E-mail
|
|
Big cat
stories in
East Texas are
numerous but
lack proof
By W. T.
Block
Reprinted
from Beaumont
Enterprise,
Saturday July
10, 1999.
NEDERLAND
-- Until 1925,
East Texans
were aware of
the presence
of black bears
and panthers
that
frequented the
forests and
river bottoms.
Such varmints
are
practically
extinct in
Texas today.
There
are three
accounts,
however, that
make the
writer wonder
if perhaps
Mexican
jaguars were
not once a
rare visitor
to the piney
woods. A
modern
encyclopedia
notes that
jaguars still
inhabit some
Mexican
mountain
ranges. A long
article in
Galveston
Weekly News of
Feb. 18, 1892,
observed that:
"...Quite
a curiosity
was filed
under Jasper
County’s Scalp
Law recently,
the head of a
unusually
large Mexican
lion, which
was killed in
the lower
section of the
county by John
Shepherd....
The skull
shows the head
to be very
near, if not
equally as
large, as an
ordinary
African lion’s
head...."
In
her
autobiography,
Mrs. Otis
McGaffey wrote
that her
husband had
killed a
"tiger cat"
along their
wagon route
between
Natchitoches
and Jasper
County in
1841.
Unfortunately
she did not
elaborate
anything else
about the
animal’s
appearance.
During
a court
proceeding of
1876, a
well-known
Beaumonter
testified that
he had known
Absalom
Williams in
Beaumont about
1834, and
afterward when
the latter
moved to
Hardin County,
presumably
before 1850.
The witness
added that
"...a Bengal
tiger that had
escaped from a
sideshow" had
attacked
Williams in
his cabin and
bitten him
badly..." Mrs.
Williams had
driven off the
animal with an
ox yoke.
The
writer doubts
though that
the animal was
actually a
tiger, which
weighs about
500 pounds,
and wonders if
perhaps a
jaguar had
been mistaken
for a tiger.
There were no
railroads in
Texas before
1850 or any
towns in East
Texas large
enough in that
year to
attract a
circus or
sideshow. The
first circus
known to reach
Houston was
about 1875,
and the first
circus to
reach Beaumont
arrived in
1881.
There
are
nevertheless
several
instances of
panthers
killing and
eating humans.
A panther
killed and ate
a Florida
woman in 1872.
In 1874 a
panther killed
and ate a man
in Madison
Parish,
Louisiana.
The
Enterprise of
Sept. 17, 1881
described a
panther attack
near Pine
Island Bayou
as follows:
"...On
the evening of
Sept. 2...
Henry Winters
and Alfred
Creswell,
colored men,
were attacked
by 2 large
panthers, and
then only
saved their
lives by
clubbing them
with large
sticks. The
fight lasted
over 20
minutes before
the animals
retreated, but
not until the
lower clothing
of the 2 men
were literally
torn off
them..."
In
1897 Robert
Jordan killed
a large
panther on the
bank of Sabine
River, which
he had stuffed
and mounted in
the pilothouse
of his
father’s
steamboat.
While
some articles
indicate that
some
confrontations
may have
involved
jaguars, there
is actually no
proof, and it
was certainly
the wily
panther that
remained the
greatest
threat in the
East Texas
forests.
|