|
|
Subject:
Davey Crocket and the perfect shot
Category: Miscellaneous Asked by: robbywilsonjr-ga List Price: $200.00 |
Posted:
28 Feb 2005 10:47 PST
Expires: 30 Mar 2005 10:47 PST Question ID: 482350 |
As the story goes, Davey got into a shooting match, shooting second at the target. When the shots were fired there was one hole in the target. Davey said he was so good a shot that his ball passed through the hole of the first. The onlookers agreed. This "myth" I believe is a true story. When discussing it with my attorney, he said that it happened in Arkansas near Little Rock and that there is a published account in an old Newspaper of that time as told by Crockett. It is thought to be a Newpaper in Washington Arkansas. Could you provide me any details or any information on the background and validity of this story? | |
| |
|
|
Subject:
Re: Davey Crocket and the perfect shot
Answered By: scriptor-ga on 01 Mar 2005 04:40 PST Rated: |
Dear robbywilsonjr, I am happy to know that I could provide a reference that answered the question to your satisfaction. Best regards, Scriptor | |
|
robbywilsonjr-ga
rated this answer:
and gave an additional tip of:
$25.00
Fast precise and always on target. Scriptor leaves nothing to the imagination. |
|
Subject:
Re: Davey Crocket and the perfect shot
From: webadept-ga on 28 Feb 2005 13:22 PST |
Something to keep in mind as well, the Deerslayer written by James Fenimore Cooper, has an almost exact scene in it and was printed in 1841. A companion volume contains The Pioneers (1823), The Last of the Mohicans (1826), and The Prairie (1827)... Cooper reused many "scenes" in his novels; when he found something that worked he stayed with it. I read the Deerslayer, but not all of the others. I would not be surprised if other characters had the same shooting game, with the same results. There is also, the "splitting of the arrow" telling in many stories prior to this period. I'm not suggesting that Davy didn't or couldn't make that shot, but I am suggesting that even if he didn't, we would believe he did. He's just too large of a hero not to have such a feat in his resume listing of "Accomplishments". webadept-ga |
Subject:
Re: Davey Crocket and the perfect shot
From: webadept-ga on 28 Feb 2005 14:12 PST |
Appologies here, that was the Pathfinder, not the Deerslayer.. it was ducks in the Deerslayer. My personal favorite description of the event is from Mark Twain. http://www2.cddc.vt.edu/gutenberg/etext02/mtfco11.txt --Quote -- The reader will find some examples of Cooper's high talent for inaccurate observation in the account of the shooting-match in The Pathfinder. "A common wrought nail was driven lightly into the target, its head having been first touched with paint." The color of the paint is not stated--an important omission, but Cooper deals freely in important omissions. No, after all, it was not an important omission; for this nail-head is a hundred yards from the marksmen, and could not be seen by them at that distance, no matter what its color might be. How far can the best eyes see a common house-fly? A hundred yards? It is quite impossible. Very well; eyes that cannot see a house-fly that is a hundred yards away cannot see an ordinary nailhead at that distance, for the size of the two objects is the same. It takes a keen eye to see a fly or a nailhead at fifty yards--one hundred and fifty feet. Can the reader do it? The nail was lightly driven, its head painted, and game called. Then the Cooper miracles began. The bullet of the first marksman chipped an edge off the nail-head; the next man's bullet drove the nail a little way into the target--and removed all the paint. Haven't the miracles gone far enough now? Not to suit Cooper; for the purpose of this whole scheme is to show off his prodigy, Deerslayer Hawkeye--Long-Rifle-Leather-Stocking- Pathfinder-Bumppo before the ladies. "'Be all ready to clench it, boys I' cried out Pathfinder, stepping into his friend's tracks the instant they were vacant. 'Never mind a new nail; I can see that, though the paint is gone, and what I can see I can hit at a hundred yards, though it were only a mosquito's eye. Be ready to clench!' "The rifle cracked, the bullet sped its way, and the head of the nail was buried in the wood, covered by the piece of flattened lead." There, you see, is a man who could hunt flies with a rifle, and command a ducal salary in a Wild West show to-day if we had him back with us. -- End Quote -- So, if "Deerslayer Hawkeye--Long-Rifle-Leather-Stocking- Pathfinder-Bumppo" could pull off such a shot, Mr. Crocket simply had to be able to do that, and more. It is just a given. webadept-ga |
If you feel that you have found inappropriate content, please let us know by emailing us at answers-support@google.com with the question ID listed above. Thank you. |
Search Google Answers for |
Google Home - Answers FAQ - Terms of Service - Privacy Policy |