Shooting for the Record: Adolph Toepperwein, Tom Frye, and Sharpshooting's Forgotten Controversy

Shooting for the Record: Adolph Toepperwein, Tom Frye, and Sharpshooting's Forgotten Controversy

Every few years a book comes along that makes an important contribution to the history of sport, even though - or, maybe, because - its storyline delves into the obscure. The event that launches the narrative in Shooting for the Record is the 1959 news report that strapping and handsome Tom Frye had broken sharpshooting's endurance world record after he shot at 100,000 hand-thrown wooden cubes and missed only six. But even as the Guinness Book of World Records would immortalize Frye, previous record-holder Adolph Toepperwein, having just reached his 90th birthday, was sitting down to write a letter accusing Frye of cheating.

Frye and Toepperwein were the two top-performing riflemen in the history of shooting sports, with the span of one generation separating them. Both had performed hundreds of sharpshooting exhibitions on behalf of major firearms manufacturers Winchester and Remington. Shooting for the Record reminds readers of America's longtime fascination with the shooting sports. It's a story that explores far beyond the nearly-superhuman feats of these two individuals. The author reaches back to the grand productions of 1880s Wild West shows and tracks the growth of shooting sports through today.

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Shooting for the Record: Adolph Toepperwein, Tom Frye, and Sharpshooting's Forgotten Controversy

Shooting for the Record: Adolph Toepperwein, Tom Frye, and Sharpshooting's Forgotten Controversy

Every few years a book comes along that makes an important contribution to the history of sport, even though - or, maybe, because - its storyline delves into the obscure. The event that launches the narrative in Shooting for the Record is the 1959 news report that strapping and handsome Tom Frye had broken sharpshooting's endurance world record after he shot at 100,000 hand-thrown wooden cubes and missed only six. But even as the Guinness Book of World Records would immortalize Frye, previous record-holder Adolph Toepperwein, having just reached his 90th birthday, was sitting down to write a letter accusing Frye of cheating.

Frye and Toepperwein were the two top-performing riflemen in the history of shooting sports, with the span of one generation separating them. Both had performed hundreds of sharpshooting exhibitions on behalf of major firearms manufacturers Winchester and Remington. Shooting for the Record reminds readers of America's longtime fascination with the shooting sports. It's a story that explores far beyond the nearly-superhuman feats of these two individuals. The author reaches back to the grand productions of 1880s Wild West shows and tracks the growth of shooting sports through today.

27.95 In Stock
Shooting for the Record: Adolph Toepperwein, Tom Frye, and Sharpshooting's Forgotten Controversy

Shooting for the Record: Adolph Toepperwein, Tom Frye, and Sharpshooting's Forgotten Controversy

by Tim Price
Shooting for the Record: Adolph Toepperwein, Tom Frye, and Sharpshooting's Forgotten Controversy

Shooting for the Record: Adolph Toepperwein, Tom Frye, and Sharpshooting's Forgotten Controversy

by Tim Price

Hardcover

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Overview

Shooting for the Record: Adolph Toepperwein, Tom Frye, and Sharpshooting's Forgotten Controversy

Every few years a book comes along that makes an important contribution to the history of sport, even though - or, maybe, because - its storyline delves into the obscure. The event that launches the narrative in Shooting for the Record is the 1959 news report that strapping and handsome Tom Frye had broken sharpshooting's endurance world record after he shot at 100,000 hand-thrown wooden cubes and missed only six. But even as the Guinness Book of World Records would immortalize Frye, previous record-holder Adolph Toepperwein, having just reached his 90th birthday, was sitting down to write a letter accusing Frye of cheating.

Frye and Toepperwein were the two top-performing riflemen in the history of shooting sports, with the span of one generation separating them. Both had performed hundreds of sharpshooting exhibitions on behalf of major firearms manufacturers Winchester and Remington. Shooting for the Record reminds readers of America's longtime fascination with the shooting sports. It's a story that explores far beyond the nearly-superhuman feats of these two individuals. The author reaches back to the grand productions of 1880s Wild West shows and tracks the growth of shooting sports through today.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780896729773
Publisher: Texas Tech University Press
Publication date: 06/06/2016
Series: Sport in the American West
Pages: 304
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Tim Price is a freelance journalist who has written for New York Times, Associated Press, NBA.com, PGATour.com, San Antonio Express-News and Fort Worth Star-Telegram. His writing has been recognized with a first-place award from Associated Press Sports Editors, and he is the co-author of Texas Sports Trivia.

His assignments have included reporting on the Super Bowl, NBA Finals, NCAA Mens' Final Four, the Kentucky Derby and Triple Crown horse-racing events and world championship boxing matches. A graduate of University of Texas at Arlington, Price lives in San Antonio with his wife Kathleen and daughter Khyleen.

Table of Contents

Illustrations xv

Preface xvii

Acknowledgments xxiii

Part 1 Defending a Mountain of 60,000 Wooden Blocks

Chapter 1 His Dream 003

Chapter 2 Why Don't You Just Keep Going? 008

Chapter 3 Most Wonderful Shooting 013

Part 2 The Shooting Stars

Chapter 4 "World's Champion Rifle Shot" 023

Chapter 5 Shaking the Hand of a Legend 033

Chapter 6 Because T.R. Said No 040

Chapter 7 Your Friendly, Neighborhood Gun Shooter 048

Chapter 8 Here Comes the Texas Triggerman 054

Chapter 9 Gar Wreck 064

Chapter 10 Plinky! 071

Chapter 11 A Sharpshooter and the Movie Stars 078

Chapter 12 A Working Mother with a Working Gun 086

Chapter 13 The Man with the Plastic Gun 099

Part 3 San Antonio, Texas, December 1907

Chapter 14 Captain of the Exceedingly Monotonous Spectacle 107

Chapter 15 Boil a Big Pot of Water 119

Chapter 16 Would Have Run Up 75,000 127

Part 4 Dayton, Nevada, October 1958

Chapter 17 100,000! 139

Chapter 18 Pack 'Em Up, Move 'Em Out 150

Chapter 19 Killing Crows 158

Part 5 The Spent Casings

Chapter 20 Broken Hearts at Creve Coeur 169

Chapter 21 I Might Be Moving to Montana Soon 183

Chapter 22 An Entirely Different Story All Together 189

Chapter 23 "Piedras Pintas" 201

Chapter 24 The Empty Trophy Room 208

Notes 221

Sources 251

Index 263

What People are Saying About This

New York Times bestselling author of American Pharoah: The Untold Story of the Triple Crown Winner's Legendary Rise - Joe Drape

In Shooting for the Record, Tim Price brings to life these two men, Adolph Toepperwein and Tom Frye, and their remarkable era, seamlessly blending first-rate writing and exhaustive research. This is storytelling at its best.

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