History:
According to legend, Mr. K.A. Little, of Kinsley traveled to Chicago in the summer of 1901 on business. While there, some friends took him to the local gun club to try the new sport of shooting at clay targets.
When he got home he and twelve friends organized the Kinsley Gun Club on July 5, 1901; to have a place to shoot clays and to "preserve the game resource".
According to club records the charter members were: Lou F. Beal, J.E. Brelsford, Monroe DeTar, J.B. Donnell, Henry J. Draut, A.C. Dyer, Dave L. Heath, S.G. Leonard, Kirby A. Kittle, Al M. Merryman, P.H.Moletor, Wilbur Oliphant, and F.E. Taylor.
Following is a reprint from the July 21, 1901, issue of The Sportsman's Review. (Forerunner to Trap & Field) "A gun club has been organized at Kinsley, Kansas, with the following officers and members: M. DeTar, president; J.L. Brelsford, secretary; S.G. Leonard, treasurer. Members - F.E. Taylor, W.T. Watson, H.J. Draut, Hinkle, L.F. Beal, R.W. Bidwell, D.M. Lewis, A.C. Dyer. The principal object of the club is to protect the game from market gunners."
You will note that some of the names are different. Notably absent from the Sportsman's Review clipping is Mr. Little. According to a history of early Kinsley residents, he moved here in September 1901!
We really know very little about the early days. None of the records except the membership list survived. We were unable to find any account of the founding of the club in local 1901 newspapers. We don't even know the first location of the club, or when it moved to it's second location near the west end of the present football field just west of the present club.
Thanks to Mrs. Gloria Breitenbach; whose father was Fred Brodbeck, we have a newspaper account of a big shoot held at the club in 1923. They awarded $187 worth of merchandise prizes and $65 in GOLD! Mr. Brodbeck was quite a fellow...and a fine shooter...he broke 94x100 at the big shoot in 1923 and was Kansas singles runner-up in 1924. He joined the club in 1915 and served as president.
Mr. Wilbur Oliphant lived north of Offerle and had a rifle and shotgun range on the farm. At the club's 50th anniversary shoot in 1951, he a fellow charter member Henry Draut broke 20 and 21 of 25!