Author Topic: Persistent Legend  (Read 7881 times)

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GRAHAM_RANCH

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Persistent Legend
« on: Mar 31, 09, 03:03:40 PM »
A Salute to a Presistent Legend

Forthcoming in our next entry is the complete story of Mr. Frank Bogert, cowboy, stunt actor, former mayor of Palm Springs and one of the folks that had a role in legend-making in the early days of Wrightwood. At the grand age of 99, Mr. Bogert rode off into the sunset of life, surrounded by his beloved family in Palm Springs on March 22, 2009. He still rode horses almost to the end. One statement he made a few years ago was this,"I can ride three hours at a time, but I can barely make it to my tack room. I can't even take off my own darn saddle. When I walk my legs hurt like the dickens. And I'm 97 years old and you think I can do more." The cowboy was spicy...full of life, a life that was legendary.

Frank played took part in a "situation" at Big Pines in 1932, that later became a persistent legend that even goes on today. Even now, folks come into the Wrightwood Historical Museum and insist that animals escaped the Big Pines Animal Park in heavy snow. Frank Bogert set the story straight for this writer two years ago. We give you the real story to a persistent legend in what we call The Great Escape.


They were just two normal hands. The one in black was named Jimmy Prince, being short of statue and in possession of a nagging stuttering problem, he was considered the hardest and most honest worker in the Wrightwood area. A jack of most trades, Jimmy worked at the Circle Mountain Cattle company in its later years and worked on different jobs in Wrightwood's early years, including a volunteer fireman. Next to him, the tall gent in the white shirt is Frank Bogert, expert horseman and top hand, his own fame stretched from the small mountain community of Wrightwood to the desert resort paradise of Palm Springs. Frank became Palm Springs' mayor three times and played a huge part in shaping the city to what it is today. Both Jimmy and Frank shared a friendship, even a secret or two. Fact is, the two saddle partners can clear up a mystery that has been plaguing Wrightwood and the Big Pines area nigh onto seventy-seven years.


GRAHAM_RANCH

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Persistent Legend
« Reply #1 on: Mar 31, 09, 03:09:19 PM »
The Big Pines Park was opened to the public in 1924 and instantly it was very popular to city visitors. The attractions that brought unbelievable amounts of crowds were the ski jumps, the ice rink, lake skating, the many toboggan and sled runs, the Recreation Hall and its entertainment, and the small Animal Park. When 1931 came around, interest in the Animal Park petered off and soon the reindeer and elk were taken from the center, as was the mountain lion. Finally, in the later summer of 1932, the only animals left were a dozen black bear, cub and adult, and the American bison. There were six cows, three spikes and one very big ill- spirited bull. That is when Frank Bogert and Jimmy Prince came in the picture. They were hired by the Big Pines Park officials to transport the remaining zoo animals to their new place of residence in the Griffin Park Zoo in Los Angeles.


Hands up!
This black bear, along with some others housed in the Big Pines Park Animal Park in 1932, was one of the culprits that started a legend that persist today: animals escape from Big Pines Zoo in heavy snowfall.-photo Wrightwood Historical Museum Archives

The two saddle partners temporarily traded in their horses for a large military-style stake side truck, and thus began an adventure that only legends can be made of. The first to go were the many black bear and the sweaty tiring job of putting each bear in individual cages became quite a chore. Finally, with cages secured in the bed of the stake side truck, Frank muscled the vehicle into first gear and exited the opened gate at the entrance of the Animal Park. Stopping at the gate to say a quick 'adios' to the gate keeper, the gate keeper told them, "Sure is an interesting way to haul animals." Looking out the windows of the large truck, the two saddle partners saw that most of the black bear decided that they didn't want go anywhere.

The bears had somehow escaped their cages and were either lunging up the slope or heading straight for their comfortable cages back at the Big Pines animal park! After some time of scrambling around and shooing the troublesome creatures back into their individual cages and loading the truck once again, the trek to the city continued. So, technically, there was a great escape...just not the type one might expect.


Next to go were the American bison. The little spikes and cows were not that hard to load, just a little shove here, a slap in the rear there and a pile of feed to urge the way. Frank and Jimmy were satisfied with the lot. The only one left to load was the one that the two saddle partners dreaded the most. The bison bull! The shaggy 1600 pound cantankerous ill-mannered bison bull lived up to the reputation of its ancestors of being able to run forty miles and hour, jump six feet high and have a general dislike for humans if they were in the wrong place at the wrong time around them. With wild snorting and foam flying from it's nostrils and flaring mouth, the two saddle partners had to resort to using whips and slaps and jabs with gun barrels to get the beast loaded. But the bull's disfavor to the situation didn't stop. Savage kicks and head strikes from its massive noggin' began splintering and breaking the stake sides of the transport truck! Frank and Jimmy quickly fixed the stake sides, only to have the bull smash them again! Finally enough was enough, and the pair tranquillized the bull bison. Without further ado, the last of the zoo animals were taken away...and a padlock locked the gate of the Big Pines Animal Park forever.

Big Pines Park's famous ski jumps, its many specially designed toboggan runs, its refreshing pool and the ice skating rink, are all gone now. But the ruins of the Big Pines Animal Park still stand, a mute testimony of the bygone glorious years of Big Pines Park...the last piece of old Big Pines had made its final great escape.

Terry Graham,
Wrightwood, Ca 2008