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Historical Accounts of Several Large Mammals in Oklahoma
Jack D. Tyler and Wendy J. AndersonDepartment of Biological Sciences, Cameron University, Lawton, OK 73505
Pre-1900 accounts of the gray wolf, black bear, mountain lion, elk, and pronghorn in Oklahoma are reviewed. Because Oklahoma was not opened to white settlement until late in the nineteenth century, early reports on the natural history of the state are sparse, scattered, and frequently anecdotal.
INTRODUCTION
GRAY WOLF
In 1718, de la Harpe (10), while traveling through Muskogee County near the present town of Haskell, wrote: "One buffalo herd was followed by a pack of wolves as large as those in France." This is significant because the observer noted the size of the wolves. Coyotes (Canis latrans) are much smaller.
Wolf packs frequently accompanied herds of bison and elk. In 1820, Long (2), traveling along the Canadian River in central Oklahoma, stated: "The bison and wolves moved slowly off to the right and left leaving a lane for the party to pass . . ." And on the Chisholm Trail between the Cimarron River and the Salt Fork of the Arkansas River, Borroum (3) wrote in 1871: "Buffalo, horses, elk, deer, antelope, wolves ... were all mixed together and it took several hours for them to pass. . . so that we could proceed . . ."
Seven times in The Rambler in Oklahoma, Latrobe (4) referred to wolves. He noted their interaction with bison in the prairie habitat: "The wolves hunt the straggling cows and calves in packs."
de Pourtales (5), on tour with Washington Irving, recounted: "I was awakened once or twice by a concert of wolves, who howled in the thicket about twenty paces from me approach ... We get a great deal of exercise by riding twelve leagues a day and by chasing down wolves all around us . . . The prairies are full of them . . ." Their camp was near the Canadian River south of Fort Gibson, probably in what is now Muskogee County.
Gould (6) asserted that the gray wolf was still present in Oklahoma as late as 1900. According to McCarley (7), full-blooded red wolves (C. rufus) were completely extirpated from the state by 1950.
BLACK BEAR
Bears were apparently plentiful across the area (6). Maley (9), while exploring the Red River (probably in present-day Choctaw or Bryan County), observed many bears. de la Harpe (10), in what is now Pushmataha County, killed a bear during a hunt for food in 1719. In 1823, a ranger with General E. P. Gaines (11) saw a bear along the Grand River in northeast Oklahoma.
In the Wichita Mountains of southwest Oklahoma, bears were once fairly common. Brevel mentioned bears in the Wichitas (1) Keim (1) found fresh bear signs in 1869 on a tree near Mount Scott. Skins of a sow and cub collected on Mount Scott by Gaut (30) are in the U.S. National Museum. According to Halloran and Glass (25), the last four bears in the Wichitas were killed in 1934.
MOUNTAIN LION
The French explorer Brevel (1) in the Wichita Mountains in 1765 wrote: ". . . on the mountains, spotted tiger (an early record of jaguar in Oklahoma?), panther, and wild cat."
"Wild cat" refers to the bobcat; however, the "spotted tiger" could possibly have been a jaguar. Jaguars ventured into southern Texas during this time (14), but have never been recorded in Oklahoma. It is possible that Brevel saw the spotted cub of a mountain lion.
On July 15, 1852, Bushman was hunting deer along the south branch of Cache Creek in southwestern Oklahoma when he attempted to bring a fawn closer by "bleating." But, to his great surprise, he attracted instead a mountain lion. Marcy (15) wrote of the incident: ". . . when immediately behind the fawn came a huge panther bounding rapidly towards him." Marcy also encountered a cougar. While passing through present-day Tillman County near Grandfield on May 17, 1852, he saw a large animal coming toward him. He wrote: "I fired several shots which took effect . . . He was a fine specimen of the North American Cougar (Felis concolor)" (15).
Records (16) mentioned mountain lions among many other mammals seen in 1800 near the Alfalfa-Major County line. Payne (17) wrote that in February 1883, panthers, wild cats, prairie dogs, and jack rabbits, etc., were found along the Canadian River in McClain County, central Oklahoma. Sitgreaves and Woodruff (18), during their travels through Oklahoma in 1858, stated: " . . . of quadrupeds (we) found but a few Dusky Wolves (Canis nubulis), panther (Felis buco). . ." These scientific names have of course since been changed.
Woodhouse (19), an avid ornithologist, made camp at Childers Ford on the Verdigris River while passing through Oklahoma during 1849. A quote from his journal reads: "I was awakened one night whilst in the camp by the cry of a panther (Felis concolor, Mountain Lion) . . . in the swamp in back of our tent." This would have been in southwestern Rogers or northeastern Wagoner County.
The exact date that cougars were extirpated from Oklahoma is not known. Ranger Earl Drummond stated that "the last cougar killed in the [Wichita] mountains was in 1900" (1).
ELK
While de Onate did not specifically identify the animals he saw as elk, most explorers described them in greater detail. Bean (20) crossed Oklahoma in 1832 with Washington Irving. Irving wrote of Bean: "He abandoned his pursuit of the deer, and followed the newly discovered track. After some time he came in sight of elk, and had several fair chances of shot, but was anxious to bring down a large buck, which kept in advance."
Elk travelled in large herds. Sibley (21) stated: "Numerous herds of elk and antelope were frisking in the gay flower plain, giving life and animation to the charming scene." This was in 1811, probably in present-day Alfalfa County. Long (22), while passing through western Oklahoma along the Canadian River, observed: "In the afternoon the country we passed was swarming with innumerable herds of bison, wild horses, deer, elk, etc. . . ." In northeastern Oklahoma in 1806,
PRONGHORN
The pronghorn can achieve speeds of up to 40 mph and the early explorers took note of this. While in the Wichita Mountains in 1852, Marcy (15) spotted several pronghorns and remarked that several greyhounds in his party could not catch them (1). Gregg (8) observed them near Richmond in Woodward County. He wrote: "Although we had encountered but very few buffalo since we left Spring Valley, they now begin to make their appearance again, though not in very large droves; together with the deer and the fleet antelope, which the latter struck me as being much more tame in this wild section of the prairies than I had seen it elsewhere."
Latrobe (4) on October 30, 1832, entered the following passage in his journal: "A small group of goats or antelopes was pointed out to me, but I was unable to approach them to give their figure or appearance with any distinctness."
It is conjectural as to when the last pronghorn left the grasslands of Oklahoma. Gaut (30) stated: "As late as 1890 antelope were numerous in Greer County southwest of Mount Scott . . ." Gould (6) wrote: ". . . in 1900 there were several droves of antelope in what is now Tillman County."
SUMMARY AND DISCUSSION
Because no game laws were in existence to protect wildlife, overhunting was also rampant. In 1912, Barde (23) portrayed the opening of the state ". . . as though the lightnings of heaven had fallen upon its wild life. Fires swept the country in all directions; armies of horsemen penetrated to remote places; wagons rumbled over the hills and down the valleys; there was a tumult of shouting and the roar of guns, and violence reigned, where until that day had been the peace of a primeval solitude. The slaughter had begun."
As ranchers moved in, they looked for possible solutions to the predator problem. Bounties were placed. In 1859, Mead (24) wrote: "Hunters with strychnia finally exterminated the wolves, myself and men killing some 5000 of them. They never molested people."
Cougars were shot, wolves poisoned, and bears hunted down. All animals that were thought to harm livestock were killed with great fervor.
Elk and pronghorn diminished quickly after white men entered Indian Territory because of extensive hunting for food and sport.
Elk have been reintroduced into the Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge and parts of eastern Oklahoma, and small numbers of pronghorns still roam the Panhandle. But the wolves, bears and cougars are gone. Occasionally, a bear or mountain lion wanders into the state, but none of these large mammals is an important component of Oklahoma's fauna today.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We thank Steve Wilson for use of the library at the Museum of the Great Plains in Lawton, Oklahoma, Roberta Vowell for initially organizing and typing this material, and Terry L. Anderson for technical assistance.REFERENCES
2. G. Litton, History of Oklahoma, Lewis Hist. Publ. Co., Inc., New York, 1957,Vol. 1, pp. 40, 43, 63.
3. H. S. Drago, Red River Valley, Charles N. Potter Inc., Publ., New York, 1962, p. 191.
4. C. J. Latrobe, The Rambler in Oklahoma,
{Page 55}
Harlow Publ. Corp., Oklahoma City, 1955, pp. 38, 74.5. G. F. Spaulding (Ed.), On the Western Tour with Washington Irving, Univ. Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1968, pp. 37, 72.
6. C. N. Gould, Travels through Oklahoma, Harlow Publ. Corp., Oklahoma City, 1928, pp. 97, 98.
7. H. McCarley, Southwest. Nat. 7: 227-235 (1962).
8. J. Gregg, Commerce on the Prairies, Univ. Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1954, p. 241.
9. S. Wilson, Oklahoma Treasures and Treasure Tales, Univ. Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1984, p. 78.
10. A. Lewis, Chron. Okla. 2: 337 (1924).
11. G. Foreman, Indians and Pioneers , Univ. Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1936.
12. T. Nuttall, A Journal of Travels into the Arkansas Territory, (1819), Univ. Microfilms, Inc., 1966, p. 147.
13. A. H. Halloran, Great Plains J. 12: 195-200(1973).
14. H. McCarley, Texas J. Sci. 11: 421 (1959).
15. R. B. Marcy, "Exploration of the Red River of Louisiana," Senate Exec. Doc. No. 54, 32nd U.S. Congr., 2nd Sess. (1853).
16. R. H. Records, Chron. Okla. 21: 280 (1950).
17. C. Foreman, The Cross Timbers, Univ. Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1947, p. 113.
18. L. Sitgreaves and I. C. Woodruff, "Reports of Captains Sitgreaves and Woodruff of the survey of the Creek Indian Boundary Line," U.S. Congr., House Exec. Doc., Vol. 12, Doc. 104, 1858, pp. 1-32.
19. J. S. Tomer, Bull. Okla. Ornithol. Soc. 7: 30, 42 (1974).
20. W. Irving, A Tour of the Prairies, Univ. Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1956, p. 86.
21. G. Sibley, Chron. Okla. 5: 210 (1927).
22. R. G. Thwaites, Early Western Travels, 16: 146, AMS Press, Inc., New York, 1966.
23. F. S. Barde, "Field forest and stream in Oklahoma 1912," Annu. Rept. State Game Fish Warden, Guthrie, Oklahoma, 1912.
24. J. R. Mead, Trans. Kansas Acad. Sci. 16: 280-281 (1899).
25. A. F. Halloran and B. P. Glass, J. Mammal. 40: 360-370 (1959).
26. G. H. Shirk, Chron. Okla. 28: 21, 1950.
27. J. A. Stout, Jr., Frontier Adventures, Oklahoma Hist. Soc., Oklahoma City, 1976, p.148.
28. United States National Museum records.
29. H.Cross, "Animal life in Oklahoma" in Geography of Oklahoma, Bull. Okla. Geol. Surv. 27: 185-186 (1917).
30. J. H. Gaut, "Hand-written account of mammals of the Wichita Mountains of Oklahoma," U.S. Biological Surv., Washington, DC (1904).
31. F. C. Orner, Chron. Okla. 7: 61 (1929).
32. F. Perrine, Chron. Okla. 3: 181 (1925).
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