Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library

The lost diary of Annie Oakley's wild west stagehand

Label
The lost diary of Annie Oakley's wild west stagehand
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
fiction
Main title
The lost diary of Annie Oakley's wild west stagehand
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Summary
The twelfth Lost Diary about this famous entertainer. Set from 1885 the year in which Annie joined Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show to 1893 when Annie reached the high point of her career at the Chicago World's Fair. Annie Oakley's rags-to-riches story is engaging and exciting. She began shooting to provide for the family pot and was soon selling her surplus game to hotels in Cincinnati. Within two years she had made enough money to repay the family mortgage! Her name is closely linked with other celebrities of the Old West most notably Buffalo Bill and the great leader of the Sioux nation, Chief Sitting Bull who adopted her as his daughter into the Sioux nation and gave her the nickname Little Sureshot. She was the star attraction in Buffalo Bill's Wild West Circus in 1885. A role-model for young women in the American West she was also widely admired by boys and young men for her shooting skills
Target audience
juvenile
Classification
Content