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Domestic News October 12, 1889

The Dickinson Press

Dickinson, Stark County, North Dakota

What is this article about?

A Texas woman whose 3-month-old baby was stolen by a wolf 20 months ago reunited with the feral child after a party of gentlemen captured it in the woods along the Brazos River. The child, reared by the wolf, exhibits animal-like behaviors and attracts crowds.

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Capture of a Child That Was Stolen and Reared by Wolf.

Some twenty months ago a woman living on the banks of the Brazos missed her 3 months old baby from the pallet where she had left it lying during an absence of a few minutes. Search was made for the infant, but no trace of it could be discovered, and the whole affair was wrapped in profound mystery until a few days ago. A party of gentlemen were riding through a somewhat unfrequented portion of the thick woods that border the river, when they were startled by seeing a strange object run across the road. Thinking at first sight that it was a wild animal several of the party were about to fire on it, when the one who had been nearest to it called to them not to shoot but to ride it down instead. This was done with difficulty for the underbrush was thick but at last the creature was overtaken in a dense copse. It was half running, first on all fours and then on hind legs upright. The gentlemen dismounted. It attempted to lay hands upon it, but chattering frightfully and savagely biting and scratching, it broke away from them. They could see that it had a human face though the bare body was covered with long tangled hair, and the nails of the feet and hands so long and curved as to be claws. It ran with incredible swiftness, getting over fallen trees and dense masses of creepers at a rate that obliged its pursuers to exert themselves to the utmost to keep it in view. It finally ran into an immense oak tree that lay uprooted in the ground, and the hollow trunk of which formed a yawning cavern. By the dint of poking it the tree with sticks the party succeeded in driving out an old wolf, which immediately took to its heels. It was not pursued, as it was not the object sought. This, too, was finally dislodged and lassoed with a lariat made of hides. It bit and scratched so fiercely that it was thought advisable not to approach it, as it was half dragged, half led home with the lariat about its neck, howling and yelping like a wolf. The fact of the negro woman's child having disappeared was well known to all, and it was decided that this must be the child. The old wolf had evidently stolen it and for some reason adopted it as its own. The mother declared that this conjecture was correct, claiming that her child had had a malformation of one ear, which peculiarity was found in the monster. It is kept tied up in her cabin, suffering no one to lay hands upon it, and is fed on raw meat, as it refuses to touch any other food. The woman has hopes that she may yet reawaken the human in it, but in the meantime she is reaping a harvest from the crowds who come daily from all parts of the country to inspect the strange creature.—Sandy Point (Tex.) Cor. Pittsburg Dispatch.

What sub-type of article is it?

Feral Child Wolf Rearing

What keywords are associated?

Feral Child Wolf Reared Brazos River Stolen Baby Texas Woods Child Capture

Where did it happen?

Banks Of The Brazos, Sandy Point (Tex.)

Domestic News Details

Primary Location

Banks Of The Brazos, Sandy Point (Tex.)

Event Date

Twenty Months Ago (Stolen); A Few Days Ago (Captured)

Outcome

child recovered alive but feral; old wolf driven away; mother identifies child by ear malformation; child fed raw meat and tied up; attracts paying crowds

Event Details

A negro woman's 3-month-old baby disappeared from her home on the Brazos banks 20 months prior, presumed stolen by a wolf. A party of gentlemen encountered and captured the feral child in nearby woods after chasing it from a hollow tree, also driving out the adoptive wolf mother. The child exhibits wolf-like behaviors, including running on all fours, biting, scratching, and howling.

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