Sunday, January 22, 2012

OddWA #26 - The Wild Man of The Wynoochie




The recent sentencing of Colton Harris Moore, a.k.a. The Barefoot Bandit reminded me of something. Whether he knows it or not, the Barefoot Bandit is part of a tradition in Washington State. Our history is full of outlaws who go a bit feral living outside the boundaries of civilization. The forests of Washington seem to attract all manner of troubled souls. Some who grew up on or near the Olympic Peninsula might remember stories of “trip-wire vets” after the Vietnam War. Even hiking the backwoods of Kitsap County, I would sometimes stumble across a crude lean-to, tent or shelter on occasion. If one left the occupants alone everything would be fine.

That was the case with the most infamous “Wild Man,” John Turnow, a.k.a. the Wild Man of The Wynoochie. At some point, the huge man stopped participating in civilized life and started to haunt the woods of Grays Harbor County. He sometimes watched logging operations from the edge of the woods but seemed harmless enough.

Then, everything went seriously wrong. A confrontation with twin nephews in 1911 ended with both young men dead and Turnow a hunted man. For two years Turnow proved his reputation as a woodsman and sharpshooter. Every attempt to find him turned up nothing. His habit of breaking into cabins and businesses yielded $15,000 in loot when he happened upon a general store that also served as the town bank. The resulting reward increased the number of men searching for Turnow. Some who searched for him never returned. Most just came back empty-handed. Some overzealous hunters shot a cow. Another posse killed a 17 year-old boy by mistake.

By this point, John Turnow was regarded as an almost supernatural bogeyman, earning nicknames like “the Mad Daniel Boone” and “the Cougar Man.” “The Wild Man of The Wynoochie” is the name that stuck.

Turnow was finally cornered at the camp near his makeshift shelter in 1913. He shot two of the three men who confronted him. The third, Deputy Giles Quimby, convinced Turnow to reveal where he had hidden his loot in exchange for his freedom. Once Turnow told him, Quimby opened fire in the direction of Turnow’s hiding place and crawled away to get reinforcements. Quimby returned the next day but found that Turnow had died after the gunfight the previous day. His body was brought to Montesano, where hundreds of citizens lined up to gawk at the Wild Man, sometimes taking souvenirs off his corpse.

One thing nobody ever found was the $15,000 in gold and silver coins.

CK

ps: Some more background on John Turnow.

3 comments:

Rob said...

This is a favorite story of mine I first had from a grizzled old woodsman by the name of Thadeus Pierce. Mr Pierce was a friend of my dad's uncle and lived in an old cabin along the Wishkah river with no electricity or running water. Born before the turn of the century, Mr Pierce told some pretty cool stories about logging, hunting and how men had carved a living from the ancient northwest forests.

My Pierce knew every inch of that land and had his own network of private trails consisting of little more than a cut limb here and there. my dad wanted to pry his secret hunting spots out of him. One such trail we hiked cut through the Aberdeen city watershed (illegal) and emerged at Pig Pen creek where the shootout with the Wildman of the Wynoochee occurred.

I found a couple of interesting links about John Turnow and the area where he hid out. Here they are.

http://www.thevidette.com/archives/27jan11/

"Meeting to discuss Tornow historical marker scheduled
MONTESANO — A meeting will be held 1 p.m., Thursday, Feb. 3 at the Montesano library to discuss the possibility of placing a historical marker on East Wynooche Road toward Camp Grisdale to commemorate John Tornow.
Tornow, the “Wild Man of the Wynooche” was slain in 1913 by a posse near a pond now on private timber land.
The area is slated to be logged, so the time to preserve the site is now, said Doug Rice, owner of the Running Anvil Carriage House museum, which has a Tornow family buggy in its collection."

If you scroll down there are some cool pics of Pig Pen creek on this site.

http://www.rco.wa.gov/prism/ProjectSnapshot.aspx?ProjectNumber=11-1261

Clayton Kauzlaric said...

Great links and background, Rob -- Thanks for sharing!

Rob said...

Great story Clay, I sent a link to my Dad. Maybe he'll post some of his memories?