Anonymous ID: f8a6bf July 30, 2021, 5:32 p.m. No.14233546   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3643

>>14233534

 

https://www.businessinsider.com/lyudmila-pavlichenko-female-sniper

 

Meet the world's deadliest female sniper who terrorized Hitler's Nazi army

Alex Lockie Oct 12, 2015, 7:42 AM

lyudmila pavlichenko

Lyudmila Pavlichenko Wikimedia Commons

In early 1941, Lyudmila Pavlichenko was studying history at Kiev University, but within a year, she had become one of the best snipers of all time, credited with 309 confirmed kills, 36 of which were German snipers.

 

https://www.businessinsider.com/lyudmila-pavlichenko-female-sniper

Anonymous ID: f8a6bf July 30, 2021, 5:48 p.m. No.14233688   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14233647

 

Silverheels was born Harold Jay Smith in Canada, on the Six Nations of the Grand River, near Hagersville, Ontario.[3] He was a grandson of Mohawk Chief A. G. Smith and Mary Wedge, and one of the 11 children of Captain Alexander George Edwin Smith, MC, Cayuga, and his wife Mabel Phoebe Dockstater, maternal Mohawk, and paternal Seneca.

His father[5] was wounded and decorated for service at the battles of Somme and Ypres during World War I, and later was an adjutant training Polish-American recruits for the Blue Army for service in France, at Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jay_Silverheels

 

Jay Silverheels (born Harold Jay Smith, May 26, 1912 – March 5, 1980)[1] was an Indigenous Canadian actor and athlete.[2] He was well known for his role as Tonto, the Native American companion of the Lone Ranger[3][4] in the American Western television series The Lone Ranger.

 

Silverheels excelled in athletics, most notably in lacrosse, before leaving home to travel around North America. In 1931, owners of National Hockey League's franchises in Toronto and Montreal created indoor lacrosse (also known as "box lacrosse") as a means to fill empty arenas during the summers, and playing as "Harry Smith", Silverheels was among the first players chosen to play for the Toronto Tecumsehs.[3] Along with his brothers and cousin, Russell (Beef), Sid (Porky), and George (Chubby), he also played on teams in Buffalo, Rochester, Atlantic City, and Akron throughout the 1930s on teams in the North American Amateur Lacrosse Association.[6] He lived for a time in Buffalo, New York, and in 1938, placed second in the middleweight class of the Golden Gloves tournament.[7] Silverheels was inducted into the Canadian Lacrosse Hall of Fame as a veteran player in 1997.