with common olâ backcountry killers than with some well-dressed desperader out of the Wild West.
Not that anybody put hard questions to this feller. If lawmen was hunting him across four states, that was not our business. His life was his own responsibility and he took it. If any man could of used a change of name, it was Ed Watson, but except for changing âAâ to âJ,â he was always exactly who he said he was, never denied it and was not ashamed. You had to respect that. He was a hard worker and a generous neighbor, and for many years we done our best to live with him.
Ted Smallwood knowed Ed Watson from their days at Half Way Creek, they was always friendly. Both come here from Columbia County, in the Suwannee River country of north Florida. Ted worked for my dad up Turner River for a while, married our Mamie in â97, bought a small property from Santinis when he went to Chokoloskee that same year. About the only settlers on the island then was Santinis, Browns, Yeomans, and McKinneys. A half dozen families was at Half Way Creek, another half dozen at Everglade, with a few more perched on such high ground as could be found down through the Islands.
C. G. McKinney started out by farming them old Injun mounds back in Turner River. Wonderful black soil but once it was cleared, the full sun killed that land. Burn off another mound, make a fine crop, and the next year it wouldnât grow an onion. McKinney come on to Chokoloskee, built a house and store, got in his supplies from Stortersâ trading post in Everglade. His billhead said, âNo Borrowing, no Loaning, I Must Have Cash to Buy More Hash.â Sold extra-stale bread that he called âwasp nest.â Set up a sawmill and a gristmill, founded the post office, tried his hand at common doctoring without no license, done some dentistry, delivered babies; the kids all thought he brought them babies in that big black satchel.
Mr. McKinney was a educated man who didnât hold with plume hunting. The Frenchman used to rant and rave about plume bird rivals such as Watson but he hollered
âEepo-creet!â
about McKinney, who went on just one egret hunt, then give it up for good. C. G. seen all them crows and buzzards picking on the nestlings, figured what theyâd went and done was not Godâs will.
Ted felt the same way about plume hunting but he had a blank spot in his heart when it come to gators. The year after he married our Mamie was the great drought year of â98 when a man could take a ox cart across country. Every alligator in the Glades was piled up in the last water holes, and one day out plume hunting, I come on a whole heap of âem near the head of Turner River. Got wagons and a load of salt, got a gang together and went after âem. Meân Ted and a couple others, we took forty-five hundred gators in three weeks from them three holes that join up to make Roberts Lake in rainy season. They was packed so close we didnât waste no bullets, we used axes. Donât reckon them buzzards got them carcasses cleaned up even today. Skinned off the belly skins, what we call flats, floated our flats down Turner River to George Storterâs trading post at Everglade and got good money. That year Capân Bembery Storterâs
Bertie Lee
carried ten thousand flats up to Fort Myers out of that one hole, and after that, it was war against the gators. Hides was coming from all over, deer and otter, too. Trader Bill Brown from Immokalee, he brung in one hundred eight otter on one trip, got a thousand dollars for âem, along with gator flats by the oxwagon load. Another trip he hauled twelve hundred seventy flats into Fort Myers after selling eight hundred there not three weeks before. Said heâd brain every last gator in the Glades before heâd see one wasted. Thousands of Godâs creatures was laying out there skinned and rotting before we seen that even gators canât stand up to
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