Roy Long
Aberdeen, S.D.
Elected: 1985
Shooting Member
Roy
Long, Aberdeen, South Dakota was one of the top trapshots in the
Northwest, for more than 30 years. He was born October 30,
1918 in Kansas City and after spending four years and eight months
in the Army moved to St. Paul in 1945.
In 1952 Ted
Smith, then Western-Winchester District Manager, hired Roy as a
salesman and shooter for the company. Roy's first score at
the traps was 18 out of 25 in a practice round at the Captain
Billy Fawcett shoot. He used Ted's Model 21.
He shot his first
registered targets in 1953, winding up with a .9112 average on
1,250 clays. The following year he broke his first 100
straight at Williston during the North Dakota state shoot.,
finishing with 197 which was high gun for both pros and amateurs.
He won the N.D. state professional singles 21 times. Roy
wound up the '54 season with a mark of .9478 on 1800 targets.
He won the Minnesota
state pro title at St. Cloud in 1955 with 199 and Captain Billy
Fawcett singles with 149 X 150, repeating in the Fawcett singles
the following year with 199. Long won the Fawcett singles 10
times, more than any other pro.
In 1957 at Blooming
Prairie he out shot both pros and amateurs at the state shoot by
breaking 100 straight Thursday, 149 Friday and 200 Saturday to
total 449 X 450.
He was thrice winner
of the Sioux Indian Singles at Eau Claire, St, Cloud and
Graceville, each time with 199 and three times winner of the ATA
Central Zone pro singles. Long averaged 97 plus in 1956 and
1957 and .9863 in 1958, Ray Zwiner, Blooming Prairie, headed
amateurs that year with .9673.
In 1961 he dropped his
200th target at Regina during the Saskatchewan provincial
shoot, finishing with 199 which was high gun among both pros and
amateurs and three years later at Graceville, he missed the first
target out, then hit 199.
Roy transferred to
Aberdeen in 1969 where he continued his great shooting. He
finished his first season in South Dakota with .9835 average on
1,700 targets, high among pros and amateurs. His last win
was at the Iowa State Shoot where he broke 197. He retired
in 1980, the nine time All-American.
Hobbies are fishing
and hunting, he has a trailer house on Lake Oahe in the Swan Creek
Recreation area where he and his family fish during the summer.
He has one daughter Diana Horvath and five boys, Jerry, Danny,
Randy, Donald, and Gregg. His grandson Mark Horvath was
captain of the undefeated Hill Murray Hockey Club that won the
Minnesota State Championship in 1983.
This year Mark's
brother Nick was goal tender for Hill Murray in St. Paul that
finished second in the state tournament. |