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Star – Clipper Supplement Chapter XIII In the first days of the settlement wild animals were
not uncommon. Bears and buffalo were here as late as
1853. A drove of seven elk, driven by a prairie fire,
crossed Wolf creek that season at a point a few rods
above where is now the railroad bridge. The drove passed
quite close to the cabin of Mr. Connell who was there
gazing at them, then entered the timber going northwest.
Elk and deer were some-what common as late as 1857. The
writer, near his fathers’s cabin in the timber, has
stood within ten feet of one as it rushed past pursued
by dogs. Wild cats and coons were here as late as 1872,
and a very large cat or lynx was shot near the residence
of Mr. Washburn by a young son of Dr. Rose in 1868, and
one near Buckingham in 1870 by William Brecken. During
the winter of 1852-3 J. P. Wood killed a buffalo near
Four Mile Grove and two at Fifteen Mile Grove. 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | |