Although Jeffery Archery carries major archery brands, the company specializes in traditional archery equipment, creating longbows and recurves for both competition archers and camo-clad bowhunters. Jeffery Archery has produced custom bows for governors and stylized archery equipment for princes and presidents, from the King of Butan to the president of Mexico.
Jeffery’s skills as a teacher were in great demand over the years. He built bows for and coached U.S., Russian, and Japanese Olympic archers and made bows for Indonesian and Australian Olympic archers. In 1978 he was invited by the French government to train the French Olympic archery team at the Paris Institute for Sports.
In 1961, when Jeffery became a charter member of the Professional Archers Association, he was one of only four master coaches in the organization who trained competition shooters in a professional archery school. He was also sought over the years as a speaker for various groups, from Cub Scouts to grizzled bowhunters.
“He had a speaking manner that engaged his audiences whether they were 6 or 60, inspiring them for an understanding and respect for the bow and arrow,” said Tom, who usually accompanied his father and assisted with archery demonstrations.
In the 66 years that Jeffery designed and built bows and taught thousands of archers to to shoot accurately, he maintained his base passion to the end: bowhunting for whatever was in season, from white-tailed deer and wild hogs to rabbits. Even field mice.
In 1963 Jeffery arrowed a 308-pound, 12-point whitetail buck on an island in the Mississippi River. A record book buck at the time, the mount hung in the Fred Bear Museum in Gainesville, Fla., for many years. He looked forward to the opening of deer season each year in South Carolina, but he honed his skills until then hunting wild hogs, which have no closed season with bow and arrow. He took his last deer at the age of 88 with, reluctantly, a crossbow, because he was no longer physically able to pull a regular bow.
“He was a tireless ambassador for the sport of archery and hunting,” said Tom. “He instilled his interest in the sport in literally thousands of people who took up hunting with bow and arrow, many of them simply because he introduced them to the game.”
Photos courtesy of Tom Jeffery