April 24 – On this day in Montana history in 1895 the
Yellowstone Journal in Miles City carried a story on a controversy involving
wolves. It seems that many people were upset because a new law required “the
full pelt from nose to tail” when collecting the state bounty on wolves. For
one thing they said wolves sometimes traveled a ways after taking poison before
dying, and often the only part that could be recovered later was the scalp.
They reasoned that the scalp should be proof enough. But Montana changed the
old scalp rule because some enterprising people were getting scalps from
furriers in Chicago and elsewhere -- who used the rest of the wolf pelt for
clothing -- and turning them in for bounty. “If all men were honest it would be
the fair thing to pay on scalps, but they are not,” the paper said.
No comments:
Post a Comment