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11-05-2021, 12:53 PM | #3 | ||||||
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AND $2,000 added money!!! Translated into 2021 dollars, that would attract quite a crowd!
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The Following User Says Thank You to J. Scott Hanes For Your Post: |
11-05-2021, 01:48 PM | #4 | ||||||
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Wow Randy - what a find!
May 16, 1896 Sporting Life https://digital.la84.org/digital/col...oll17/id/47116 FIRST OPEN COMPETITION for the “E.C.” Inanimate Target Championship Cup was held May 5-8, 1896, at the Guttenberg racetrack, above Weehawken, N. J. Noel E. Money, then secretary of the “E.C.” Company, and Elmer E. Shaner, were the moving spirits in the management of the tournament, Mr. Shaner, of course, running the shoot on lines devised by him and which even at that time had reduced tournament management to a science. The first event on the program for the first day had over one hundred entries, a record entry then, although entry fees were stiff, and professional and amateur shooters were allowed to shoot for the cup. The list of aspirants for championship honors gradually simmered down until only 26 finished their strings of 300 on the last day, and Gilbert, the shooting star, who had risen above the horizon the year previous, when he won the du Pont pigeon trophy at Baltimore, WAS HAILED AS CHAMPION. The match at that time consisted of 100 targets, unknown angles, from known traps; 100 targets, unknown traps and known angles (commonly called expert rules - At expert rules, one man up in the centre of five traps, pulled unknown, according to an indicator); and 50 pair of doubles. Gilbert’s score (using a Smith) at that time was 266. Fulford (Greener) and Elliott (Winchester) were next with 261, while Heikes (Winchester) came in third with 258. Capt. A.W. Money used a Smith GUNS USED https://digital.la84.org/digital/col...oll17/id/47117 Smith - 42, Parker - 32, Winchester - 16, Greener - 7, Francotte - 6, Lefever - 5, Daly - 3, Scott - 3, Colt - 4, Cashmore - 2, Forehand, Spencer, Burgess & Baker - 1 each. The history of the "E.C." Cup starts here about 1/3 down https://docs.google.com/document/d/1...Rp99wVEBQ/edit
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http://sites.google.com/a/damascuskn...e.com/www/home Last edited by Drew Hause; 11-05-2021 at 03:56 PM.. |
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The Following 7 Users Say Thank You to Drew Hause For Your Post: |
11-05-2021, 01:57 PM | #5 | ||||||
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The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Drew Hause For Your Post: |
11-05-2021, 04:54 PM | #6 | ||||||
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Capt. A.W. Money and most of his family arrived in the U.S. in 1890 and established the American E.C. & Schultze Powder Company with works at Oakland, Bergen County, New Jersey and offices at 318 Broadway in New York City.
Capt. A.W. Money.jpg On 7 October 1891, Lieutenant Noel E. Money (Princess Victoria’s Royal Irish Fusiliers), resigned his Commission and subsequently joined his Father’s business in the U.S. He had been stationed in India. This picture supposedly of Noel was in an 1894 sporting paper -- Noel E. Money, Shooting and Fishing, June 7, 1894 cropped.jpg but sure looks like the old man to me. Noel was representing the company at the meeting forming the Interstate Association. By the late 1890s, younger son Harold Money, later known as "De Shootin'est Gent'man", was shooting with his Dad. Captain Harold Money.jpg Noel went off to again serve Queen & Country in January 1900, in the Boar War. |
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The Following 6 Users Say Thank You to Dave Noreen For Your Post: |
11-05-2021, 06:07 PM | #7 | ||||||
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Capt. Money was 2nd in the 1894 GAH and used his Greener in the 1897, 1898 & 1899 GAHs; a Parker in 1900 & 1901. He purchased a CH Parker SN 87238 in 1897 which he returned for his discount purchase price of $75 in Dec. 1898. He also used a L.C. Smith in 1897 and purchased a Smith A2 in 1901.
He later had two Parker pigeon guns stolen. Reward offered for Parker stolen July 20, 1901; SN 90,635, 8#, 30” barrels. “Captain Money, of the “E.C.” and “Schultze” Powder Company, New York, is mourning the loss of his Parker pigeon gun, which was stolen February 15 (1902) at Paterson, N. J. The gun was taken from the case and shells substituted, giving it the required weight, so he did not discover his loss until some hours later. This is the second Parker gun Captain Money has lost in this manner.” Noel Money was 2nd at the 1st GAH at Live Birds in 1893, and prior to the 1895 GAH ordered a $400 AAH Parker SN 81122; “30” barrels, a slender grip, no safety, 2 3/4" chambers, scroll and flowers, no birds, trigger pulls 3 and 4.” Harold Money used a Parker at the 1901 GAH at Live Birds and later was a Professional Representative for Winchester, using a Winchester 1897 Repeating Shotgun and competing primarily in the South.
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The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to Drew Hause For Your Post: |
11-07-2021, 06:53 PM | #8 | |||||||
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Quote:
The shooting stars of the Tournament... Trap3 |
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The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Randy Davis For Your Post: |
11-08-2021, 01:47 PM | #9 | ||||||
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Captain Money's CH 12 must have been broken down for parts, because his Titanic Steel barrels, #87,238 are now installed on one of my Damascus guns. I don't know the location of the rest of the gun. I may now be "De Shootin'est Gent'man".
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Bill Murphy For Your Post: |
11-10-2021, 10:02 PM | #10 | ||||||
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I have Capt. Money's CH, serial no. 87238. It's still in one piece and it still has it's Titanic steel barrels.
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"Life is short and you're dead an awful long time." Destry L. Hoffard "Oh Christ, just shoot the damn thing." Destry L. Hoffard |
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