Snakes Beware! You
Don't Want 'Big Jim's' Fate
From The Valley
Advance, Vol. 19, No. 40, Vincennes, Ind., May 31, 1983
By Richard Day and
Paul Ingram
The Woods and
Streams north of Jasper found a dubious honor in the natural history of
Indiana a few weeks ago when two men who were canoeing a flooded stream
spotted a large snake swimming uncomfortably close to them.
After whacking it
into oblivion with a paddle they took it to a conservation officer who
identified the 42-inch-long serpent as a western cottonmouth,
so-called because of its white mouth. Indiana suddenly became identified
as the home of a fourth
species of poisonous snake.
The western
cottonmouth joins the timber rattlesnake and copperhead of southern and
central Indiana and the massasauga, found in northern Indiana swamps.
The western
cottonmouth, or water moccasin, has long been suspected to inhabit
southern Indiana. One was reported in Gibson County in 1887, but its
existence wasn’t confirmed. Persons who want to look for cottonmouths
might note its dark brown coloring under black markings, a triangular head
and a heavy body. One way of telling it from the non-poisonous copperbelly
is to look it in the eye. If the pupil is round the snake is safe. If it
is slit-shaped like a cat’s, it is venomous.
Experts say that
of the four poisonous Indiana snakes, only the rattlesnake’s bite is
usually fatal. There is only one sure test of this rule of thumb.
Fortunately, or
unfortunately--depending on your interest in snakes--residents of most of
the Wabash Valley will have to go a ways to find one of the poisonous
species. A recent issue of Outdoor Indiana reported that poisonous vipers
seem to give Sullivan, Daviess, Knox, Pike and most of Gibson counties a
wide birth.
A visitor to
Vincennes in 1816 attributed the lack of snakes to the Indian custom of
burning off the tall grass of the prairie each Fall to make spotting game
easier. Also, the flat, rolling plain of Knox County is not the sort of
topography rattlers prefer. They like hilly timbered land.
Then maybe the
poisonous snakes have heard of the inglorious end of Big Jim.
A century ago
stories of a giant rattlesnake were striking fear in the hearts of the
area. Big Jim was reported as the terror of the
Wabash,
a monster rattler 10 feet long (or longer in some estimates). He made his
home at Rattlesnake Bluff on the Little Wabash, 12 miles north of Carmi,
Ill., although he reportedly ranged up and down the Wabash Valley.
The snake was
first noticed in the spring of 1881 when loggers went to log the Skillet
Fork bottoms.
According to the
story of this confrontation, told with grand detail in 1908 by the
Vincennes Commercial, the loggers were driven to shelter in rain to the
bluff overhanging the river. A black man in the crew was sent for
firewood, but he came back, terrified and empty-handed. The logger, who
was named Big Jim, reported seeing a great demon prowling the bluff. Capt.
Ed Ballard, in charge of the crew, angrily ordered the man back to his
task.
Minutes later a
scream was heard from the top of the bluff and Jim hurtled down the bluff
and into the flooded river. He was never seen again, though an extensive
search was made of the river the next day. More men ascended the bluff but
heard what they said sounded like a thousand rattles. Rain or not, the
survivors boated to the Illinois bank of the Wabash in record time.
The Commercial,
looking back, said the logging business in the area was set back by
stories of the giant snake. Also, other excursions of this of this monster
rattler, now called Big Jim in honor of his victim, were reported
in succeeding years. Near the bluff one farmer looked into his chicken
yard and saw his best Plymouth Rock rooster staring eyeball to eyeball
with a giant snake. He emptied a shotgun at the snake, and it disappeared.
He said his rooster was never the same again.
Cattle and hogs
were reported bitten in the area.
Then a group of
turkey and squirrel hunters, including Knox County Sheriff Lee Staley, saw
what they said was Big Jim on a log sunning himself. They blasted away at
him, interrupting his nap but apparently not hurting him.
A country school
four miles from Rattlesnake Bluff was the next site of a report. Big Jim
was spotted nearby, and the frightened teacher gathered the students
inside the school, shut the blinds and hid out until evening when parents
came to see what the problem was. School was dismissed for the rest of the
year.
One are farmer
reported the snake’s love for his blackberry patch. The farmer, William
Ude, said his bull tried to horn the critter and came out the loser to the
snake’s fangs.
A large cage put
over the hole to what was supposedly Big Jim’s lair was found bent and
twisted. A price was put on the snake’s head, and fearful farmers began
wearing high boots to ward off attacking snakes. A snake, Big Jim, of
course, frightened a team of stagecoach horses near Centerville, Ill.,
sending one frightened traveler up a tree.
Dynamiters blew
holes over Rattlesnake Bluff, maybe sending thousands of snakes to their
deaths, but reportedly not Big Jim. In 1908, after more than a quarter of
a century there still was a rattlesnake mania north of Carmi, and all
reports of snakes were attributed to the legendary serpent.
Big Jim finally
was put to rest, shortly after the latest account of his history had been
told in the Commercial.
On the W.H.
Thompson farm in southwestern Sullivan County, farm hand John Bascomb
heard a commotion in the pigpen. A boar had a giant rattlesnake in his
jaws, close enough to the head that the snake couldn’t get in a knock-out
punch. By the time he had returned with a rifle the other hogs in the pen
were in the fray, stomping and biting at the writhing snake. Bascomb
finally got a clear shot, and the snake was finished.
Bascomb mounted
the skin, which measured 12 feet five inches and had 29 rattles. Whether
Big Jim or just a big rattler, the legend of the terror of the
Wabash
died in a Sullivan County pigpen.
