Great Floridian beasts these were not. But the alligators were, as you’d expect, quite a spectacle in often-chilly New England.
There are several newspaper articles from the time that make reference to the alligators, which lived in a basin — or pond — near the Arlington Street entrance among a “splendid” array of lilies. Accounts differ, but for some time there were between three or four alligators on the grounds, striking additions to the many other exotic features of the Public Garden back then. (Source: Boston Globe)
"Striking additions" that lived on rats.
Now, the Public Garden is no stranger to rats.“Some Objection Raised to Feeding Those in the Public Garden Pond with Live Rats and Mice,” read the sub-headline of the August Globe article.Nothing like a bit of morbid interest to occupy the women folks and the kiddies. After all, it had been a while since Massachusetts was holding public hangings for Quakers and witches et al. That morbid interest has to come out somewhere. Isn't that what NASCAR's for?
The newspaper reported that the alligators would be placed in the Public Garden when “warm weather comes,” and be fed by park officials once per week.
But residents often had other plans: tossing rodents they’d caught in traps to the gators for fun. Hardly a highbrow affair.
“Live Rats Thrown to Hungry Alligators,” read a headline in the Boston Post on Aug. 9, 1901. “Public Garden Exhibition Attracts Morbid Interest of Women and Children.”
“The victim is thrown into the pond,” it read. “As it splashes the water the three alligators start towards it. Kicking and squealing it is dragged beneath the water ... they fight violently, the mud is stirred from the bottom of the shallow pond. Then through the muddy water appear splotches of red. The crowd slowly disperses. The fun is over — for now.”
Oh, what fun.
Come winter, the alligators were fished out of the basin and housed elsewhere for the duration. Not clear how many years the practice of keeping alligators in the Public Garden kept up. 1901 was clearly a high point.
Urban legend has long been full of stories of baby alligators ordered from the back of comic books, and flushed down the toilet when mothers got sick of having them in their kids' bedrooms. Thus, the legend held, most big city sewer systems are full of alligators. Maybe they weren't flushed down the toilet, but in truth, when alligators do show up in cities, they're usually discarded pets. Not so much fun having that scaly little reptile around once it gets big enough to eat you.
But, with global warming, alligators may be on the move, heading north. Their natural habitat already extends as far as North Carolina, but if winters keep getting milder, there's nothing to keep them from expanding their range. Swell!
Wait a few years and we may see alligators snapping around after the swan boats, hoping that a tourist tosses them some Doritos. Or rats, if they happen to have any on them.
If alligators could take out the rat population but were otherwise harmless, I'd say 'come on up.' But I'd rather chance an occasional rat sighting than have to worry about an alligator grabbing me off a path in the Public Garden and dragging me under.
Meanwhile, I'm just as happy that there aren't crowds gathering to throw live rats to alligators across the street from where I live. Sure, there might be some folks who'd still think it was great fun, but I'll satisfy my morbid interest elsewhere. Obituary page, please!
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A nod to my brother Rick, who's apparently a much more rabid online Globe reader than I am, for pointing this story out to me.
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