You can spend your hard-saved cash on the legendary yet all-too-real Annie's guns, her Stetson hat, and mundane items like letters and pictures. It's all part of a Heritage Auctions production featuring 100 items put forward by Oakley's descendants.
Tommye Tait and Terrye Holcomb, two of Annie's great-grandnieces, now own the items, and many more like them, having inherited them all from their mother, Billie Butler Serene, who died three years ago. In true family tree fashion, Serene was reared by her grandfather, who was the brother of Frank Butler, Annie Oakley's husband and manager. Turns out that Serene learned how to handle a gun from Annie herself.
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The photos should be of special interest to historians because they feature formal portrait of Annie — with her gun.
This is not the only Oakley-related collection, of course. You can find lots of authentic Annie stuff in various locations around the country, including the Buffalo Bill Historical Center and, of course, the Annie Oakley Center.
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