Cougars in N. Chicago, IL
Posted: Tue Apr 08, 2008 6:00 pm
There have been several recent articles about possible cougar sightings in in the Chicago area!
http://www.journal-topics.com/dp/08/dp080404.2.html
Cougar Terrified City In '50s
By TROY BRUZEWSKI
Journal Reporter
North Chicago is not alone in being the location of a recent cougar sighting.
Approximately 50 years ago, Des Plaines was gripped by such an occurrence. Fearful local residents stayed in their homes for several days as authorities searched in vain for the big cat.
The most recent sighting sparked lots of reminiscing by former resident and attorney John T. Burke who remembers the incident very well. The Des Plaines spotting of a cougar occurred in the late 1950s in what was then Burke's neighborhood on Columbia Avenue near Weller Creek, situated near Golf and Mt. Prospect roads.
Burke, in a telephone interview with the Journal & Topics Newspapers this week, recalled when the first report came in from a frightened local woman. Her report at first wasn't taken very seriously by local authorities.
"I think the police said it was another case of a housewife having too many martinis," Burke said. "But this woman was smart enough to know what she saw - two lantern-like eyes looking at her through the window as she washed dishes."
Still, police responded, but found nothing except large footprints.
Burke said the matter became a point of ridicule for a short period of time and even then City Attorney Jim Dowd poked fun at the matter. At the time, Burke handled several zoning cases in Des Plaines and was friends with Dowd.
"When (Dowd) heard about this he was laughing and thought it was a really ridiculous story," Burke said.
However, the story quickly became more believable to authorities when Dowd was sent fleeing into his house after claiming to see a "mountain lion" in his backyard. Suddenly, Burke said, the issue was no longer a laughing matter.
"One night he came running into the house to call police, saying there was a mountain lion in his back yard," Burke recalled. "I guess the police figured it's the city attorney, so they better look into it." Again, nothing was found except large footprints, which Burke said were later determined to be a cougar, based on the reported size, color and diameter of the paw prints.
It also became a serious matter for the entire neighborhood, which was on lockdown, according to Dowd's daughters, Tara Gurber and Ronie Kaechelle.
Both were elementary school students, and during the summer of the cougar sighting, spent a lot of time indoors, compared to other summers.
"Our dad didn't want us outside," Gurber said. "Our parents were scared to death.
"We got to see other kids' houses during the daylight hours, which never happened before."
Kaechelle eventually wrote a poem about cougars which later published in a local newspaper. The poem was about how cougars sleep during the day and prowl at night. When streetlights came on in the neighborhood that summer, Des Plaines youngsters knew they had to be inside.
"All of a sudden, we were inside people's houses, rather than being outside," Kaechelle said. "Parents were fearful for their children."
Ironically, Kaechelle now lives in Poway, Calif., which has several such sightings each year.
"Out here, it's kind of a 'ho-hummer' seeing a cougar or mountain lion," she said. "There are many and people out here actually need to be prepared and know what to do when they come into contact with one."
The two sisters said they heard speculation the Des Plaines cougar of five decades ago had escaped from a circus train that had come to town. Burke said in later years that it was his understanding that an Arlington Hts. resident had a cougar as a pet and released it. That likely was the animal witnesses saw, Burke said.
In the recent North Chicago sightings, three residents called police to report seeing a cougar-like animal walking near Argonne Drive and Seymour Avenue on the morning of Friday, Mar. 28.
It was described as approximately 30 inches tall and tan in color. North Chicago police officers scoured the area, but found nothing except prints.
Reportedly, North Chicago Animal Warden Ted McClelland said the prints were consistent with a large cat, most likely a cougar or mountain lion.
http://www.journal-topics.com/dp/08/dp080404.2.html
Cougar Terrified City In '50s
By TROY BRUZEWSKI
Journal Reporter
North Chicago is not alone in being the location of a recent cougar sighting.
Approximately 50 years ago, Des Plaines was gripped by such an occurrence. Fearful local residents stayed in their homes for several days as authorities searched in vain for the big cat.
The most recent sighting sparked lots of reminiscing by former resident and attorney John T. Burke who remembers the incident very well. The Des Plaines spotting of a cougar occurred in the late 1950s in what was then Burke's neighborhood on Columbia Avenue near Weller Creek, situated near Golf and Mt. Prospect roads.
Burke, in a telephone interview with the Journal & Topics Newspapers this week, recalled when the first report came in from a frightened local woman. Her report at first wasn't taken very seriously by local authorities.
"I think the police said it was another case of a housewife having too many martinis," Burke said. "But this woman was smart enough to know what she saw - two lantern-like eyes looking at her through the window as she washed dishes."
Still, police responded, but found nothing except large footprints.
Burke said the matter became a point of ridicule for a short period of time and even then City Attorney Jim Dowd poked fun at the matter. At the time, Burke handled several zoning cases in Des Plaines and was friends with Dowd.
"When (Dowd) heard about this he was laughing and thought it was a really ridiculous story," Burke said.
However, the story quickly became more believable to authorities when Dowd was sent fleeing into his house after claiming to see a "mountain lion" in his backyard. Suddenly, Burke said, the issue was no longer a laughing matter.
"One night he came running into the house to call police, saying there was a mountain lion in his back yard," Burke recalled. "I guess the police figured it's the city attorney, so they better look into it." Again, nothing was found except large footprints, which Burke said were later determined to be a cougar, based on the reported size, color and diameter of the paw prints.
It also became a serious matter for the entire neighborhood, which was on lockdown, according to Dowd's daughters, Tara Gurber and Ronie Kaechelle.
Both were elementary school students, and during the summer of the cougar sighting, spent a lot of time indoors, compared to other summers.
"Our dad didn't want us outside," Gurber said. "Our parents were scared to death.
"We got to see other kids' houses during the daylight hours, which never happened before."
Kaechelle eventually wrote a poem about cougars which later published in a local newspaper. The poem was about how cougars sleep during the day and prowl at night. When streetlights came on in the neighborhood that summer, Des Plaines youngsters knew they had to be inside.
"All of a sudden, we were inside people's houses, rather than being outside," Kaechelle said. "Parents were fearful for their children."
Ironically, Kaechelle now lives in Poway, Calif., which has several such sightings each year.
"Out here, it's kind of a 'ho-hummer' seeing a cougar or mountain lion," she said. "There are many and people out here actually need to be prepared and know what to do when they come into contact with one."
The two sisters said they heard speculation the Des Plaines cougar of five decades ago had escaped from a circus train that had come to town. Burke said in later years that it was his understanding that an Arlington Hts. resident had a cougar as a pet and released it. That likely was the animal witnesses saw, Burke said.
In the recent North Chicago sightings, three residents called police to report seeing a cougar-like animal walking near Argonne Drive and Seymour Avenue on the morning of Friday, Mar. 28.
It was described as approximately 30 inches tall and tan in color. North Chicago police officers scoured the area, but found nothing except prints.
Reportedly, North Chicago Animal Warden Ted McClelland said the prints were consistent with a large cat, most likely a cougar or mountain lion.