a left wing liberal shooting facility? yep.

Discussion in 'History Buffs' started by bobski, Jun 17, 2021.

  1. bobski

    bobski USN Retired Range Owner

    many dont realize it, but one of most prestigious clubs in america is in connecticut, my home state. its the home of the yale shooting team. though only yale alumni and students can shoot there, it is a glimmer of hope for such a lost group of people. im posting this as a historical account of american shooting history. enjoy.
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    Our shooting fields are located on the territory of the Yale Outdoor Center in East Lyme, CT - approximately 45 minutes away from the Yale campus in New Haven, CT. Facilities include an American skeet field, an international skeet field, a trap field, a five-stand sporting clays field, stocked trout pond, hiking trails, and clubhouse. While the Yale OEC is open to all members of the Yale community, use of the shooting facilities is strictly limited to the Yale Skeet & Trap Team. Transportation for team members to and from practices is provided by team drivers and the coach.
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    Competitions include matches against other collegiate teams on the East Coast, including the United States Military Academy at West Point, Harvard University, the University of Vermont, the University of Delaware, George Mason University, the U.S. Naval Academy, Brown University, and others. We compete in several regional tournaments during the year, including the East Coast Collegiate Regional Clay Target Championship, the New England Collegiate Clay Target Championship, and the Yale Invitational. Yale shooters frequently hold the top honors in these competitions, both individually and as a team. Our main competition of the year is the ACUI National Collegiate Clay Target Championships, usually held in April in San Antonio, TX. Competing against nearly 50 other collegiate teams, the Yale Skeet & Trap team has recently placed in the top 5-10 in various events at Nationals, including a second place finish in American Skeet in 2011. Travel costs for competitions are paid out-of-pocket by team members, although alumni donations sometimes allow us to subsidize some travel expenses for shooters.
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    The team consists of up to 15 male and female shooters; while membership on the team is open to all Yale students, we are comprised mostly of undergraduates. New members are selected once a year (September) through interviews with the team leaders (captains, assistant coach, coach). Available positions on the team are highly competitive, with approximately 10-15 individuals interviewing each year for a handful of open slots. Open positions in any given year vary based on the number of returning shooters, but usually range from 1-4 slots per year. We expect a serious commitment from all team members. This includes attending a minimum of 3 out of every 4 practices throughout the year, as well as a minimum 2-year commitment to the team. While many shooters have considerable previous shooting experience, some who are invited to join the team do not have this experience. Shooters may bring their own shotguns for use or may use one of the firearms owned by the team.
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    Admission to Yale University is highly competitive, as Yale is one of the most selective universities in the country. Unfortunately, Yale Skeet & Trap cannot offer scholarships (in fact, the Ivy League does not allow athletic scholarships of any kind, even for varsity sports). We are also not able to influence the admissions process itself. However, prior excellence in shooting may be the kind of unique extracurricular that will help a candidate stand out in the admissions process.
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    Address:

    Yale Outdoor Education Center

    124 Scott Rd.

    East Lyme, CT 06333
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  2. bobski

    bobski USN Retired Range Owner

    The Yale Skeet & Trap Team is one of Yale’s oldest club sports, a tradition that stretches back to the late 19th century. According to an article published on November 11, 1892 in the New York Times, the first annual trap match between the Yale and Harvard Gun Clubs took place in 1888. Not surprisingly, Yale won the match three out of the first four times it was held. By 1896 the Princeton shooting club had entered the competition in what became the annual intercollegiate trap shoot. According to the account of the 1896 match, “The Harvard butts are on low ground and wind and tide so backed up the Charles River that the last men who were at the targets had to stand in four inches of water and shoot out to sea.” Fittingly, Yale shooters won that first intercollegiate match despite the typically miserable conditions they found in Cambridge. By 1900, the University of Pennsylvania was competing in the annual intercollegiate shoot, with Yale continuing to dominate its Ivy League rivals.

    The first two decades of the twentieth century witnessed Yale’s continued excellence in collegiate shotgun sports. By 1915, Yale had established a dominant superiority over its Ivy rivals in the annual intercollegiate championship, which now included Dartmouth College as a competitor. A 1922 article from the New York Times reports the Yale Gun Club winning the intercollegiate shoot for the 13th consecutive time, a match that was held on the grounds of the New Haven Gun Club. In what was a familiar refrain by then, Harvard’s shooters had to settle for second place.

    It is here that the historical record goes blank until 1940, and it is unclear what became of shotgun sports at Yale during the Great Depression and pre-WWII era. In January 1940, students organized the Skeet Club, with an annual membership fee of $5. The modern Yale Skeet & Trap Team has been in continuous operation since its 1940 founding as the Skeet Club and recently celebrated its 70th anniversary of clay target shooting.

    In 1940 Nelson Boyce and Howard Ingels (class of 1943), the founding members of the Yale Skeet Club, secured land on the grounds of the Yale Golf Course to build shooting fields for the club. They cleared the trees, built the skeet houses, and installed the traps themselves. The fields were dedicated on May 1, 1940 and hosted shoots against Princeton and the New Haven Gun Club during that first year. Press accounts make no mention of Harvard competing against the reorganized Yale team in the 1940s, perhaps due to lingering embarrassing memories of their inability to mount a successful challenge to Yale for the better part of 30 years earlier in the century. In 2009, the Harvard Shooting Team was reorganized (though perhaps not reformed), thereby reviving the storied Ivy League shooting rivalry of decades past. Though the enthusiastic Harvard shooters had the chance to prove their mettle against Yale in their first direct competitions in 2010 and 2011, the Cantabs were (somewhat predictably) trounced by Yale’s finest, a trend that is likely to endure for many years to come.

    1940 also witnessed the beginning of a distinguished tradition that continues to this day. This refers to the regular competitions between the Yale Skeet & Trap Team and the shooters of the United States Military Academy (West Point). With Yale’s shooters apparently off the collegiate shooting circuit during the late 1930s, Army took the lead as the top collegiate clay target team. In 1940 and 1941, Yale finished in second place in the Intercollegiate tournament, beaten both times by Army. However, Yale managed to best the cadets of West Point for the first time in May 1941 (453 to 446 out of 500) in the last formal match of the season at the famed Remington Gun Club at Lordship Point, CT. Today the Yale Skeet & Trap Team considers the USMA to be our primary collegiate rivals thanks to our evenly-matched teams, the high academic standards held by both institutions, and the friendly biannual head-to-head matches hosted by each team.

    Unfortunately, the Yale Skeet Club’s use of their field on the grounds of the Yale Golf Course was short-lived due to complaints by golfers about the distracting gunshots. This began a nearly 30-year period where Yale’s shotgunners were without a permanent home, instead practicing at local facilities like the Hamden Rod and Gun Club, Winchester’s Bethany Range, Choate School, and Winchester-Western’s facilities in North Haven.

    The Skeet Club’s transience was finally rectified by a remarkable man with a vision who established the foundations of the modern Yale Skeet & Trap Team. Edward C. Migdalski, a researcher and specimen collector for Yale’s Peabody Museum and the Bingham Oceanographic Laboratory, founded the Club Sports program at Yale in the late 1950s, seeking to elevate the so-called “minor sports” to officially recognized collegiate status. In this respect, Migdalski was an early nationwide pioneer of the club sports model that can be found at most colleges and universities today. Skeet and trap was one such club sport at Yale, and Migdalski took the reins of the team as head coach in the early 1960s.

    Thanks to years of tireless work and extensive fundraising, Ed Migdalski succeeded in establishing the Yale Outdoor Education Center in East Lyme, Connecticut, and in 1971 construction was completed on a permanent shooting facility for Yale’s clay target shooters. Fittingly, Yale won its first match on its new fields, beating Dartmouth that day. In addition to to building a trap field, two skeet fields, hiking trails, and a trout pond (for use by the Yale Fishing Club, which Migdalski also founded), Migdalski succeeded in converting an existing historic cow barn into the clubhouse that the team still uses today.

    During Ed Migdalski’s tenure, the Yale Skeet & Trap team claimed its place once again as a top collegiate shooting program in the United States. The Yale team was a participant in the first annual Intercollegiate Clay Target Championship (currently run by ACUI) in 1968 and has competed in the tournament every year since. Yale’s shooters won the 1977 collegiate national skeet championship as well as many local and regional tournaments under Migdalski’s leadership. In 1976, Yale skeet shooter Brad Simmons competed in the summer Olympic Games in Montreal, becoming the first civilian to compete on the U.S. Shooting Team in over 20 years. Simmons went on to be a member of the U.S. skeet team that won the 1977 World Championship and remains an active supporter of the team today, as do many of the alumni who have honed their shooting skills in East Lyme over the years.

    Ed Migdalski retired from coaching in 1984, handing over the reins to his son, Tom Migdalski, who now coaches the team. Ed Migdalski passed away in December 2009, leaving behind a rich legacy of excellence in the shotgun sports at Yale, a legacy that the team keeps alive today through its commitment to developing scholar athletes who excel on the fields as well as in the classroom.

    Team history researched and written by Rob Person (GRD ’10).

    (courtesy to & photo credits: the yale website)

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  3. History Seeker

    History Seeker A NoBody Founding Member Official Historian

    MORGAN HEBARD CUP 1905.JPG

    Bobski, Thank You for this history !

    The oldest trophy I have in my collection was won by a Morgan Hebard at Yale in 1905.

    His biography is also very interesting.

    Early life and education
    Morgan Hebard was born on February 23, 1887 in Cleveland, Ohio to Hannah Jeanette (née Morgan) and Charles Samuel Hebard, in the lumber manufacturing business in Pequaming, Michigan at Charles Hebard and Sons, where his father had co-developed a saw-mill and associated company town and later the Hebard Cypress Company, where the family business constructed the Waycross and Southern Railroad specifically to harvest the cypress trees in the Okefenokee Swamp.[2] The family also had houses in Thomasville, Georgia and Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Hebard attended Asheville School in North Carolina, educated by a private tutor, before graduating from Yale University in 1910.[3][4] At Yale, Hebard won prizes as a member of the gun team.[4][5] At the time of his graduation, he intended to enter the lumber business.[4]

    Career
    He worked for brokers and bankers, Henry & West from 1910 to 1912 in Philadelphia. From 1910 to 1928, he was a research associate at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. For ten years after that he was the curate of entomology. Between 1938 and 1940, he was a research fellow. In 1945 and 1946, he was a benefactor of the Academy. During field trips to Western Europe, Panama, Cuba, Jamaica, Columbia and the Bahamas, Hebard built a collection of 250,000 specimens, which he presented to the Academy in 1945. He wrote 197 journal articles and monographs on entomological topics, either individually or jointly with his fellow entomologist, James A. G. Rehn, comprising over 5,000 pages.[6] He described over 800 new species of orthopteroids; this included 44 new species and ten new genera of Phasmids (six new genera on his own and four as co-author with Rehn).[5] Forty orthopteroid species and nine genera have been named after him, including: one Phasmid species, Ilocano hebardi Rehn & Rehn, 1938; three species of Mantids, and two genera: Hebardia Werner, 1921 and Hebardiella Werner, 1924; eight species of Cockroaches, and four genera: Hebardina Bei-Bienko, 1938, Hebardula Uvarov, 1939, Euhebardula Princis, 1953 (a replacement name for Hebardula Princis, 1950); and 28 species of Orthoptera, three genera: Hebardiniella Chopard, 1932, (emendation of Hebardinella Chopard, 1932), Hebarditettix Günther, 1938[7] and Hebardacris Rehn, 1952.[5] He was a member of American Entomological Society, and for a time it's Treasurer, and was elected a Fellow of the Entomological Society of America.[8][9] He was an honorary member of the Entomological Society of France, and also of the Columbian Natural Science Society.[9]

    World War I
    During World War I, Hebard was a Second Lieutenant for the Signal Officers Reserve Corps. He was a post supply officer and at Columbia University was acting adjutant at the Signal Corps School. He also served in Washington, D.C. at the Military Intelligence Division.[8]

    Personal life
    On October 16, 1913, he married Margaret Champlin Perry (née Claxton), a granddaughter of artist John La Farge (and who was also descended from Oliver Hazard Perry, Mayflower passenger William Brewster and Benjamin Franklin), and they had three children, naturalist Morgan Hebard, Jr., Charles Bradford Hebard (died February 27, 1930), and Margaret Champlin Perry, wife of Richard Wingate Lloyd (BA Princeton 1928)[8][10] Beginning about 1936 he was afflicted with acute rheumatoid arthritis. He died in Philadelphia on December 28, 1946 and is buried at St Thomas' Cemetery in Whitemarsh, Pennsylvania.[8] Hebard was a convert to the Catholic faith.[11]
     
  4. History Seeker

    History Seeker A NoBody Founding Member Official Historian

    By the way,

    On the cup, below the 1905 is engraved:

    School Champion
     
    rookieshooter likes this.
  5. bobski

    bobski USN Retired Range Owner

    i thought this topic may be a good tie in to the topic elsewhere on the clay targets of the time. being yale and harvard were slugging it out with all those old clay pigeons and tossers around 1888. enjoy.