Final Shots: Doug Coulter

We are sorry to report the passing of Doug Coulter, 76, of San Antonio on February 20 after a short battle with cancer. His long-time friend T.D. Berkes III recalled him as “a great person, a great friend, and a long-time shooter who was a true ambassador to skeet.” Since joining NSSA in 1972, Doug registered over 280,000 lifetime targets. He was honored as the 1997 inductee into the Armed Forces Hall of Fame, won many championships (including winning the last 250-target 12-Gauge event for the 12-Gauge Open World Championship title in 2009), and was named to many All-American teams throughout his career.

“I am proud to have shot with him, proud to call him my friend, and was privileged to have known him for nearly 50 years,” said Berkes. “He will be buried forever in the best of all places, in the hearts of us who knew him.”

NSSA extends its sincere condolences to Doug’s many friends and family members.

 

Final Shots: Barry Hartmann

It is with much sadness that we report the passing of Barry Hartmann, 85, on February 10. A long-time member of Tulsa (OK) Gun Club and an NSSA Master Level Instructor, Barry helped teach countless youth and adults how to shoot skeet and, as Zone Instructor, trained 75+ NSSA Level 1 Instructors.

Target Talk and Clay Target Nation staff appreciated his contributions to both publications. He provided shooting tips for Target Talk through “Hartmann’s Hints” and wrote “Training Tips” and other articles for CTN. We remember him as knowledgeable, gracious, devoted to NSSA and the sport of skeet, and always willing to share his knowledge with others.

Barry registered 90,514 skeet targets during his 31 years as an NSSA member. He attended six World Shoots.

Barry will be greatly missed by his fellow members at Tulsa Gun Club, the instructor program, NSSA staff and his family. We extend our gratitude for his many contributions to the sport of skeet and offer our deepest condolences to his friends and family.

 

Final Shots: Hollis Boss

The skeet world and NSSA lost a great friend and supporter when Hollis Boss died at age 99 on July 14, 2024.

Hollis was a WWII Navy veteran, a businessman and career insurance man, skeet shooter, lifelong outdoorsman, and big game hunter who lived a very full life. He was a dedicated supporter of the game of skeet and the NSSA for over 60 years, and he remained interested in what was going on at the association even until his final days.

Hollis began his involvement with skeet in the late 1950s where he lived just outside of Buffalo, NY. By 1958, he was shooting registered tournaments, refereeing and working on shoot administration in New York State. During the ’60s, Hollis continued to become more involved in NSSA, representing New York State in Zone 1 at the time his friend and shooting buddy, Arch MacIntryre, was the Zone 1 Executive Committeeman. Meeting and working more closely with Past Presidents Alex Kerr and Chet Crites, Hollis decided he wanted to be a positive influence on the future of the organization, and he began to get more involved nationally.

At this time, NSSA was administered out of rented office space in Dallas, and the National Championships were rotated every year to a few different clubs which were large enough to hold the week-long event. In 1962, Hollis traveled north to shoot the World Championships (then called the “Nationals”) at the Montreal Skeet Club in San Janvier, Quebec, the first and only time that shoot was held outside the U.S. This experience drove him to become instrumental in the expansion of the Rochester-Brooks Gun Club at a new location in Rush, NY, which built 24 skeet fields for the NSSA Nationals that were held there in 1963, 1966, 1969 and 1972.

In 1969, then-President Ray Boller died unexpectedly. Arch MacIntyre became NSSA President, and Hollis stepped up to take the Zone 1 seat on the NSSA Executive Committee. The next five years, when Hollis was most heavily involved on the Executive Committee and as an Officer of NSSA, were years that significantly shaped the future of the NSSA. Discussions were ongoing by the EC as to the future of the organization and the need to have a home grounds large enough to host the NSSA National Championships. At that time, there were continual difficulties finding clubs large enough to hold a growing event and negotiating with clubs to hold the Nationals while keeping costs in check. Having an association property in a central location would solve that problem for all future years.

In 1970, Hollis and Chet Crites, Past President and then Zone 3 EC member, were asked to search for a suitable parcel of land. They did, discovering the Texas International Gun Club (TIGC) which had been built in the mid-1960s outside of the city of San Antonio. In January, 1971, the EC began discussing a partnership proposal from TIGC to purchase 217 acres adjoining the TIGC upon which the TIGC would build 20 skeet fields. These 20 fields, in addition to the 12 fields at TIGC (at today’s Vendor Row), were used to hold the 1971 Nationals at San Antonio in July.

In 1972, when Ken Pletcher was NSSA President and Hollis was Vice President, the TIGC proposed to sell their club and all of their land to NSSA. In 1973, the EC approved the purchase of the TIGC, and the headquarters operation relocated from Dallas to the facility which became known as the National Gun Club. In 1974, Hollis succeeded Gen. Pletcher as NSSA President for his term from 1974-1976.

After completing his service as an NSSA Officer, Hollis continued actively supporting Zone 1. He was also successful in winning the New York State 12-Gauge Open Championship at the 1981 State Shoot at Lewiston, NY, after a lengthy shoot-off of 100 straights. He was coach and manager of the U.S. A. Shooting Team for International Skeet and Trap in 1981. He eventually went on to take nine trips to Africa to hunt big game and to enjoy several hunting and photo safaris with his children and grandchildren. To say that he kept busy all of his years and had seen the world would be an understatement!

In 1991, Michael Hampton, Sr., then-NSSA Executive Director, called upon Hollis for help to find liability insurance coverage for NSSA members and member gun clubs. From that one phone call, the Sportsmen’s Insurance Agency, Inc. (SIAI) eventually evolved, and Hollis found himself out of retirement and back in the insurance business. Today, 30+ years later, SIAI has been providing continuous, comprehensive insurance coverage at discounted rates to our members, certified instructors, and member clubs. Suffice to say, the alliance between NSSA-NSCA and SIAI has been a very important one to our organization, and Hollis’ solution has become one of our most sought-after member benefits. Even after his retirement from the day-to-day business at SIAI, Hollis remained interested for years, keeping his finger on the pulse. Many of his longtime, very qualified and supportive staff remain in place today, providing a successful, continuing relationship between the association and SIAI well into the future.

Hollis was pre-deceased by his wife Jean, daughter Sheila, stepson Bruce, and grandson Kevin. He is survived by his daughters, Lonnie, Joan Patricia, and Roxanne (Arthur), and stepdaughters, Kathie (James), and Gerri Ann, and sons, Hollis (aka Chip), and Richard (aka Buddy)(Deborah), as well as his 14 grandchildren and 11 great grandchildren.

RIP, Hollis!

– Contributed by Louise Terry
 

Final Shots: Mike Brazzell

Mike BrazzellWe are saddened to report the death of Mike Brazzell on February 29, 2024. The long-time curator of the Hal duPont NSSA-NSCA Museum and Hall of Fame at the National Shooting Complex, Mike was the unofficial historian of NSSA, documenting the association’s history in both words and artifacts collected in the museum.

Mike was a Life Member of NSSA, TSSA, and the Armed Forces Skeet Association (AFSA). Prior to becoming curator of the NSSA-NSCA Museum, Mike was retired from the U.S. Air Force. He served as AFSA’s historian and was inducted into the AFSA Hall of Fame in 1992.

The NSSA staff and members will miss Mike, and we extend our sympathies to his family and many friends.

Final Shots: Joe Dunn, Sr.

If you shot clay targets, particularly skeet, at any time in the past at Tri-County Gun Club in Oregon, you probably knew Joe Dunn. If you’re a recent member and you didn’t know Joe, you are currently benefiting from Joe’s influence on shotgunning at TCGC. Joe passed away December 9, 2023. Joe led the Skeet program at Tri-County Gun Club for 35+ years until the pandemic caused him to retire as the club’s Skeet Activity Chair. Over the years, Joe was an avid promoter of local and regional skeet and international skeet shooting by preparing articles for the Oregonian newspaper outlining upcoming events, tournaments results and reporting on individual shooters.

As a competitor, Joe was awarded many individual class awards and father-and-son awards with his standout son, Joe Jr. (“Joey”). Joe volunteered countless hours maintaining our skeet fields and target throwers, and with club governance. Joe represented TCGC as a member of the National Skeet Shooting Association for three decades and was an NSSA Certified Instructor. In July, 2022, Joe Dunn Sr. was inducted into the Oregon Skeet Shooting Association Hall of Fame.

Joe’s legacy was his desire to help many new and experienced shooters develop skills and knowledge of the sport he loved and helped coach women hunters via skeet shooting (NRA program) and coached many youth in refereeing skeet tournaments. We are appreciative to Joe, as his legacy lives on at Tri-County Gun Club.

– Contributed by Tom Jones