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Garst Museum in Greenville showcases new Annie Oakley artifacts
Garst Museum in Greenville showcases new Annie Oakley artifacts

Yahoo

time14-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Garst Museum in Greenville showcases new Annie Oakley artifacts

DAYTON, Ohio (WDTN) – New artifacts from Annie Oakley, the legendary sharpshooter, are now on permanent display in Greenville. These artifacts, locked away in a bank vault for decades, were gifted to the Garst Museum by the great-grandchildren of William Longfelder, the executor of both Oakley's and her husband Frank Butler's estates. The Longfelders were historic friends of the Butlers, living in the same neighborhood of Nutley, New Jersey, from 1893 until 1904. Deeply personal letters from Oakley to Jennie Longfelder are among the artifacts. Oakley wrote about her own declining health and her husband's dementia. The decline in Oakley's health can be seen through her handwriting deteriorating. The museum was in competition with the Buffalo Bill Center of the West in Cody, Wyoming, for the items. The Longfelder heirs visited Garst the day after the May 2024 tornado and were given a flashlight tour of the museum. The National Annie Oakley Center collection convinced the heirs that the Garst Museum should receive the artifacts. The gun Oakley would place under her pillow before sleeping while traveling – a small .32-caliber Smith and Wesson revolver with a pearl handle – is also on display. The museum is located at 205 N. Broadway St., Greenville. The museum staff members will continue working to display more of the Longfelder donation in a temporary case in the coming months. To learn more about the museum, click here. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Annie Oakley artifacts locked away for decades in bank vault on display at local museum
Annie Oakley artifacts locked away for decades in bank vault on display at local museum

Yahoo

time14-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Annie Oakley artifacts locked away for decades in bank vault on display at local museum

Artifacts that belonged to sharpshooter Annie Oakley that have been locked away for decades are now on display at a local museum. [DOWNLOAD: Free WHIO-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] A .32 caliber, Smith & Wesson, pearl-handled revolver that Oakley would sleep with under her pillow when she traveled can now be found at the Garst Museum in Darke County. TRENDING STORIES: Deputies searching for missing 15-year-old Greene County girl; can you help? Burned remains of beloved local market now an eyesore Cleanup continues after train derails dumping wheat into Clark County creek It is on display with a dressing gown case and Oakley's pink pillow. The items almost went to a museum in Wyoming, according to a media release. The great-grandchildren of William Longfelder, the executor of both Annie Oakley's and her husband Frank Butler's estates, visited the Garst Museum the day after the tornado in May 2024 and were given a flashlight tour of the museum. Even in the dim light, the Longfelder heirs chose the Darke County Museum as the new home for the treasured items. [SIGN UP: WHIO-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

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