Wednesday, December 25, 2002
Bigfoot Feat
By David Carkhuff,
Editor - Blue Mouintain Eagle
Remarkable hoax looms large in Grant County family’s history
MT. VERNON — Bigfoot stands tall in the family history of the
McKinleys of Mt. Vernon. The late Ray Wallace, who died Nov. 26 at the
age of 84 in Centralia, Wash., helped launch the Bigfoot legend in North
America. His great-nephew Todd McKinley, a school resource officer with
the Grant County Sheriff’s Office, and great-niece Jina (McKinley)
Carniglia, who lives in Canyon City, affectionately recalled “Uncle Ray’s”
pranks with Bigfoot feet.
Following his death, descendents to Wallace revealed his
role in making the 1958 footprint that gave new life to the Bigfoot legend.
The prints, created with big, wooden feet strapped to boots, and a famous
amateur film, showing a hairy creature ambling through a forest, were the
creations of Wallace and his brother, Wilbur. These innocent but effective
hoaxes ignited international attention and fixed Humboldt County, Calif.,
in the spotlight of Bigfoot believers.
Wilbur came up with the idea of planting Bigfoot footprints
around the Northwest, according to his local relatives. Ray promoted the
myth and filmed the famous “sighting” of Bigfoot. Since he appeared in
the viewfinder as the startled camera operator, it’s likely that great-aunt
Elna is the model who donned the gorilla suit for the legendary film, McKinley
said.
Numerous sets of molded feet, made out of fiberglass,
cement and wood, were constructed, and some were put to use planting prints
in woods across the Northwest. These prints would baffle scientists and
intrigue the public for nearly half a century.
(Bigfoot "feet" remain in possession of Grant County
relatives. Photo by David Carkhuff)
“They’ve left tracks all over the Northwest,” McKinley
said. “I don’t know how much they did in Oregon. They’ve been everywhere
with them, and that spanned 20, 30 years.”
Both McKinley and Carniglia recall that when they were
children, they discovered a set of Bigfoot model feet at the family’s ranch
near Mt. Vernon.
“When I was 7, I think, I found the feet and asked about
them,” McKinley said.
“They disappeared for a while until I was older,” he said.
“I was probably 12 or 13 and they reappeared. I found them again. Then,
I was kind of let in on the story, and that was from my dad and my uncle,”
he concluded.
Carniglia described these same feet, “carved with straps
and all,” and told a similar story about the innocent discovery of two
children.
“I remember, growing up, my brother, Todd McKinley and
I accidentally ran upon the feet, and were playing with them. We got in
trouble, and were ordered to not tell a soul,” she recounted.
Carniglia said great-uncle Ray recruited various nephews
to help spread the tracks through western forests. The hoax created such
a public sensation that Ray and Wilbur dared not reveal what
they had done.
“It is actually a great relief for many family members
to get it off their chest, as Uncle Ray’s practical joke has been a great
weight to carry for 40 some years,” Carniglia stated.
It was all part of a family prank to McKinley. He even
remembered listening to a record with Bigfoot sounds and learning that
his elders had created those sound effects as part of their hoax.
“It was just a joke to us,” he said.
For the Wallace brothers, however, the Bigfoot legend
quickly grew larger than life.
“I think they got into it a little deeper than they expected,
and they didn’t expect it to take such a
foothold, if you want to use that play on words,” McKinley said.
Descendants of Ray and Wilbur still own wooden feet, the
original models used for launching the legend. The exact location of these
unique artifacts is not for public disclosure, but a pair of the feet do
reside in Grant County, McKinley confirmed. The family has no plans to
sell them, he added.
“Those are almost family heirlooms,” he said.
OMED: Some researchers claim that NW Indians put Sasquatch on their
totem poles for hundreds of years before the Wallace pranks began.
Try this link http://www.bfro.net/news/Wallace.asp
The photo illustration near the top is a link to a British Bigfoot site.
Main text and fake foot photo © 2003 Blue
Mouintain Eagle Reprinted by permission |