Archery Deer Hunting History
Archery deer hunting has come a long way in the last few years but it has really come a long way from the time archery deer hunting started in Missouri.  We found this article in the MDC archives.  It was written in 1996 celebrating the fiftieth archery deer season in Missouri.  We are including it here for your enjoyment and for those of you who missed it.  We would love to see your old photos of archery deer hunting.  They don't have to be trophy shots just any old photos that have to do with archery deer hunting.  If you have a scanner email them to us and we will put them up for everyone to enjoy.  If you do not have a scanner send them with a self addressed stamped envelope and we will scan them get them up here and send them back to you. The story would be nice also.

This is a photo of me and my first deer.  The bow was a Bear Whitetail Hunter,  arrows were Easton Gamegetters worn shiny from shooting them so much, the broadhead was Wasp three blade, the date was November 4th, 1979, the camo was K-Mart's finest, and the boots were Vibram soled waffle stompers.  I was 16.  She was heading toward a persimmon grove near New Melle, Mo.  I spent about 45 minutes on stand that evening.  The shot was 30 yards.  I missed the heart by 10 inches, but got one lung and the aorta.  She took about five steps and fell. 
Tom Morrow

November 4th, 1979
ALLEN MORRIS' FIRST DEER STORY
TRADITIONAL
ARCHERY
EQUIPMENT

SPORTSWOMEN

HUNTING

FISHING

BOATING

CAMPING

SHOOTING

ATV'S

LODGING

HORSES

OUTDOOR NEWS

HUNTING LAND
FOR SALE

SPORTSMEN JOKES

ORGANIZATIONS

LAND OWNERS

COFFEE SHOP

LINKS

LOCAL WEATHER

TAXIDERMISTS
 

CONTACT US

50 Years of Archery Deer Hunting
by Tom Cwynar

It has been a half-century since Missourians took up the bow and arrow for modern-day deer hunts.

It is past the time of shadows. In the still half-light, a white-tailed doe warily nibbles her way along the wooded ridge. Nearby, a hunter, who had been leaning into the fissured trunk of a thick oak, raises and draws his bow. He pauses, releases the string.

Stung and startled, the doe crashes away. After several bounds, she buckles, falls to the ground, makes a brief commotion among the leaves and dies.

That hunt might have taken place last fall, or it could have occurred more than 30,000 years ago. Archery deer hunting, a popular sport today, extends back into prehistory, to the time of caves and stone tools.

Missouri's regulated deer season began 50 years ago, in 1946. Not long before that time, deer were about as uncommon as ostriches in the state. Thanks in large part to market hunting and illegal hunting, it was estimated that only about 2,500 deer lived in Missouri during the 1930s, most of them in a few Ozark counties.

Deer numbers began to rebound after deer seasons were closed to protect the remaining deer and the Conservation Department began an ambitious deer and deer habitat restoration program. Even with these efforts and a change in public attitudes toward illegal harvest, deer probably numbered less than 25,000 when the archery season began. Today we have upwards of 750,000 deer.

That first season, only one county - Crawford - was open to archery deer hunting for bucks only. The season lasted a mere three days, and 73 archers participated. Among them were at least five women.

That first archery season was a big event. The Steelville Boosters Club hosted a barbecue for all the archers on Saturday evening of the hunt. And the bowhunters put on an archery demonstration at the local ball diamond.

Because archery hunting was so new, the Conservation Department didn't know what to expect from the sport. To be prepared for any eventuality, they sent almost as many agents to Crawford County as there were bowhunters.
 

"There just weren't enough deer around," says Earl Hoyt Jr., who was at the first hunt and later would establish Hoyt Archery Co. "Out of all the hunters, only one archer saw a deer and that was Jack Compton, who was famous among us archery rabbit hunters for his sharp eyes."

Taney County was next to open, in 1948, with a 9-day season, but none of the 62 hunters who purchased archery permits were successful. The January 1949 Conservationist reported on a group of about 50 hunters at the Mincy Public Hunting Area in deer-heavy Taney County. "The archers saw deer, shot at bucks, but brought nothing into the bag," the article stated.

"Most of the group, men and women alike, camped out despite a heavy, wet snow that fell all one day. And they walked 10-12 miles daily over thickly forested hills. But they liked it."

In 1950, 64 bowhunters bought a $5 archery deer permit, but none of those hunters were able to harvest a deer. In fact, it would be six years from the opening of the modern archery deer season before anyone would legally bag a deer with a bow and arrow.

In 1952, the rules allowed bowhunters to shoot either sex deer, and archery hunting was allowed in five counties. Jack Compton of Ferguson was hunting the Cletis McLanahan farm in Ste. Genevieve County and managed to shoot a forkhorn on Oct. 20.

Compton is credited with the first legal archery kill in modern times.

At least two hunters claimed to have killed a deer with a bow before Compton, but these claims have been discredited.

"Everyone in archery at the time knew Compton's was the first legal archery deer," Hoyt says. "There was no question."

Paul Jeffries, who was a conservation agent in the county, as well as an avid archer, says he told Compton to show off the first archery killed deer by driving "around the courthouse square until the flies followed him." Compton's mounted buck is now displayed on the wall at the St. Louis Bowhunters archery range in St. Charles.

Another archer, Clyde Dunford, harvested the second archery killed deer later that year. He also hunted the McLanahan farm.

Bowhunting was catching on, and the numbers began creeping up. By 1954, 44 counties were open to archery deer hunting and over 1,000 permits were sold. Archers harvested 22 deer.

Back then, getting a deer with a bow and arrow was rare enough to rate headlines.

W. Robert Bell, now of Mountain Home, Ark., sent us a clipping from the Oct. 31, 1953, Saline County Daily Democrat with the headline, "Slater Resident Kills Doe With Bow and Arrow."

After describing Bell shooting the doe at 50 yards with a lemonwood bow, the story said that his was the fourth deer killed in Missouri during the 17-days then allowed for archery hunting.

Since then, the numbers of archery deer hunters have skyrocketed. In 1980, nearly 50,000 bowhunters took to the woods. Last year, the Conservation Department sold almost 100,000 archery deer permits.

As bowhunting grew, the technology of the sport evolved. Clever inventions and gewgaws made bowhunting seem almost high-tech, but the basic units of archery deer hunting - a stick and a string - remain the same, and bowhunting continues to be a quiet, elemental undertaking.

The simplicity of bowhunting is what attracts many people to the sport. They could shoot deer at longer ranges with a gun and, statistically, bring home more venison per day of hunting, but they prefer the limits that the bow and arrow impose.

What limits? Well, for one, no matter how powerful your bow, you still have to get almost unnaturally close to a deer to use it. Most deer shot with a bow are within 20 yards of the hunter. And in order for you to get a good shot, the deer, a bundle of acute senses, can't be aware of your presence.

This requirement brings primitive hunting techniques into play. To keep deer from seeing, smelling or hearing them, archery deer hunters often daub paint on their faces, don camouflage clothes, cover their human scent with animal urine and other natural odors and sit still as sphinxes for hours on end.

Those hours quickly translate into days. According to a recent archer survey conducted by the Conservation Department, the average deer bowhunter goes hunting about 20 times during the 3 1/2 month season.

Check station statistics tell us that less than 20 percent of archers are successful in any one season, which means that, on average, it takes more than 100 hunting trips (five years x 20 average hunting trips a year) to bag a deer.

Some skilled or lucky hunters beat that average, but that means that a lot of others take longer. Michael Kennedy of St. John wrote that he has bowhunted for 22 years and is grateful for "having the opportunity to be in the woods in the fall and just hoping for a sighting of the beauty of the beasts."

Kennedy was happy to report that he finally filled his first archery deer tag the first day of the season last fall. "Patience does pay off!" he writes.

Juan Lamanna of Platte City tells us, "I was hooked on bowhunting. It didn't matter that it was my seventh season trying - and failing - to get a deer."

In his eighth year of hunting, he bagged his first deer - a 10-point buck - with a bow.

That was in 1994. Two years later Lamanna still remembers the date, the time, what he was thinking about before the deer came, how the deer looked as it approached, how his heart pounded before he shot, seeing the arrow in the deer, finding the downed deer in the field and running back to his home screaming news of his success to his wife and children.

Because of the demands of getting close to the deer, bowhunting requires planning, scouting and enough woods-craft to find deer travel routes and bedding areas. Then the hunter has to plan an ambush that takes into account wind direction and provides cover while providing a clear shot.

"Deer are the Einsteins of the animal kingdom," William Burgess of Richland says. "Matching wits with them is 95 percent of the challenge." Burgess is a year-round bowhunter. He scouts deer locations and looks for shed antlers during the off-season so that he can target individual deer during the actual season.

Despite all the planning and preparation that goes into archery deer hunting, the deer often manage to arrive when hunters least expect them.

Norman Kamler of Troy started hunting in his 50s and figured he needed camouflage clothing and odor-reducing sprays and soaps to get a deer. But it was only after he'd taken off his face mask and camouflage and was sitting on a log in his white T-shirt enjoying a hard salami sandwich and a soda that a deer approached him.

"I laid down my sandwich and picked up my bow," Kamler says. "Between her putting her head up and down, I drew back and shot my first deer at 20 yards. I thought the throbbing of my heart would never stop."

Many people find bowhunting to be the most exciting, fulfilling activity in their lives, and they encourage their children to take up the sport.

Gary Martin of Dixon says he had planned for his son Gabe's hunting from the moment he saw the nurse with his son in the hospital. "I knew when I saw her coming my way, that I had a hunting partner," he writes.

Martin says Gabe began shooting a bow at the age of 5, and when he was 11 he could accurately shoot a 35-pound-pull bow. Martin said he knew "if a deer gave him a decent shot at 20 yards or under that it would be in big trouble."

They hunted about 40 yards apart and the father watched his son competently pull back the bow and make a killing shot on a forkhorn buck. "This hunting trip turned out to be the most memorable trip I have ever experienced," Martin says.

Jerry Kennedy of Arnold said he has shared bowstands with both his 11 year-old son Jeremiah, and his 9-year-old daughter Emily. "It is wonderful," he writes, "to see their faces when we sneak up on a deer in the wild or have a wild turkey cross our path by accident or see any of the other special creatures in the outdoors."

Although Emily prefers to shoot deer only with a camera, Jeremiah was hunting in a treestand only 10 yards away when his Dad harvested his first whitetail in nearly two decades of hunting. Kennedy says he is grateful he could share this experience with his son.

This archery season, our 50th in the state, will no doubt provide more challenges, create more wholesome experiences, embed more lifetime memories, bond together more parents and children, husbands, wives and friends and put more venison on dinner tables for people to enjoy.

It's a great birthday for bowhunting, and though people are not likely to celebrate it with lots of splash and fanfare, this mid-century mark is a good time to reflect on how bowhunting has become one of the state's grand traditions, providing innumerable feasts for both soul and body.
 

Tom Cwynar is assistant editor of the Conservationist magazine.
 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 

Regulations help sport grow

Rules, regulations, seasons and bag limits are usually restrictive, but in the case of bowhunting for deer, regulations have been liberalized through the years to allow more people more opportunity to enjoy the sport.

The very first bowhunting seasons were only a few days long, but now archers can hunt in steamy weather or snow, thanks to a season that lasts for three and a half months - from Oct. 1 through Jan. 15.

Although at first only open to bucks, deer of any sex now may be taken, and the limit is two deer. In management areas 58 and 59, representing St. Louis and Kansas City, respectively, archers can purchase up to five Urban Archery Deer Permits.

Originally limited to hunting in certain "deer rich" areas, archers now hunt for deer in every county of the state. In fact, urban deer hunting has become extremely popular among city hunters and allows the Conservation Department to help manage deer in areas where harvest options are limited.

New Bow Compounds Hunters

Hunter numbers grew tremendously following the introduction of the compound bow. Patented by Missourian Wilbur Allen in 1966, the compound bow changed the look of archery, turning the bow into a block and tackle affair, with pulleys at either end.

Although ungainly in looks, the "wheel bow" made it easier for archers to pull and hold strong hunting weights and to deliver arrows accurately into a target.

No longer was the skill of shooting a bow the most difficult to master component of bowhunting. Thanks to the bow's mechanical advantages over a simple stick and string, archers could quickly become proficient enough to become capable and responsible bowhunters.

Within a few years the compound bow took over the archery market, almost completely displacing recurves and longbows.

BACK TO TOP OF PAGE

 October 21st, 1988
Allen Morris's First Bow Kill
I was working in New Madrid, Mo. and after work I drove down the levee just outside of town and saw a few deer about 1.4 miles from the stop sign to turn on the levee. I decided to go hunting with my bow I had gotten for Christmas. I went to Wal-Mart and bought a grunt call and some Dr. O's deer scent. That morning I pick up my girlfriend's younger brother William and went down to the levee. I park the truck and walk at  an angle down the levee and William went the other way. I walked into the woods and found a big stump that was shaped like a chair with arms. I sprayed the scent around the stump. It was still dark and I got settled in. I blew on the new grunt call and I had accidentally got some scent on it. After I got it clean off I blew on the grunt call again. I let the grunt call dropped to my chest. Then I look to my left and I say a small 8-point buck headed right for me.It was to late to move so I just kept still. I had one leg extended out with my bow lying on my lap. The buck walk right up to the stump with in inches of me and walked around to the front of the stump and stepped over my leg and almost hit the arrow broadhead as it passed.
   The buck then turned and walked away from me at an angle and I stood up and pulled backed. It then finally turned broadside but was in brush and then turned again and  was walking away. Then all of sudden I heard something snap a twig in front of me and it was another buck at about 15 yards away in the open I turned and let the arrow fly. I watched the buck run about 40 yards and just drop. The other buck then came running back. It stood about 30 yards away. I could see the other buck on the ground. It finally stop moving and I walked over to wear I had shot. I walked the blood trail toward the down buck and the other buck stayed near by about 20 yards until it finally had enough and took off running. I walked up to the down buck and it was a 10-½ spike buck about 125 lbs. field dressed. I looked up and it was right in line with my truck. I put the tag on and field dressed the deer. I took my bow to the edge of the woods and sat it down and went back and dragged the buck to the edge of the woods. I took the bow up to my truck and went back down to the bottom and
started dragging the buck up the levee when William came out of the woods and came and helped me drag it up to the truck. When I got the buck in the back of the truck I notice the tag was gone. We started looking in the woods where I had dragged the buck out. Finally found the tag after about 10 minutes. I thought to my self there's nothing to this bow hunting. If I only new back then what I know today.
 By Allen Morris

BACK TO TOP OF PAGE