Walter Winans

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Olympic medal record
Men's Shooting
Gold 1908 London Double-shot
running deer
Silver 1912 Stockholm Team 100 m
running deer
Art competitions
Gold 1912 Stockholm Sculpture

Walter Winans (April 5, 1852August 12, 1920) was a British marksman, sculptor, and painter who participated in the 1908 and 1912 Summer Olympics. He won two medals for shooting: a gold in 1908 and a silver in 1912. He also won a gold medal for his sculpture An American Trotter at Stockholm in 1912.

He was born on 5 April 1852 at the Nikolaevsky Railway Works at St. Petersburg, Russian Empire (where his father was engaged in construction work) and lived in St. Petersburg until the age of 18, taking the oath of allegiance at the US Embassy before leaving for England. He died in Parsloes Park, Dagenham, Essex on 12 August 1920.

As an expatriate, Winans lived in Kent, England. He was interested in horses, stag and wild boar hunting, and held shooting rights over nearly 250,000 acres in Glen Strathfarrar, Glen Cannich and Glen Affric in the Highlands of Scotland. His favorite firearm was the Webley-Fosbery Automatic Revolver.

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[edit] Quotes

Only quite recently there was a report of a mad dog in a crowded street of New York. The policeman on the beat killed it at the first shot, and did not hit anyone in the crowd. If a London policeman started "loosing off" a revolver in a crowd, I fear the ambulance corps would be kept busy!
Moreover, the revolver is now obsolete, and there is no use learning to shoot it (1919)

[edit] Bibliography

  • The Art of Revolver Shooting (1901, 1911)
  • Practical Rifle Shooting (1906)
  • Automatic Pistol Shooting (1916)
  • Hints on Revolver Shooting (1904, 1910)
  • Automatic Pistol Shooting (1915, 1916)
  • The Modern Pistol & How to Shoot it (1919)
  • The Sporting Rifle (1908)
  • Deer Breeding for Fine Heads (1913)
  • Animal Sculpture (1914)
  • Shooting for Ladies (1911)
  • Revolvers- an article in "Encyclopedia of Sports & Games in Four Volumes Vol IV", published by the Sportsman (1912)

[edit] See also

[edit] References

Obituary: http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F70A17FB355511738DDDAA0994D0405B808EF1D3