Let’s remember when an area man killed a bear, on this day in 1873 (June 22)

Chris Burlingame
Journal of Precipitation
2 min readJun 22, 2019
By Source (WP:NFCC#4), Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=48542456

I think the saying goes something like “dog bites man isn’t news, but man kills bear is,” or something like that. That’s why this kind of strange story showed up on HistoryLink.

On June 22, 1873, a Mr. G. Proctor, who lives on “an island in Lake Washington,” sights a bear near his premises and gives chase. The bear “took to the lake.” Proctor follows in a skiff, kills the animal with his rifle, and tows it ashore.

Very likely the island is the one in Lake Washington between present-day Seattle and Bellevue that will be named Mercer Island. In the 1870s, Gardner Proctor owned land on the northwest portion of Mercer Island. In 1873, he was about 43 years old and worked as a cooper smith and hook maker.

Proctor did not know the weight of the bear but he stated that the length was more than seven feet long. He presented to Beriah Brown (1815–1900), editor of the Puget Sound Dispatch, the bear’s foot, which measured eight inches long and four inches wide. The hunter believed it was “the largest black bear ever seen in this section.”

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Chris Burlingame
Journal of Precipitation

Seattleite, (mostly) retired arts/culture blogger. Come for the Seinfeld references, stay for the Producers references.