Trade Card Shows a Pigeon
Match Underway. Four Parker Plunge Traps Are Visible on
the Ground to the Right With Cords Extending Back to The
Handler Standing to the Left of the Shotgunner. NOTE:
Click on Image to Enlarge.

As one might expect, live pigeon shoots are banned most places now.  Recently live pigeon matches have been replaced in many locations by a new sport known as Helice (or "ZZ Shooting").  In ZZ Shooting, there is a white plastic target called a "witness" that looks like a clay target and fits into a pair of plastic propeller-like wings.  (Helice means propeller in French.)  The shooting field is set up the same as a live pigeon ground, but the pigeon "traps" consist of five electric traps that randomly spin off the targets.  On the shooter's call, one of the traps (selected randomly) releases the spinning dipsy-doodle target.  The shooter must hit the target with sufficient force to "break" the target by popping the "witness" out of the plastic propeller wings before the target reaches a boundary fence.  The shooter may take two shots at the target.  The propeller wings are reused until they are visibly damaged (which occurs frequently).  


Live pigeon shooting, of course, is a sport no longer practiced in Pelham.  Its modern replacement, Helice or ZZ Birding, is a sport that likely never will be practiced in Pelham. 

*          *          *          *          *

"SOCIAL CALENDAR.
-----
WHERE FASHIONABLE FOLKS WILL GATHER TOMORROW.
Friday, February 22. . . . 

Mr. and Mrs. James M. Waterbury, Mr. and Mrs. Marion Story and some others of the 'Pelham aristocracy' have made up large home parties who go out this afternoon and stay until Monday.  Washington's Birthday will witness the pigeon shoot for a $500 cup at the Country Club and there will be a most animated contest.  A ball at the club house will end the day's festivities. . . ."

Source:  SOCIAL CALENDAR -- WHERE FASHIONABLE FOLKS WILL GATHER TOMORROW -- Friday, February 22, The Daily Graphic [NY, NY], Feb. 21, 1889, p. 831, col. 3

"PASTIMES OUT OF TOWN
-----
SHOOTING, RIDING, AND CURLING FOR PRIZES.
A VARIETY OF SPORTING EVENTS ENTICE CITY PLEASURE SEEKERS TO VARIOUS SUBURBAN RESORTS.

There was a large assemblage of people at the grounds of the Country Club at Bartow, Westchester County, yesterday, to witness the pigeon shooting for the five-hundred-dollar cup offered by that club.  The prize was contested for by teams of two from the different clubs.  The clubhouse presented an inviting appearance, and the scene was rendered additionally attractive by the gayly-colored [sic] grand stand at the right of the shooting box which was used for the guests who watched the match.  Among them were many ladies.

The shooting began at 11 o'clock in the morning, and the day's session lasted until 3 o'clock.  The conditions were:  Each man 50 birds, with a rise of 30 yards, and the boundary to be 50 yards; ties, 5 birds, and entrance fees, $5.  The cup offered was made by Tiffany, and was of silver, urn-shaped.  The shooting started off briskly, and few misses were made.  The birds rose well.  There were seven team entries:  The Country Club No. 1, C. O. Iselin, W. Thompson; the Carteret Gun Club No. 1, F. Pierson, W. B. Smith; the Riverton Country Club No. 1 of Philadelphia, T. S. Dando, W. Handy; the Riverton Country Club No. 2, Randolph and Dolan; the Country Club No. 2, Williams and Gladwin; the Westminster Kennel Club, G. Floyd-Jones, G. Wilmerding, and the Carteret Gun Club No. 2, Chauncey Floyd-Jones and Dr. Knapp.  The shooting continued briskly up to 1 o'clock, when a recess was held for dinner, after which the match was resumed.

During the day a number of guests visited the club grounds, both from the city and New Rochelle and Pelham.  The first shooting was done by Randolph who only missed 8 birds out of the 50.  C. Floyd-Jones also did good shooting, missing only 9 out of the 50.  It was arranged that only half of the men making up the teams should shoot yesterday, the other half continuing the contest to-day.  The men who shot yesterday were those whose names were registered at No. 1 of their respective teams.  They were Thompson, Pierson, Dando, Randolph, Williams, G. Floyd-Jones, and Chauncey Floyd-Jones.

At the close of the match shooting for the day short impromptu sweepstakes were shot by the different club members.

The score for the day's work at the match shooting was Randolph, 42, 8 missed; Chauncey Floyd-Jones, 41, 9 missed; Pierson, 40, 10 missed; Dando, 39, 11 missed; Williams, 36, 14 missed; G. Floyd-Jones, 36, 14 missed; and Thompson, 34, 16 missed.  The match will be continued to-day.

Among the spectators were Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Sands, Mrs. J. Lorillard, Theodosius Bartow, Mr. and Mrs. C. Oliver Iselin, Mr. and Mrs. William E. Iselin, Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Campbell, Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Gladwin, T. W. Thorne, N. D. Thorne, Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Ingersoll, P. H. Adee, Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Adee, F. W. Adee, Mr. and Mrs. M. Dwight Collier, Mr. and Mrs. Gerdon MacDonald, John C. Furman, W. H. Jackson, and F. W. Jackson. . . ."

Source:  PASTIMES OUT OF TOWN -- SHOOTING, RIDING, AND CURLING FOR PRIZES -- A VARIETY OF SPORTING EVENTS ENTICE CITY PLEASURE SEEKERS TO VARIOUS SUBURBAN RESORTS, N.Y. Times, Feb. 23, 1889, p. 2, col. 5.  

"SHOOTING AT THE COUNTRY CLUB.

A big silver cup, worth about $500, is a prize the possession of which will depend on the number of pigeons that the aspirants for it can kill.  The competition began yesterday at the grounds of the Country Club of Westchester County.  The shoot was open to teams of two from the following clubs: -- Tuxedo, Westminster Kennel, Carteret, Rockaway Hunt, Meadow Brook, Philadelphia, Riverton, Country Club of Boston and the Country Club of Westchester.

One member of each team shot.  The others will shoot to-day.  Altogether the sport was good, and the day thoroughly enjoyable.  Fifty was the highest possible score.  Following is the result so far:  --  

Name                                   Club                Birds
Mr. Dando...........................Riverton...........42
W. Chauncey Floyd-Jones..Carteret...........41
Fred. Pierson......................Carteret............40
Mr. Daniel...........................Riverton...........39
Mr. Tabor.............................Westchester....34
Mr. Williams........................Westchester.....36
The shooting will be continued at noon to-day."

Source:  SHOOT AT THE COUNTRY CLUB, N.Y. Herald, Feb. 23, 1889, p. 6, col. 2.  

"SHOOTING IN A WIND.
-----
A WESTMINSTER KENNEL CLUB TEAM WINS AT BARTOW.

A strong wind, keen and frosty, made what was known as a 'rough day' for the sportsmen who took part yesterday in concluding the pigeon-shooting match begun on Friday for the five-hundred-dollar silver cup offered by the Country Club of Westchester.  On Friday one member from each of the seven teams entered shot, and yesterday the remaining team members took their turn.  The shooting began at 11:30 o'clock on the grounds of the club at Bartow, on the Sound.  As on Friday, a large number of guests gathered to witness the match, and the grand stand erected near the shooting box sheltered many ladies.  The birds rose well, and the wind gave the sportsmen no little annoyance, as it frequently carried birds nearly killed but with life enough to fly a few seconds out of bounds, adding 'lost' birds on the score.  John G. Hecksher acted as referee, and the men who shot were C. O. Iselin of the Country Club, Team No. 1; W. B. Smith of the Carteret Gun Club, Team No. 2, of Philadelphia; Mr. Handy of the Riverton Club, Team No. 1, of Philadelphia; J. L. Gladwin of the County Club, Team No. 2; L. Wilmerding of the Westminster Kennel Club, Team No. 2, and Dr. G. L. Knapp of the Westminster Club, Team No. 1.

In spite of the day the shooting was good, but not up to that of Friday.  The best work was done by L. Wilmerding and Dr. Knapp, both killing 38 birds out of a possible 50.  A brilliant shot was made by Mr. Smith of the Carteret Gun Club in shooting off the final tie between that club team and team No. 1 of the Riverton Club for second place.  The bird rose a few feet and took a swift zig-zag dodge to the right.  The first barrel made some feathers fly, but the bird sped rapidly on.  The second barrel, a long side shot, caused the fugitive to turn a complete somersault and fall dead.  

The shooting for the match continued up to a little after 3:30 o'clock, and the sportsmen kept steadily at work.  The score for the day stood:

Iselin, 35 killed, 15 missed; Smith, 36 killed, 14 missed; Dolan, 33 killed, 17 missed; Handy, 37 killed, 13 missed; Gladwin, 33 killed, 17 missed; Wilmerding, 38 killed, 12 missed; and Dr. Knapp, 38 killed, 12 missed.

These, added to the scores of Friday, made the totals:

Westminster Kennel Club, Team No. 1 -- W. Chauncey Floyd-Jones, 41; Dr. Knapp, 38; total, 79; Riverton Country Club, Team No. 1 -- Dando, 39; Handy, 37; total, 76.  Carteret Gun Club -- Pearson, 40; Smith, 36; total, 76.  Riverton Country Club, Team No. 2 -- Randolph, 42; Dolan, 33; total, 75.  Westminster Kennel Club, Team No. 2 -- G. Floyd-Jones, 36; Wilmerding, 38; total, 74.  Country Club (Westchester,) Team No. 1 -- Thebant, 34; Iselin, 35; total, 69.  Country Club (Westchester,) Team No. 2 -- Page, 36; Gladwin, 33; total 69.

This score gave the cup to Team No. 1 of the Westminster Kennel Club, W. C. Floyd-Jones and Dr. Knapp, and made a tie for the second place between the Riverton Country Club, Team No. 1, and the Cartaret team.  The tie was shot off, live birds to each man, and was won by the Cartaret Club, killing 9 out of 10 birds to the Riverton's 8.

By the conditions of the match the cup went to the club winning first place, 60 per cent. of the entrance money over the cup value to the second team, and 40 per cent. of it to the third.  The Cartaret team received $180 and the Riverton $80.

One of the features of the match was the retrieving of the Country Club's dogs, the setter Goldie, the English setter Fan, and the pointer Fairy.  

Among those present at the match were J. Lorrillard, Theodore Bartow, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Iselin, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Waterbury, Mrs. J. L. Gladwin, Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Ingersoll, Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Campbell, Mr. and Mrs. De Lancey Kane, T. W. Thorne, N. D. Thorne, John L. Kane, P. H. Adee, William Sands, Mrs. J. S. Dando, Mrs. Gordon McDonald, the Misses Thorne, Miss Roberts, and Mr. and Mrs. Jordan L. Martin, Jr.  In the evening W. B. Cutting gave a private dinner at the club. . . ."

Source:  SHOOTING IN A WIND -- A WESTMINSTER KENNEL CLUB TEAM WINS AT BARTOW, N.Y. Times, Feb. 24, 1889, p. 6, col. 2.  

"THE BEGINNING OF THE END.
-----
Some Closing Scenes of a Rather Eventful Season.
-----
DOGS AND DARLINGS.
-----
And Soon Lent Cometh When All of Us May Sleep. . . . 

Out of town! is the cry on such days.  Mr. and Mrs. James Waterbury, whose various houses seem never closed or servantless, entertained a large company at luncheon out at Pleasance, and then drove them over to the Country Club to watch the clever pigeon shooting which was going on.  Another lot of people went down to Tuxedo, where the skating, tobogganing and ice boating are pretty near perfect. . . ."

Source:  THE BEGINNING OF THE END -Some Closing Scenes of a Rather Eventful Season -- DOGS AND DARLINGS -- And Soon Lent Cometh When All of Us May Sleep, N.Y. Herald, Feb. 24, 1889, p. 18, col. 1.

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Wednesday, January 18, 2017

A History of Trap Shooting in Pelham, Including Amateur National Championships


Countless news stories (too many to quote them all below) describe or reference elaborate "pigeon shoots" in the Town of Pelham during the 19th century, particularly on holidays such as Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year's Day.  Shotgunners competed to kill live pigeons released into the air and, later, glass and clay targets, for cash prizes, silver trophies, and more.  In one year alone during the 1880s, more than 15,000 live pigeons were shot and killed on the grounds of the Country Club that once stood along today's Shore Road in Pelham.  Spectators and shotgunners bet on the outcomes of the competitions.  Pelham sportsmen, it seems, were avid participants in one of the oldest shotgunning games:  trap shooting.

According to one authority:

"Trap shooting has been around for a long time, maybe hundreds of years.  An early printed mention was in an English publication called 'Sporting Magazine.'  In 1793, an article stated that trap shooting was already 'well established' in England.

"Early trap shooters used live pigeons for targets.  Birds were held in a box or 'trap' until the shooter 'called for the bird.'  An assistant would then pull a string to open the trap's lid.

"The first known records of organized trap shooting in the U.S. are probably those contained in the 1831 records of the Sportsman's Club of Cincinnati, Ohio.  In 1866, Chs Portlock of Boston, Massachusetts, introduced a glass ball to American target shooters.  The balls met with limited success because the levers used to propel them were so inadequately matched to the glass that many balls shattered when they were launched.

"Glass ball shooting declined when George Ligowsky invented the first clay pigeon and a machine to throw it effectively in the 1880s.  This was significant for shotgun games because Ligowsky's disc-shaped clay pigeon simulated the flight of a live bird, whereas the glass balls were simply lobbed into the air.

"Ligowsky's pigeons were made of clay and baked in an oven.  They were apparently quite hard and it took a precise shot to break one.  Today's clay targets are made primarily of pitch and are easier to break.  The use of live birds gradually fell into disfavor in the 20th century."

Source:  Sapp, Rick, The Gun Digest Book of Trap & Skeet Shooting, 5th Edition, p. 17 (Gun Digest Books, 2009).

The sport of trap shooting seems to have progressed in Pelham consistently with the history of the sport.  There are countless references to live pigeon shoots with later references to competitions involving glass target balls and "clay pigeons."  By the early 20th century, there was a trap shooting range and a "Trap Shooters' Lodge" on Travers Island that operated for many, many decades.  

Early pigeon matches, as they were called, were interesting affairs.  In the earliest days wooden boxes were placed on the ground in front of the shotgunner, each holding a pigeon.  They were called box "traps," hence the name of the modern sport of trapshooting.  Each box trap had a long cord attached to a door on the trap.  When the shooter called for a bird, a participant pulled a cord that sprang open the door allowing the bird to escape into flight to be shot.  



Chromolithograph Entitled "Pigeon Match" from Work
by Henry Thomas Aiken.  A Wooden Box Trap May Be
Seen on the Right From Which the Pigeon Has Just
Been Released.  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

During much of the 1880s and early 1890s, live pigeon shoots were held in Pelham at Bartow Station and in an area near the border of Pelhamville and Eastchester.  By 1884, the Country Club located near Bartow on both sides of Shore Road held live pigeon shoots as well as clay pigeon matches on its grounds.  On October 4, 1884, for example, shotgunners faced off in a clay pigeon match.  The men were presented with twenty clay targets apiece, presented as singles.  The clay targets were sprung from five traps hidden by a screen with each trap throwing in a different direction.  J. L. Breese and W. Kent ended the day with the two highest scores.  Breese shot 18 of the 20 clay pigeons.  Kent shot 17.  

At the height of the popularity of live pigeon shoots in Pelham, more than fifteen thousand pigeons a year were shot and killed on the grounds of the Country Club along today's Shore Road.  When a reporter for the New York Herald visited the clubhouse of the Country Club in 1888, he later wrote:

"Within the office [of the clubhouse] was a heap of gun cases, which led to the remark on the part of the young man in charge that the last pigeon match of the winter season was shot off last Saturday.  Do they have many matches?  Well, they kill about fifteen thousand pigeons in a year.  And so it readily appeared, for the grassy plot without for about a quarter of an acre was enclosed with a netting fence, within whose confines were the traps and other paraphernalia necessary to such sport. . . ."

Other news items indicate that during the mid-1880s, Pelham sportsmen shot live pigeons, glass ball targets (the predecessor to clay pigeons), and also clay pigeons.  For example, a January 11, 1884 local news item stated:  "There is to be a big time at Secord's, Bartow, on the 22nd of February.  There will be pigeon, sparrow and glassball shooting.  Secord is offering $5 a hundred for live sparrows.  This is a good opportunity to get rid of some of the little nuisances."  During that February 22nd pigeon shoot (held on the holiday of George Washington's Birthday), two local residents shot a pigeon match.  William Pell and Ben May bet $25 a side when shooting against each other.  Pell won the match and the bet by "killing eight straight birds."

As another example, an item published on November 28, 1884 stated:

"There was a big time at Secord's, Bartow yesterday.  There was an interesting pigeon match, between Messrs. Weeks and Malnatt, and plenty of clay pigeon and glass ball shooting. . . ."

As the sport of trap shooting progressed, the traps did as well.  So-called plunge traps became fairly standard.  The plunge trap, invented by Parker and in use by 1874, was an early effort to "launch" a pigeon rather than simply open a box and wait for the pigeon to emerge.  With box traps, the door would be opened and it might be some time before a wary and reticent pigeon might attempt a flight escape -- a reason for the intentionally unpredictable delay in the release of a clay target once it is called for in modern trap shooting.  A plunge trap had a platform on which the bird was placed with spring doors that closed like a pyramid above the platform.  When the cord was pulled, the doors fell away from the platform which "plunged" upward to force the pigeon into the air.



"THE PARKER GUN MANUFACTURED BY PARKER BROS.
MERIDEN CONN."  This 1893 Trade Card Shows a Pigeon
Match Underway.  Four Parker Plunge Traps Are Visible on
the Ground to the Right With Cords Extending Back to The
Handler Standing to the Left of the Shotgunner.  NOTE:
Click on Image to Enlarge.


Though it seems a certain recipe for disaster, such pigeon matches occasionally involved copious amounts of whiskey.  Indeed, occasionally the nasty results were predictable.  One odd event involved whiskey at a pigeon match near an Eastchester tavern called Forkle's on the border of Eastchester and Pelhamville on New Year's Day, 1886.  (Forkle's, owned by William Forkle, was sometimes referenced as in Pelham and other times as in Eastchester.)

Two men from the settlement of Bartow in Pelham, John Secord and W. J. Elliott, faced off against two men from the Village of Westchester, Hiram Hoffman and Joseph Whitney.  The four men loaded up on "Forkle's whiskey" during the match.  According to one account, "[d]uring the afternoon, while the boys were feeling the effects of Forkle's whiskey, to a considerable extent, someone fired a shot through Forkle's door."  

Mr. Forkle had Joseph Whitney arrested, claiming he fired the shot.  Whitney was tried and found not guilty.  Forkle next had Whitney arrested on charges of disorderly conduct and disturbing the peace.  Whitney refused to appear for trial and was fined $20.  Not yet satisfied, a "meddler" claimed W. J. Elliott of Pelham was actually the one who fired the shot.  Nearly three weeks after the pigeon match, Forkle had Elliott arrested and charged with disorderly conduct.  The case was tried before Justice Farrington and a jury on the evening of Tuesday, January 19, 1886.  According to an account of the trial:

"On the trial that took place there was not a scintilla of evidence against Elliott, as the counsel for the prosecution remarked, 'the witnesses would not swear as they had talked.'  The result was a verdict by the jury of 'not guilty.' The action of Forkle in this matter, to say the least, is reprehensible.  He issues an invitation broadcast for a pigeon shooting, a violation of law; he then sells his guests whiskey, and when it takes effect and they get hilarious, he has them arrested for disorderly conduct."

Many of the pigeon shoots were held in and around the settlement known as Bartow that once surrounded Bartow Station along the New Haven Branch Line near the head of today's Orchard Beach Road.  

Glass target balls and the new "clay pigeons" were being used in Pelham by at least mid-1882.  For example, according to one report, on July 29, 1882, a match game between two local residents included a $20 stake as the wager:

"A match game at glass ball shooting will take place to-morrow (Saturday), at Bartow, between James K. Hyde and Gus. Barton.  For the purpose of making it the more interesting, $20 has been staked on the result."

Source:  CITY ISLAND AND PELHAM, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Jul. 28, 1882, Vol. XIII, No. 671, p. 3, cols. 2-3.  

Occasionally local shotgun shoots included glass target balls in conjunction with live pigeon matches.  Indeed, in late 1885, John S. Secord of Bartow arranged a sports day on Christmas Day to have "a pigeon match, clay pigeon shooting and shooting for poultry.  

By at least August, 1895, shootists in the little settlement of Pelhamville (actually the spanking new Village of North Pelham) took a more humane approach.  By then they seem to have been shooting exclusively clay pigeons rather than live pigeons.  New York State banned live pigeon shoots, although other states such as Pennsylvania continued to allow such competitions as late as the 1960s. 

Many of today's Pelhamites can actually remember the sounds of trap shooting emanating from Travers Island by members of the New York Athletic Club and their guests.  Trap shooters shattered clay pigeons on the island for more than eighty years.  Indeed, there was a "Trap Shooters' Lodge" on the island maintained by the NYAC Trap Shooting Department.

Beginning in 1906, the New York Athletic Club began sponsoring an annual trap shooting "Amateur Championships of America."  Travers Island became the mecca for the most outstanding trap shooters in the United States.  Indeed, excepting the latter years of World War II, the annual championships attracted the nation's best amateur trap shooters for many, many decades.  In some years up to 300 trap shooters, both men and women, gathered to fire thousands of shells at clay pigeons on Travers Island.

Perhaps one of the most interesting Amateur Championships of America held at Travers Island was the 49th annual championship held in early May, 1958.  Seventy-year-old Ben Higginson won the National Singles Trap Shooting Championship by breaking 197 out of 200 targets.  Higginson thus became a three-time national champion in the event, having won the same event on Travers Island 52 years previously and also in 1949.  



Rufus A. King of Witchita, Texas, Winner in the
Class A Doubles Trap Shooting Event and the
Preliminaries Singles Event in the Amateur
Championships of America Held in Early May,
1939.  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.



"AT THE TRAPS - TRAVERS ISLAND 3/22/11"
Image Shows Competitors on Two Trap Shooting
Platforms on Travers Shooting Clay Pigeons onMarch 22, 1911.  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge. 

In early 1994, the Long Island Soundkeeper Fund and the New York Coastal Fishermen's Association filed a lawsuit against the New York Athletic Club alleging violations of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq. and the Federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, 42 U.S.C. § 6901 et seq.  The plaintiffs claimed that the club's trap shooting activities involving shooting clay targets from shoreline concrete platforms and breaking those targets over the waters of Long Island Sound were polluting the waters of the Sound.

On March 22, 1996, Federal District Court Judge Robert P. Patterson, Jr. ruled in favor of the plaintiffs.  The Court concluded that the New York Athletic Club either had to apply for a Federal permit to pollute (in essence) or cease shooting immediately.  The club decided to end its century long shooting tradition on the island rather than seek the required permit.  See Long Island Soundkeeper Fund, Inc., et uno v. New York Athletic Club of the City of New York, No. 94 Civ. 0436 (RPP), 42 E.R.C. 1421, 1996 WL 131863 (S.D.N.Y., Mar. 22, 1996).

The long tradition of trap shooting in the Town of Pelham thus ended.

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"City Island. . . . 

A pigeon match will take place at the Tally Ho Hotel, Bartow Station, between Charles Johnson and Wm. Pell, for $25 a side, on September 4, 1880; also sweepstake shooting at one hundred birds.  The shooting will take place in the meadow at the rear of the hotel. . . ."

Source:  City Island, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Aug. 27, 1880, Vol. XI, No. 571, p. 3, col. 2.  

"BARTOW AND PELHAM BRIDGE. . . . 

A glass ball shooting match took place at Bartow Station, on Friday last.  Two contests for sweepstakes were ties between W. Pell and Gus Barton, and the third was won by Mr. Talman P. Hyde.  A match has been arranged for July 29th, at the same place, between Gus Barton and James K. Hyde. . . ."

Source:  BARTOW AND PELHAM BRIDGE, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Jul. 21, 1882, Vol. XIII, No. 670, p. 3, col. 3.  

"PELHAM AND CITY ISLAND

There will be a pigeon shoot, at Secord's, Bartow, on Wednesday next. . . ."

Source:  PELHAM AND CITY ISLAND, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Oct. 12, 1883, Vol. XV, No. 734, p. 3, col. 3.  

"PELHAM AND CITY ISLAND. . . .

There is to be a big time at Secord's, Bartow, on the 22nd of February.  There will be pigeon, sparrow and glassball shooting.  Secord is offering $5 a hundred for live sparrows.  This is a good opportunity to get rid of some of the little nuisances. . . ."

Source:  PELHAM AND CITY ISLAND, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Jan. 11, 1884, Vol. XV, No. 747, p. 3, cols. 3-4.

"CITY ISLAND AND BARTOW. . . . 

A pigeon match is to be shot at Seacord's [sic] Hotel at Bartow Station, on the 22d inst., between Benjamin May and Willard [illegible] for $50 and at ten birds each.  Sweepstakes shooting at sparrows will follow the pigeon match."

Source:  CITY ISLAND AND BARTOW, New Rochelle Pioneer, Feb. 9, 1884, Vol. XXIV, No. 46, p. 3, col. 7.  

"PELHAM AND CITY ISLAND. . . . 

The pigeon match at Secord's Bartow, on Washingtons Birthday, between Will. Pell and Ben May, for $25 a side, was won by Pell killing eight straight birds. . . ."

Source:  PELHAM AND CITY ISLAND, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Feb. 29, 1884, Vol. XV, No. 754, p. 3, col. 4.  

"SPIRIT OF THE FIELD.

THE COUNTRY CLUB. -- A clay pigeon match was held at Bartow-on-Sound Oct. 4 at thee grounds of the Country Club -- 20 birds each, 21 yards rise, singles, with 18 entries.  The birds were sprung from five traps hidden by a screen, each trap throwing in a different direction.  The following are the two best scores:

J. L. Breese........1 1 1 1 0    1 1 1 1 1    1 1 1 1 1     1 1 1 1 0 - 18
W. Kent...............1 1 1 1 1    1 1 1 1 1    0 1 1 1 1     1 0 1 0 1 - 17"

Source:  SPIRIT OF THE FIELD, Spirit of the Times, Nov. 15, 1884, p. 499, col. 3.  

"COUNTRY CLUB MEETING.

Everything is in readiness for the first fall meeting of the Pelham Country Club, which is to take place at Pelham, to-morrow afternoon. . . .

The club has been very actively managed, and all through the Summer there have been any number of tennis, polo and pigeon shooting matches. . . ."

Source:  COUNTRY CLUB MEETING, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Oct. 17, 1884, Vol. XVI, No. 787, p. 2, cols. 3-4.  

"PELHAM. . . .

There was a big time at Secord's, Bartow yesterday.  There was an interesting pigeon match, between Messrs. Weeks and Malnatt, and plenty of clay pigeon and glass ball shooting. . . ."

Source:  PELHAM, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Nov. 11, 1884, Supplement, p. 1, cols. 2-3.  

"PELHAM. . . .

There was a big time at Secord's, Bartow, yesterday.  There was an interesting pigeon match, between Messrs. Weeks and Malnatt, and plenty of clay pigeon and glass ball shooting. . . ."

Source:  PELHAM, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Nov. 28, 1884, p. 2, cols. 2-3.

"PELHAM AND CITY ISLAND. . . . 

Mr. J. S. Secord, of Bartow, having given way on Thanksgiving, to all those who usually arrange sports on holidays, has decided to have a pigeon match, clay pigeon shooting and shooting for poultry, on Christmas Day, and to that end is making extensive preparations for a big time.  John never does things by halves, and a fine day's sport may be confidently looked for."

Source:  PELHAM AND CITY ISLAND, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Dec. 11, 1885, Vol. XVII, No. 847, p. 3, col. 4.  

"LOCAL NEWS. . . . 

While a pigeon match was in progress at Forkle's, Eastchester, on New Year's Day, Joseph Whitney, a colored man of Westchester, is charged with having fired the contents of his gun through the door of Mr. Forkle's house, after otherwise conducting himself in a riotous manner.  Upon complaint of Forkle, Justice Edmonds issued a warrant for the arrest of Whitney.  The same was adjourned from Saturday to Monday on application of the defendant to get witnesses, and on Monday the principal witness for the people not being present the case was further adjourned until last night. . . ."

Source:  LOCAL NEWS, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Jan. 8, 1886, Vol. XVII, No. 851, p. 3, cols. 1-2.  

"LOCAL NEWS. . . .

As previously announced in these columns there was a pigeon match at Eastchester on New Year's day, at Forkles, and among those in attendance were W. J. Elliott and John Secord, of Bartow, and Hiram Hoffman and Joseph Whitney, of Westchester.  During the afternoon, while the boys were feeling the effects of Forkle's whiskey, to a considerable extent, someone fired a shot through Forkle's door.  The act was charged upon Whitney and he was arrested, tried and found not guilty.  He was then rearrested on a charge of disorderly conduct and disturbing the public peace and for not appearing for trial was fined $20.  Not yet satisfied or as was intimated by the complainant Forkle, at the instigation of a meddler, nearly three weeks after the pigeon match, he, Forkle, caused a warrant to be issued for the arrest of Elliott, whom he charged with disorderly conduct, and the trial took place before Justice Farrington and a jury last Tuesday evening.  On the trial that took place there was not a scintilla of evidence against Elliott, as the counsel for the prosecution remarked, 'the witnesses would not swear as they had talked.'  The result was a verdict by the jury of 'not guilty.'  The action of Forkle in this matter, to say the least, is reprehensible.  He issues an invitation broadcast for a pigeon shooting, a violation of law; he then sells his guests whiskey, and when it takes effect and they get hilarious, he has them arrested for disorderly conduct."

Source:  LOCAL NEWS, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Jan. 22, 1886, Vol. XVII, No. 853, p. 3, cols. 1-2.  

"PELHAM AND CITY ISLAND. . . . 

Benj May, Jr., of Bartow, shot a pigeon match, at Forkle's, last Monday, with Harry Force, of Harlem, at seven birds each.  May won, by killing three to his opponent's one. . . ."

Source:  PELHAM AND CITY ISLAND, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Mar. 5, 1886, Vol. XVII, No. 859, p. 1, col. 5.  

"PELHAM AND CITY ISLAND. . . . 

A number of gentlemen, some from Mount Vernon, assembled at Elliott's Grand View Hotel, Pelham Bridge last Tuesday and as there were no pigeons or glass balls to shoot at, amused themselves shooting at bottles, and they got lots of fun out of it too. . . ."

Source:  PELHAM AND CITY ISLAND, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Sep. 17, 1886, Vol. XVII, No. 916, p. 1, col. 6.

"PIGEON SHOOTING.
-----

The noted wing shot from Long Island, Ike Hyde, competed last Thursday against John Hall of England at Bartow-on-the-Sound, in a pigeon match under Hurlingham rules, thirty yards rise, for $500  Hyde killed seventeen out of his eighteen birds, while his opponent only killed thirteen out of the same number.  The Englishman's friends are said to have had lost considerable money on the result."

Source:  PIGEON SHOOTING, The Newtown Register, Feb. 17, 1887, p. 2, col. 3.  

"PELHAM AND CITY ISLAND. . . . 

Handy-cap Pigeon Match. -- Americanized Hurlingham Rules. -- From Five Traps. -- For a Sporting Trophy, will be shot at J. S. Secord's Hotel, Bartow Station, on Thursday next, December 8th.  Conditions of the match:  at 11 birds each, from five traps [illegible] entrance fee, $3.00.  The above trophy is a solid silver cake basket of very unique design and specially appropriate, being supported on three guns between which, on the base stands a dog, at point. . . ."

Source:  PELHAM AND CITY ISLAND, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Dec. 8 1887, Vol. XIX, No. 1043, p. 2, col. 4.  

"PELHAM AND CITY ISLAND. . . . 

There was a pigeon shoot at Secord's, Bartow, last Monday, during which the tie for the silver trophy, between Messrs. McCourt and Trott, was shot off, and in the contest which followed, there was another tie between Messrs. McNicholl and Elliott.  As a result, there will be another match to-morrow. . . ."

Source:  PELHAM AND CITY ISLAND, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Jan. 13, 1888, Vol. XIX, No. 1054, p. 3, col. 2.  

"WITH THE COUNTRY CLUB. . . . 

FIFTEEN THOUSAND A YEAR. 

The Country Club!  Who has not heard of it?  It is a landmark for all the villages around, as was attested by Blacksmith Burns' remark to a policeman at New Rochelle, when Mr. Lynch drove by in his buckboard, with his broad brimmed hat fluttering in the breeze.  He said, 'That little roan horse is the toughest in Westchester county.  He can keep up that three minute gait from here down to the Country Club.'  What a wholesome sound is there to the name, 'The Country Club?'  It seems to ring with rural music -- the baying of hounds, neighing of hunters, crack of guns, snapping of whips and shouts of stable boys.

Within the office was a heap of gun cases, which led to the remark on the part of the young man in charge that the last pigeon match of the winter season was shot off last pigeon match of the winter season was shot off last Saturday.  Do they have many matches?  Well, they kill about fifteen thousand pigeons in a year.  And so it readily appeared, for the grassy plot without for about a quarter of an acre was enclosed with a netting fence, within whose confines were the traps and other paraphernalia necessary to such sport. . . ."

Source:  WITH THE COUNTRY CLUB, New York Herald, May 6, 1888, p. 10, col. 3.  

"LOCAL NEWS. . . .

About 10 a.m. Thanksgiving day there will be a grand pigeon match at Forkle's Pelham.  Several crack shots of our village will take part."

Source:  LOCAL NEWS, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Nov. 22, 1889, Vol. XXI, No. 1248, p. 3, col. 1.  

"PIGEON MATCH, (EASTCHESTER.)

A large and jolly crowd of the town men attended the pigeon match at William Forkel's, Eastchester, on Thanksgiving day.  It was one of the finest displays of marksmanship that has taken place in this vicinity for some time.  The first was a sweepstakes in which John Secord, of Bartow; John Elliott, of Pelham Bridge and Wm. Hoffman, of Westchester, entered.  The distance was 30 yards and it was nip and tuck between them, but John Elliott captured the prize.  Next one had 6 entries -- William McCourt, Peter Magee, John Secord, John Elliott and Wm. Hoffman.  This was a tan-teaser as one of the boys remarked; not a bird escaped, and in the shoot off the sweep was won by William McCourt.  Several other sweeps were indulged in equally as interesting; then John Elliott gave an exhibition of his skill, killing 17 out of 18 birds. They will attend the tournament to-day at White Plains.  Five better marksmen with a gun will be hard to find.  Zoo Zoo."

Source:  PIGEON MATCH, (EASTCHESTER.), The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Dec. 3, 1889, Vol. XXI, No. 1251, p. 3, col. 3.  

"SPORTING NOTES OF INTEREST. . . .

The Wauregan Gun Club will shoot matches and sweepstakes at Pelhamville on the 12th inst.  The principal match is a four-handed one -- W. Harris and W. H. Auckner against J. Fay and T. Kerker -- 25 birds each, 28 yards rise and $100 a side. . . ."

Source:  SPORTING NOTES OF INTEREST, New York Herald, Aug. 2, 1892, No. 20434, p. 8, col. 5.  

"CITY ISLAND. . . .

Owing to the inclemency of the weather on Saturday, Jan. 14th, the pigeon match which was advertised to take place at Percy Pell's is postponed until Saturday, Jan. 21st, at the same time and place.  All entries stand."

Source:  CITY ISLAND, The Daily Argus [Mount Vernon, NY], Jan. 18, 1893, Vol. 1, No. 244, p. 1, col. 5

"CITY ISLAND.
-----

How is it that Percy W. Pell, could not shoot one bird out of five at the recent pigeon match for the gold medal, but when he entered into the 'sweepstakes' shoot a week later he succeeded in killing ten straight.  That is easy enough.  May be Percy was a little off on the medal, and was in perfect trim for the sweepstakes. . . ."

Source:  CITY ISLAND, The Daily Argus [Mount Vernon, NY], Feb. 5, 1894, Vol. 2, No. 564, p. 1, col. 6.

"OUR NEARBY NEIGHBORS.
-----
Pelhamville. . . .

At the pigeon-match held Friday afternoon last, the first prize was awarded to Mr. Munzer of New York, second prize to Mr. William Brickner of the same city, third to Mr. Silverhorn and the fourth to Mr. Jarvis of New Rochelle. . . ."

Source:  OUR NEARBY NEIGHBORS -- Pelhamville, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Apr. 19, 1894, Vol. XXV, No. 1633, p. 4, col. 1.  

"Clay Pigeons Shoot at Pelhamville.
-----
GEORGE STANLEY AND MICHAEL KELLEY VANQUISHED.
-----

Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock a shooting match at clay pigeons took place at Pelhamville Hotel, now under the management of Michael Kelly, formerly of this city.  The match was between Daniel Kelly and M. F. Brickner versus Michael Kelly and George Stanley, 15 birds each.  Kelly and Brickner shot 12 birds each.  Michael Kelly 10 and G. Stanley 11.

After this the party shot at clay pigeons placed upon poles, distance 150 feet.  Daniel Kelly shot 6, Brickner 4, Michael Kelly 5 and Stanley 2.  Brickner and Daniel Kelly were declared the winners.  There was a large and interested crowd present."

Source:  Clay Pigeons Shoot at Pelhamville -- GEORGE STANLEY AND MICHAEL KELLEY VANQUISHED, Daily Argus [Mount Vernon, NY], Aug. 21, 1895, Vol. XIII, No. 1034, p. 1, col. 3.  

"COUNTRY CLUB XMAS SHOOT.

The Country club of Westchester had an all day shoot at live birds yesterday at its grounds, overlooking Pelham bay.  Three cup events and a dozen sweepstakes made up the programme and among the cracks present were George Work, Fred. Moore, J. Seaver Page, W. Gould Brokaw, W. S. Edey and Colonel Butler.  The firset cup event, at five birds, was won by P. H. Adee, a 27 yard man.  Fred. Moore won the second event and Colonel Butler the third.  In the sweepstake events Moore, Work, Page, Gilbert, Brokaw and Butler divided the honors."

Source:  COUNTRY CLUB XMAS SHOOT, The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Dec. 26, 1896, Vol. 56, No. 357, p. 5, col. 5.  

"SHOTGUN STAR TO COMPETE IN NYAC TITLE TEST
-----

Joe Hiestand, the farmer of Hillsboro, Ohio, regarded as the greatest shotgun marksman of all time, with a straight run trap record of 1,191 clay targets will be the stellar attraction in the 34th annual tournament for the Amateur Championship of America which will start the 1939 trapshooting season on  national scale at the New York Athletic Club's Travers Island field tomorrow.  

Hiestand, who made his phenomenal record in the Grand-American at Vandalia, Ohio, last August, will try to shatter his own mark this season.  His entry in the New York A.C. meeting will be his first appearance in national competition this year.  He won the Amateur Championship of America at Travers Island in 1935, tying the record score of 199x200, again in 1936, and expects to repeat.

The stiffest kind of competition confronts him.  Roger Fawcett, New York, the defending champion who also shares the record for this event, Walter Beaver, Berwyn, Pa., and Steve Crothers, Chester Hill, Pa., both former title holders twice, will be on the firing line.  In addition to Beaver, several other former Grand American Handicap winners are entered including Rufus King of Wichita Falls, Texas, and F. G. Carroll, Brecksville, Ohio.

On account of the World's Fair, the Travers Island meeting this year is expected to be larger than ever before.  At least 200 of the nation's leading scatter-gun marksmen will shoot, plus a Canadian detachment of twenty under the leadership of Sam Vance.

The tournament will start tomorrow morning with a preliminary 100-target event followed by the Amateur Championship of America at doubles targets in the afternoon.  Hiestand, Beaver and Crothers have alternated in capturing this event for the past six years.  The Amateur Championship is scheduled for Saturday, 200 targets at 16 yards.  The 100 Targets Distance Championship will be fired on Sunday.  This was won last year by Z. G. Simmons, Jr., Greenwich, Conn., with a score of 98-100 at 22 yards."

Source:  SHOTGUN STAR TO COMPETE IN NYAC TITLE TEST, The Daily Argus [Mount Vernon, NY], May 4, 1939, p. 24, col. 3.  

"Trap Shooting Title Taken By Ohio Ace

PELHAM MANOR -- With most of the major titles already claimed by victorious contestants, competition in the 37th annual national amateur clay target championships resumed today at the New York A.C. traps at Travers Island here.

Joseph Hiestand of Hillsboro, Ohio, won the doubles title for the fourth time yesterday when he managed to turn back a challenge by John D. Rowland of New Brunswick, N.J., in a shoot off.  Hiestand and Rowland scored 95 each in the regular competition, leading a field of 65 contestants, but in the shoot-off the former blasted 20 birds to Rowland's 18.

Top award in Class A competition, for which Hiestand and Rowland became ineligible when they placed one two in the doubles, went to Walter S. Beaver of Conahohocken, Pa., who won the title on five previous occasions and who scored a 94 yesterday.  W. H. Miller of Cleveland and Donald Tullock of Wilmington, Del., took first prizes in Classes B and C, respectively.

Earlier in the day Beaver, B. M. Higginson of Newburgh and Roger Fawcett of Larchmont all posted perfect scores in a preliminary singles event at 16-yard targets.  In a shoot-off, Higginson won a toss of the coin to settle the deadlock, and Fawcett received second prize.

Heading the B, C and D divisions respectively were A. L. Cornwell of Brookfield, Conn.; N. J. White, Hamilton, Ont., and Mrs. I. Andrews of Spartansburg, S. C."

Source:  Trap Shooting Title Taken By Ohio Ace, The Daily Argus [Mount Vernon, NY], May 2, 1942, p. 6, col. 7.  

"TRAPSHOOT CHAMP

PELHAM MANOR, NY, May 13 (AP) -- The 47th annual national trap shooting championships came to a close today at the New York athletic club's Travers Island range when Dr. Harry Whiteford, a Mountain View, N.J., dentist, won the handicap title by breaking 97 out of 100 targets."

Source:  TRAPSHOOT CHAMP, Schenectady Gazette, May 14, 1956, p. 21, col. 2.  

"Trapshoot Champ Retains Crown

New York -- Walt Ostrom of Orangeburg, N.Y., successfully defended his national singles crown yesterday in the forty-eighth annual National Trap shooting Championships at the New York Athletic Club's Travers Island range.

Ostrom broke 192 of 200 targets to defeat George Newmaster of Lebanon, Pa., and C. H. Ziegler of Vernfield, Pa., by two.  It was the champion's third national singles victory in six years as a trapshooter."

Source:  Trapshoot Champ Retains Crown, The Sunday Press [Binghamton, NY], May 12, 1957, p. 15, col. 7.

"Veteran Wins In Trapshoot

PELHAM MANOR, May 10 (AP) -- Ben Higginson, 70-year-old veteran of the firing line, won the National Singles Trap-shooting Championship today at the New York Athletic Club's Travers Island range by cracking 197 out of 200 targets.

Higginson, who won the same title 52 years ago, and again in 1949, outshot a field of 125 of the nation's top on his way to his latest success.

The Newburgh contractor finished two targets in front of Walt Ostrom of Orangeburg, the defending champion; Howard Lewis of Frenchtown, N.J., and C. H. Ziegler of Vernfield, Pa.

John H. Larocque of Harrison, 16-year-old prep school junior, won the Junior Championship in a shoot-off with John Campbell of Oyster Bay by breaking 21 out of 25.

The Ladies Championship was won by Mrs. Mary Christopher, a 40-year-old Bristol, Pa., widow, at 184."

Source:  Veteran Wins In Trapshoot, Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, May 11, 1958, p. 6B, col. 2.

"National Trap Shoot At N.Y.A.C.

PELHAM -- 

One of the largest and strongest fields ever to enter a trap-shooting tournament have filed entries to compete in the fifty-fourth annual National Trap-shooting Championships scheduled for the New York Athletic Club's Travers Island range next week-end.

Shooting will get under way on Friday with the shooting of the doubles event in which a field of over 300 marksmen and women will set aim at 50 pairs of double targets.

Five championships will be decided on Saturday.  Sharpshooters from the United States and Canada will try for titles in the singles, ladies, seniors, junior and immediate family events.

The eight-event program will be completed on Sunday with the shooting of the handicap and overall events.

Included among the title defenders who have filed entries are Walt Ostrom, singles; Ruth Conover, ladies; Ben Higginson, seniors; Daniel O'Neil, juniors; Dan Orlich, doubles; Dr. Robert Silva, handicap and C. J. and R. B. McArthur, immediate family.

Higginson, the dean of New York A. C. trapshooters, will be attempting to win the senior title for the sixth successive year, a feat never before accomplished in trapshooting.  The Newburgh, N.Y. veteran is also a former three-time winner of the singles title."

Source:  National Trap Shoot At N.Y.A.C., The Daily News [Tarrytown, NY], May 4, 1963, p. 22, col. 4.  

"'Southern' NY Next For Frank

Frank Little of Endicott continues his accelerated preparation for U.S. Olympic trap-shooting trials this weekend when he competes in a New York State championship held 200 miles south of here.

Little was one of the three U.S. trap entries in the 1964 Olympics at Tokyo and is an automatic qualifier for the July trials in San Antonio.  He was an alternate on the U.S. team in last year's world meet in Italy after twice shooting in previous world meets.

The IBMer has competition scheduled every weekend from now till fall.  On Sunday he took three trap titles in the New York Athletic Club's Amateur Championships of America, held at Travers Island, and this weekend it'll be pigeon-shooting, held in Philadelphia because [it's] banned in New York State.  

Yesterday's Press erroneously listed Little's first name as Fred and said his Sunday wins were in Endicott."

Source:  'Southern' NY Next For Frank, Press [Binghamton, NY], Apr. 2, 1968, p. 3-C, col. 5.


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