Bull moose among fireweed on the central Kenai Peninsula. |
THEY
LIKED IT POACHED
JANUARY 2009
Fresh red meat could be difficult to come by in the late
1940s and early 1950s on the Kenai Peninsula, particularly in the winter.
Heavily salted canned meats were available but were far from fresh and often
far from tasty. On the other hand, fresh meat on the hoof was ambling all over
through the mixed coniferous-deciduous woods, and many homesteaders were not
reluctant to take advantage of this good fortune.
“Illegal moose meat was a main source of food for us,” said
Maxine Lee, Soldotna’s first postmaster, in a personal history written in 2003.
“We were all law-abiding citizens, but in 1948, to get a hunting license, you
had to have been a resident of Alaska for a year or else buy a $50 non-resident
license and hire a guide at $50 a day—even on your own land. We had little
money. We needed meat. The U.S. Fish & Wildlife (Service) controlled
hunting—the Feds. They knew that we were eating moose, but they also knew we
needed food. We were circumspect, hiding the meat tied up in spruce trees.”
Maxine and Howard Lee and family at Soldotna home, 1950. |
Lee also asserted that many folks then believed they would
receive lighter punishment for killing another human being than for killing a
moose. Still, she said, the authorities were occasionally known to look the
other way, particularly if it was understood that a homesteader’s survival
might depend upon the infraction.
Once, she added, she and her husband, Howard, were visited
by the game warden shortly after Howard had brought a frozen haunch into the
house to thaw and carve. Although they hastily covered the meat, its shape was
difficult to disguise, even in the lantern-lit gloom. In the end, when the
warden departed, Lee said, “He knew that we knew that he knew.”
Howard Lee also wrote about those days, in an undated paper
entitled “Reminiscent Ramblings of Early Soldotna”: “The taking of moose
legally, with license and in season, didn’t quite coincide with homesteaders’
needs or the most practical weather period to avoid waste. The risk of taking
an animal was made most hazardous and detectable on the site of the butchering.
Being spotted by our flying friendly game warden (Dave) Spencer kept us alert.
Once the site was located either by bloody snow or the ravens having a feast on
remains, it only took the effort of following one’s snowshoe trail to the
culprit. Most moose were shot when it appeared a good storm was setting in to
cover the tracks.”
Such was the case in February 1951 when Larry Lancashire
thought the weather was about to change in his favor. He shot and killed a
moose, gutted it quickly, and then dragged the carcass home on a sled to his
family’s cozy cabin atop Pickle Hill. Unfortunately for Lancashire, the
forecast for heavy snow was incorrect.
Al Hershberger, who was stationed at the time at the Alaska
Road Commission shop in Kenai, remembers the rest of the story: “Larry left
word for me to stop on the way home from work and fix a magneto on a tractor
that was giving him problems. I knocked on the door, and I opened it up, and
there was a big kitchen table there just covered with moose meat, blood all
over the place.”
Al Hershberger at his Soldotna home, 1960. |
Hershberger was invited inside, and later, when he had the
magneto in hand and had promised to fix it and return after work the next day,
Larry’s wife, Rusty said, “Why don’t you plan on stopping for dinner tomorrow
night? We’ll have fresh moose steak and french-fried potatoes out of our patch.”
Al readily accepted the invitation, salivating at the thought of fresh moose
and of the potatoes, which the Lancashires were beginning to farm commercially.
The next day, Hershberger was in the parts room at the ARC
when he happened to glance out the window and notice a small gathering of men:
Allan Petersen, the local marshal; Dave Spencer, head of the Fish &
Wildlife Service; and Jimmy Petersen, Spencer’s assistant and son of the
marshal.
“They were all standing there talking. So I went out, and I
said hi to ’em. Everybody knew everybody in those days, and I said to Allan,
‘What’s going on here? You plottin’ against somebody?’ He said, ‘Oh, that Larry
Lancashire shot a moose, and we gotta go arrest him.’ I thought, ‘Oh, there
goes my dinner.’”
Marshal Allan Petersen. |
Hershberger said he was conflicted about what to do next: “I
could run out and warn him, but it wouldn’t really work because they couldn’t
get all that meat out of the way in time. So I didn’t.”
On the way home, he stopped again at the Lancashire home.
Larry was still there, having been formally charged and instructed to appear
later in court, but the moose and Larry’s rifle had been confiscated. And Rusty
was there, too, at work at the stove. When Hershberger said it was too bad that
they wouldn’t be having moose meat that night, Rusty said, “Oh, no, no. I told
‘em that I invited Al Hershberger to dinner tonight, and so they left us enough
for dinner.”
Turns out that Sergei “Pete” Peteroff, a good friend of the
marshal’s who lived down by Eagle Rock, was the one responsible for
Lancashire’s arrest. Peteroff, according to Hershberger, “didn’t have any idea
who shot the moose,” but he came across the kill site and reported it to Petersen,
who likely followed the sled tracks right to Lancashire’s front door.
Hershberger said that Lancashire was fined and later had to
go to Anchorage for several weeks to get a job and earn enough money to cover
the cost. Hershberger added that when Sonny Miller was nabbed for poaching a
moose a year or two later, he was so destitute that the local community held a
dance to raise money to pay the fine.
Dolly Farnsworth, who also has lived in the area since the
late ’40s, added a coda to the Lancashire moose-poaching tale: She said that
her husband, Jack, along with Frank Mullen, shot an illegal moose near Jack and
Margaret Irons’s cabin, where the Farnsworths were living at the time. “They
shot it out behind the burn pile,” she said. “And so they skinned it out and
took it down to (Mullens’) cabin and hung it up.”
Marge Mullen and her children were visiting in Anchorage at
the time, Dolly recalled, so the family cabin was temporarily available. “And
the thing is that the damn squirrels got in there,” she said. “It was hung
right over the bed arch, and so you have all of these droppings from the
squirrels right on (the Mullens’) bed. They were getting at that darned moose.”
The next day, Jack and Frank were back at the Ironses’ place
trying to cover their tracks, cleaning up everything that could implicate them,
and pouring motor oil over everything that might attract hungry dogs.
Rusty and Larry Lancashire at their Ridgeway home, circa 1950. |
While they were tidying up, a car loaded with men went by
out on the highway, headed for Kenai.
“It was the trial for Larry Lancashire, for his poached
moose,” Dolly said.
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