Historical Bigfoot Attack Site Rediscovered In Washington
Historical bigfoot attack site rediscovered in Washington
In July of 1924, four prospectors on a Mount St. Helens gold claim told journalists that they had endured a night from hell when numerous boulder-tossing, hairy “Mountain Devils” descended upon their cabin. The attack resulted in a one-sided gun fight, and one man, Fred Beck, claims to have shot one of the creatures, watching it tumble some 400 feet into the canyon to its ultimate demise.
The story spread like wildfire, and found itself the subject of newspaper articles, books, and several televised recreations of the incident. The tale has remained one of the most curious reports of Sasquatch-related violence, and its prominence has even earned the gorge an official name: Ape Canyon.
While the story has remained an important piece of cryptozoological lore for almost a century, the evidence has not endured the same fate, with the site and its cabin presumably destroyed when Mt. St. Helens erupted in 1980. For years researchers have hunted the remains of the cabin but with little success.. until now.
For the last five years, Marc Myrsell and his Washington-based Dark Waters Paranormal Investigation team have spent their warm months hunting down evidence of the Ape Canyon Cabin, and after a series of fortuitous clues, believe they’ve finally discovered its location. But don’t go asking for directions, because DWP ain’t giving them out, at least not yet.
“Due to the sensitive nature of this historic site, I’m really, really, really sorry, but WE CAN’T GO INTO SPECIFIC DETAILS ABOUT THE SITE’S LOCATION,” Myrsell exclaimed on Facebook. “PLEASE DON’T ASK.”
What Myrsell’s announcement lacked in directions, it made up for in details. Here’s an excerpt:
All surface evidence of the cabin is gone. A 1936 trail map told us that one could see the cabin from the trail. But that was only 12 years after the incident. In 1968, Fred Beck had heard that the cabin had burnt to the ground. In 1972, hikers told Peter Byrne that they had visited the cabin. Today, it’s rock, steep slope and trees.. The nature of the site carries a high probability of very little human impact. The area has never been commercially logged as there are so few trees and these are very difficult to get out. The danger of traversing the area makes a high rate of human camp sites unlikely.. ..the excitement began with the discovery of the wire, about 16″ long with a coiled loop at one end, like for a bailing or a handle, sticking vertically in the ground.. The excitement grew with a nail, a shank nail about 4 inches long.. jumping up and down and yelling and vigorous hand shaking ensued with the spoon. A single spoon. Just an old spoon. About 6″ underground.. But this was the clincher. We started finding more and more nails and finally got to a rotten horizontal log, again about 6″ underground WITH THE NAILS DRIVEN IN TO IT. As best we can tell, we probably found the long, 20 foot side of the cabin, guessing the uphill side.
Myrsell goes on to say that there is plenty of work to be done yet, with more expeditions planned to continue excavating the area for better evidence, and even an Xray Dispersion Analysis to help date the spoon. These guys may very well have uncovered some real Bigfoot history.
Now, if they could only find the body of the creature Fred Beck claims to have shot in 1924, people other than monster nerds like you and I might have even more reason to get excited.
For more on the frightful Ape Canyon attacks, you can read the entirety of Fred Beck’s 1967 book I Fought the Apemen of Mount St. Helens, WA over at Bigfoot Encounters. More on Marc Myrsell and the Dark Waters Paranormal expedition, by checking out their Facebook page.
Source: RoadTrippers.com
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Might have found the cabin, might not have. There were a lot of miner cabins in that area, in the day, I’m sure. If you’ve ever been in ‘big timber’, you realize quickly that land changes really fast in time’s eye. I hunted a great site on a rocky valley about 25 years ago. Lot of rock, but until the year before, it had a lot of timber, too. It had been clearcut the prior year of my hunt. Decent camping, bad weather, but overall a good hunt. Two years ago, I went back into that area and thought about that camp. I went 2 hours out of my way to find the old campsite. Easy enough, I told myself, it was right off this access road, set into a small box canyon. Well, I followed the road, turned where the box canyon was, but it all looked different. Where once there were a few stumps, it was full of 25-ft tall trees again. I couldn’t see landmarks for the trees, I couldn’t see distant vistas because of the new timber, and rockslides had changed one canyon wall. It did not look the same. I decided that it was the same place, but a very small chance of doubt – but if I had given someone a hand-drawn map of the area, they would NEVER had been able to validate it. Too much had changed.
This is the problem, if the original person doesn’t go back with you to the site, for whatever reason. This has been the problem with the Lost Dutchman Mine, Adams Diggings, and a number of other treasure hunts – just not enough detail, and often, intentionally confusing information to make it further hidden.