Jack O'Connor (writer)


Jack O'Connor was an author and outdoorsman, best known as a writer for Outdoor Life magazine, where he served as Shooting Editor for 31 years.
O'Connor was well known among shooters and hunters as a proponent of the.270 Winchester and 7x57mm Mauser cartridges, and for his extensive knowledge of hunting and shooting.
O'Connor wrote over a dozen non-fiction books including Game in the Desert, The Rifle Book, The Complete Book of Rifles and Shotguns, The Big Game Animals of North America, The Art of Hunting Big Game in North America, and Sheep and Sheep Hunting. He also wrote two western novels, Conquest and Boom Town, and the autobiography of his formative years: Horse and Buggy West: A Boyhood on the Last Frontier.
According to his son Bradford, in an introduction written for the 2004 book The Lost Classics of Jack O'Connor, O'Connor wrote more than 1200 articles for hunting and fishing magazines, and also wrote romantic novellas and articles for Redbook, Mademoiselle, Reader's Digest, Cosmopolitan, Esquire, the literary magazine Midland, and other magazines popular in the 1930s and 1940s.
O'Connor worked as a college professor of English and journalism at Sul Ross State Normal College in Alpine, Texas, until 1945, when he quit teaching to write full-time.
The papers of Jack O'Connor of Lewiston, Idaho, were donated to the Washington State University Libraries in November 1978, by his son, Bradford O'Connor, and daughters, Caroline O'Connor McCullam and Katherine O'Connor Baker, all of Seattle. The O'Connor papers were enlarged by the addition of an extensive correspondence series donated by Margorie E. Poleson, long-time secretary to O'Connor, in May 1979.
In 2006 the Jack O'Connor Hunting Heritage and Education Center opened at Hells Gate State Park on the Snake River, near Lewiston, Idaho. Many of his big game trophies are on display there, along with other memorabilia, including his favorite.270 rifle.