always tactful and never strident, appealed to women in a way that would not offend men. As a result, Annie drew large numbers of both female and male fans to her exhibitions, which usually combined skill with her own humorous touches. In other cases, her skill created humor unintentionally, as at the Boston Gun Club in 1888, when two viewers tossed half-dollars in the air for her to mark as souvenirs. The force of her bullets carried the coins into oblivion, and "roars of laughter greeted the disappointed souvenir hunters."
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Despite huge crowds and attendant confusion, Annie's good nature usually triumphed. When, in 1896, Oakley shot an exhibition in Greenville, Ohio, one observer noted that the surging crowd strained the resources of the police but contained "over four hundred ladies" who lent calm and charm to the occasion. While Annie shot, a mass of friends and well-wishers jostled her, yet she continued to smile and perform.
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Soon, medals and gifts began pouring in. In February 1887, a gun club in Pine Brook, New Jersey, presented Oakley with another handsome gold medal inscribed from "her many friends and admirers." Then, during the summer of 1887 the Notting Hill Gun Club in London gave her a gold medal, the first it ever presented, with an engraving of the Notting Hill grounds on its face and with an inscription on its clasps, "Presented to Miss Annie Oakley by the members of the London Gun Club, June 11, 1887." When Annie later shot in Marseilles, France, she received three medals in three weeks.
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Over time, Annie also received a sterling silver tea service, silver loving cups, a set of Limoges china, other Limoges pieces including an umbrella stand, a set of crystal glassware, a dagger in a gold-leaf scabbard, and jewelry, including pins, brooches, bracelets, necklaces, and rings. During the mid-1890s, a countess in Paris unclasped her bracelet, which contained seven handsome Roman mosaics, and gave it to Oakley in recognition of her skill. When Annie gave an exhibition to benefit the orphans' home in Vienna, Baroness Rothschild gave her a heavy link pin, each link encrusted with diamonds.
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In response, Annie always gave short but gracious thank-you speeches. At Notting Hill, she proclaimed her enthusiasm for
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