OBITUARY - February 1, 1962
HELD MANY NATIONAL RECORDS
Maj. Jack Hession, 84,
Greatest Rifleman, Dies
Maj. John W. (Jack) Hession, 84, who some claim was the greatest rifle
shot that ever squeezed the trigger, died in Clearwater yesterday. He
lived in the Carlouel section of Clearwater Beach.
Hession won more than 500 matches during his long career, once held every
record from 200 to 1,200 yards and was a member of 12 teams that
represented the United States in competition abroad.
Once Walter Chrysler asked for a demonstration of the major’s skill and
Hession promptly obliged by shooting the ashes off the auto pioneer’s
cigar with a target pistol.
Less than two months ago Hession chalked up a perfect score at the
Clearwater Rifle Club range with 40 straight bulleyes from 100 yards,
putting 39 of the shots in the one-inch “X” ring.”
HESSION was born in 1877 at Clinton, Canada. He worked as a ballistics
engineer for both the Remington Arms Co. and Winchester Co. His
“beavertail” design for a gun stock – which provided a wider and less
tiring grip – earned him credit for improving scores of all shooters.
Maj. Hession made the 1908 U.S. Olympic Team and in 1918 finished 63
points ahead of the runner-up in the U.S. tryouts at France for the
inter-allied rifle competition.
He once clicked off 102 straight bullseyes with a .22 rifle on a 200-yard
course and had 79 in a row during practice at 1,000 yards. His best
competitive run was 57 at 800 yards at Camp Perry, Ohio.
During a Camp Perry match in 1913, the major scored 19 “bulls” out of 20
shots at 1,000 yards shooting across a 42-mile gale that forced him to aim
25 feet to the right of the distant target.
Hession was still winning titles in 1942, when he copped the New York
State Championship hitting 43 straight bullseyes at 1,000 yards.
UNTIL LAST SUMMER the major played golf weekly at Clearwater Country Club.
He was a crack trap shot, in addition to his rifle and pistol target
ability. During his younger days the major was a bicycle champion too,
winning the Dunlop Trophy in 1898.
Hession moved here 15 years ago from Hew Haven, Conn. He has memberships
in Episcopal Church of the Good Shepard, Dunedin; National and English
Rifle Associations; Army and Navy Club, Washington, D.C.; Retired Officer
Club, Clearwater, and Explorers Club. |
IN MEMORIAM - March,
1962
JOHN W. HESSION
Major John W. Hession, firearms expert, many time
rifle champion and Camp Fire Club Member since 1915 died February 1st
at his home in Clearwater, Florida. He was eighty-four years old.
One of his major achievements was to set four world’s
records in one day. This he did on July 3, 1925 while competing in the
Eastern Small Bore Championships at Sea Girt, New Jersey. In
accomplishing this he fires 102 shots all of which, including sighting
shots, were bulls-eyes.
In the Marine Corps Cup Match held at Camp Perry,
Ohio in 1913 he led a field of 600 competitors by scoring 195 out of a
possible 200.
He won the British Wimbledon Cup in 1932 with a
perfect score, and in 1909 registered an amazing fifty-seven consecutive
bulls-eyes at 800 yards to win the Second Brigade Match at Camp Perry.
Largely self taught and with unusual natural facility
for shooting he was to rise in a few years from a tyro to the point at
which he developed the skill which was to make him a member of ten United
States International teams.
Major Hession was not originally a professional
shooter in the technical sense of the word as it was an avocation and
hobby for much of his life.
Later he was employed by the Winchester Western Arms
Company, Division of Olin Mathieson Corp., and at his death was a retired
executive of that company.
While a member of the United States Olympic Rifle
team, after competing at Bisley, England, he went with the team on a trip
to Argentina where they defeated all competing South American rifle teams.
During World War II he headed the Winchester Arms
Washington office and acted as consultant to the War Department on rifles
and rifle ballistics.
Jack Hession, as he was known at the Camp Fire Club
never lost his youthful outlook and resilience of mind.
He was a familiar sight at the outings up to a year
ago and could often be seen the center of a group of men half his age
holding his own in any discussion, and often entertaining the group from a
large fund of humorous stories and recitations. |