Demise of
Reptilian ‘Big
Tooth’ drew
crowds
By W. T.
Block
Reprinted
from the
Beaumont Enterprise,
Saturday
January 2,
1999.
NEDERLAND --
It was early
July of 1929,
and the Neches
River had just
returned to
within its
banks. A month
earlier, there
had been long
torrential
rains
throughout
East Texas,
causing it to
rampage out of
its banks
until it was 2
miles wide at
Port Neches
Park.
One morning I
went down to
pump out the
boats at our
boat landing
on Block’s
Bayou, in
place of my
brother
Broomtail, who
was ill.
Immediately I
saw a huge
alligator,
half of its
body above
water and
swimming
slowly toward
the mouth of
the bayou.
I quickly ran
up the bluff
toward our
barnyard,
screaming for
Dad to bring
his 73
Winchester and
kill old "Big
Tooth." Dad
had already
left for the
field, but a
neighbor, Roy
Sterling, was
still in the
barnyard,
hitching up a
team of mules.
As Roy ran
for the boat
landing, Mama
handed him the
loaded
Winchester.
Roy began
rowing the big
skiff toward
the alligator,
which by then
was already
swimming out
the mouth of
the bayou and
into the
river.
As Roy rowed
into the
river, he
could still
see "Big
Tooth," as the
big croc swam
slowly toward
the north in
the direction
of the
Magpetco
(Mobil) docks.
Roy allowed
the skiff to
glide slowly
beside the
gator, and
when he was
even with its
head, Sterling
shot old "Big
Tooth" in the
ear.
Roy got a
large loop of
a rope around
the big
alligator’s
head, but he
also quickly
backed the
boat away to
escape the
thrashing of
his tail.
Later Roy
towed the big
croc back into
Block’s Bayou
to our boat
landing.
Because "Big
Tooth’s"
weight was
estimated at
1,000 pounds,
Sterling had
to use the
team of mules
to pull the
alligator out
of the bayou.
"Big Tooth"
soon created a
local
sensation, and
for 3 days or
more, there
was a constant
stream of
Model T and
Model A cars
parked down at
our farm
house, for
everyone
wanted to sit
on the
alligator and
have his
photograph
taken. A
photograph of
‘Big Tooth’
appears on
page 135 of
Sapphire City
of The Neches.
"Big Tooth"
measured only
2 inches short
of 15 feet
long and was
estimated to
be 60 years
old. His mouth
measured 32
inches from
the tip of his
snout to the
end of his
jaw, where his
teeth stopped.
One person
believed that
the big
alligator was
possibly ill
and had
drifted down
on the flood
tides from
Angelina
River. As of
1930, large
alligators ten
feet or longer
had already
been hunted to
near
extinction in
the vicinity
of Sabine
Lake.
Beause of the
smell,
Sterling
eventually had
to stack drift
wood and pour
crude oil on
‘Big Tooth’
and set him
ablaze, but
not before
about 500
people got to
see him and
snap photos.
Because of
the lack of
television or
other
amusements
around the
then-small
town of Port
Neches, old
"Big Tooth"
provided each
with a moment
of mirth, much
like the big
whale at Port
Arthur had
provided in
1910. And
nearly
everyone
commented that
‘Big Tooth’
could also
have provided
an hour of
grief if the
big croc had
caught a small
child in his
jaws.
- W. T.
Block of
Nederland is a
historian and
author. His
website is
http://block.dynip.com/wtblockjr. This database is very large (150 articles)
and is
intended as an
area history
source for
students.
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