Lovable
trickster created a monster with Bigfoot hoax
By
Bob Young, Seattle Times staff reporter
A
tribute to the Bigfoot legacy
Bigfoot
is dead. Really.
"Ray
L. Wallace was Bigfoot. The reality is, Bigfoot just died," said Michael
Wallace about his father, who died of heart failure Nov. 26 in a Centralia nursing
facility. He was 84.
The
truth can finally be told, according to Mr. Wallace's family members. He orchestrated
the prank that created Bigfoot in 1958.
Some
experts suspected Mr. Wallace had planted the footprints that launched the term
"Bigfoot." But Mr. Wallace and his family had never publicly admitted
the 1958 deed until now.
"The
fact is there was no Bigfoot in popular consciousness before 1958. America got
its own monster, its own Abominable Snowman thanks to Ray Wallace," said
Mark Chorvinsky, editor of Strange magazine and one of the leading proponents
of the theory that Mr. Wallace fathered Bigfoot.
Pranks
and hoaxes were just part of Mr. Wallace's nature.
"He'd
been a kid all his life. He did it just for the joke and then he was afraid to
tell anybody because they'd be so mad at him," said nephew Dale Lee Wallace,
who said he has the alder-wood carvings of the giant humanoid feet that gave life
to a worldwide phenomenon.
It
was in August 1958 in Humboldt County, Calif., that Jerry Crew, a bulldozer operator
for Wallace Construction, saw prints of huge naked feet circling and walking away
from his rig.
The
Humboldt Times in Eureka, Calif., ran a front-page story on the prints and coined
the term "Bigfoot."
According
to family members, Mr. Wallace smirked. He had asked a friend to carve the 16-inch-long
feet. Then he and his brother Wilbur had slipped them on and created the footprints
as a prank, family members said.
His
joke soon swept the country, which was fascinated by rumors of Himalayan Abominable
Snowmen in the 1950s, Chorvinsky said.
"The
Abominable Snowman was appropriated by Ray Wallace. It got into the press, took
on a life of its own and next thing you know there's a Bigfoot, one of the most
popular monsters in the world," he said.
Mr.
Wallace continued to milk the prank for years. He offered to sell a Bigfoot to
Texas millionaire Tom Slick and then backed out when Slick made a serious bid.
Mr. Wallace later put out a press release saying he wanted to buy a baby Bigfoot
for $1 million, said Loren Coleman, who has written two books about Bigfoot. Mr.
Wallace also cut a record of supposed Bigfoot sounds and printed posters of a
Bigfoot sitting peaceably with other animals, said Chorvinsky, who received several
hundred pages of correspondence from Mr. Wallace.
But
Mr. Wallace's chief contributions to bigfootery were films and photos he supposedly
captured of the creature in the wild.
There
were depictions of Bigfeet eating elk and frogs, of a Bigfoot sitting on a log
and of a Bigfoot munching on cereal.
"Ray's
contribution was study into the actual behavior of Bigfoot, what it eats, how
it acts," said Ray Crowe, director of the International Bigfoot Society in
Hillsboro, Ore.
Chorvinsky
believes the Wallace family's admission creates profound doubts about leading
evidence of Bigfoot's existence: the so-called Patterson film, the grainy celluloid
images of an erect apelike creature striding away from the movie camera of rodeo
rider Roger Patterson in 1967. Mr. Wallace said he told Patterson where to go
near Bluff Creek, Calif. to spot a Bigfoot, Chorvinsky said.
"Ray
told me that the Patterson film was a hoax, and he knew who was in the suit,"
Chorvinsky said.
Michael
Wallace said his father called the Patterson film "a fake" and said
he had nothing to do with it. But he said his mother admitted she had been photographed
in a Bigfoot suit. "He had several people he used in his movies," Michael
Wallace said.
Mr.
Wallace never received proper credit in the Bigfoot community, Chorvinsky said.
"He got it off the ground, and he kept getting glossed over. He's been consistently
marginalized or ignored by authors," Chorvinsky said.
Why?
"Because it hurts the case for Bigfoot if you talk too much about Ray Wallace,"
he replied.
The
Wallace family's revelation does not faze some Bigfoot experts, and the debate
about Bigfoot's existence rages on.
"These
rumors have been circulating for some time," said Jeff Meldrum, an associate
professor of anatomy and anthropology at Idaho State University.
Meldrum
said he has casts of 40 to 50 footprints that he concludes, from their anatomical
features, come from authentic unknown primates.
"To
suggest all these are explained by simple carved feet strapped to boots just doesn't
wash," he said. Even if the Wallace family's claims are true, Meldrum added,
there are historical accounts of Bigfoot-like creatures going back to the 1800s.
"How do you account for that?"
It's
easy, replied Chorvinsky; the historical accounts were mistakes, myths or hoaxes.
"I would like to see the evidence beyond the anecdotal. Jeff Meldrum's job
is show us the beef, something beyond old newspaper articles."
As
for Meldrum's claim about authentic footprints, Chorvinsky said: "Jeff Meldrum
is not an expert in creating hoaxes. I was a professional magician and special-effects
film director; anything can be faked."
Michael Wallace said family members
knew about his father's hoax but never let on.
"The
family just sat back and grinned," he said. "He didn't mean to hurt
anyone."
To
them, it was just another one of Mr. Wallace's jokes. Like the time he dropped
a powerful firecracker down the chimney of a bunkhouse while loggers played cards
inside. Or the time he convinced his crew that wild cats with bushy tails were
living in forest treetops.
To
his family, Bigfoot was a small part of Mr. Wallace.
A
rugged rogue with a big laugh and generous heart, Mr. Wallace was born in Clarksdale,
Mo., and came West as a boy. He spent much of his adult life taming the country.
He built part of Highway 1 in coastal California, he cut trees when they were
so big that trucks carried one-log loads, and he opened a free petting zoo near
Chehalis.
In
1942, he married Elna Sorensen and moved around the Pacific Northwest as his company
built logging roads and cut timber. His four adopted sons spent much of their
childhood in logging camps.
"Sometimes
we lived in the middle of nowhere. You couldn't ask for a better life as a kid,"
said Michael, his oldest son, now a home builder in Castle Rock.
In
1961, he settled down in Toledo, Lewis County. Shortly after, he opened a free
zoo, the Wild Animal Farm, off Interstate 5. It stayed open for about 13 years.
His wife ran an adjacent hamburger stand to help support the zoo. "I didn't
have normal pets," said Michael Wallace. "I had cougars, raccoons, deer
and bear cubs."
Mr.
Wallace would sometimes give free hamburgers and milkshakes to families that looked
poor, his son said.
"He
loved children and wanted to adopt every kid he saw. He was a good provider. If
he wasn't playing a practical joke, he was always working."
Nephew
Dale Lee Wallace added: "He always told us to believe in the good Lord and
stay married. He was always preaching things like that."
His
son is convinced Mr. Wallace is still relishing his biggest practical joke. "I
know he's just cracking up," said Michael Wallace.
Mr.
Wallace was preceded in death by son Gary, who died in a logging accident. Besides
his wife and son Michael, Mr. Wallace is survived by sons, Larry, of Winlock,
and Richard, of Toledo; 10 grandchildren, six great-grandchildren and numerous
nieces and nephews.