Ray Chapman (marksman)

Ray Chapman
From the left, Ray Chapman, Elden Carl, Thell Reed, Jeff Cooper, Jack Weaver. These were five of the most successful "Combat Masters" during the competitions held at the South Western Combat Pistol League ("SWCPL") at Big Bear Lake, California, during the late 1950s. (The sixth "Combat Master", John Plahn, is missing from this photograph.)

Ray Chapman was an American sport shooter and firearms instructor who was central to the development of practical shooting in the late 1950s and one of the founders of the International Practical Shooting Confederation at the 1976 Columbia Conference. He won the first IPSC Handgun World Shoot in 1975 and took silver behind Jan Foss from Norway in the second World Shoot in 1976. He continued to compete until 1979 when he retired from competition.

In his mid-teens Chapman served in the United States Marine Corps at the Pacific Ocean theater of World War II after having lied about his age to enter.[1] After the war he worked as a policeman for some time before he started working for the California Highway Department where he worked during the 1950s as an engineer. During that time, along with Jeff Cooper and others, he was one of the pioneers of the Southwest Pistol League.

In February 2008 Ray died peacefully at age 79 in a Texas hospital.[1]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.