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George Bird Grinnell investigated several
reported wolf attacks on humans. He dismissed many reports for
lack of evidence. Grinnell did verify one attack. This
occurrence was in northwestern Colorado. An eighteen-year-old
girl went out at dusk to bring in some milk cows. She saw a
gray wolf on a hill as she went out for the cows. She shouted
at the wolf to scare it away and it did not move. She then
threw a stone at it to frighten it away. The animal snarled at
her shouting and attacked her when she threw the stone at it.
The wolf grabbed the girl by the shoulder, threw her to the
ground and bit her severely on the arms and legs. She screamed
and her brother, who was nearby and armed with a gun, responded
to the scene of the attack and killed the wolf. The wolf was a
healthy young animal, barely full grown. Grinnell met this girl
and examined her. She carried several scars from the attack.
This attack occurred in summer about 1881. (Grinnell, G.B.;
Trail and Campfire - Wolves and Wolf Nature, New York,
1897)
In 1942, Michael Dusiak, section foreman for
the Canadian Pacific Railway, was attacked by a wolf while
patrolling a section of track on a speeder (small 4-wheeled
open railroad car). Dusiak relates, "It happened so fast and as
it was still very dark, I thought an engine had hit me first.
After getting up from out of the snow very quickly, I saw the
wolf which was about fifty feet away from me and it was coming
towards me, I grabbed the two axes (tools on the speeder), one
in each hand and hit the wolf as he jumped at me right in the
belly and in doing so lost one axe. Then the wolf started to
circle me and got so close to me at times that I hit him with
the head of the axe and it was only the wielding of the axe
that kept him from me. All this time he was growling and
gnashing his teeth. Then he would stop circling me and jump at
me and I would hit him with the head of the axe. This happened
five times and he kept edging me closer to the woods which was
about 70 feet away. We fought this way for about fifteen
minutes and I fought to stay out in the open close to the
track. I hit him quite often as he came at me very fast and
quick and I was trying to hit him a solid blow in the head for
I knew if once he got me down it would be my finish. Then in
the course of the fight he got me over onto the north side of
the track and we fought there for about another ten minutes.
Then a west bound train came along travelling about thirty
miles an hour and stopped about half a train length west of us
and backed up to where we were fighting. The engineer, fireman
and brakeman came off the engine armed with picks and other
tools, and killed the wolf."
It should be noted that this wolf was skinned
and inspected by an Investigator Crichton, a Conservation
Officer. His assessment was that the animal was a young healthy
wolf in good condition although it appeared lean. ("A Record of
Timber Wolf Attacking a Man," JOURNAL OF MAMMOLOGY, Vol. 28,
No. 3, August 1947)
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