GC3NGM9 Traditional Cache Old Mose the Grizzly Bear
Type: Traditional | Size: Regular Regular | Difficulty: 1.5 out of 5 | Terrain: 1.5 out of 5
By: chasclifton @ | Hide Date: 06/13/2012 | Status: Available
Country: United States | State: Colorado
Coordinates: N38° 38.346 W105° 44.584 | Last updated: 08/30/2019 | Fav points: 0
Takes less than an hour  Scenic view 

This site commemorates Old Mose, the last grizzly bear in Fremont County. The cache is found on Fremont County Road 2 (Tallahassee Road), accessible from Colorado Highway 9 to the east or from US Highway 50 at Cotopaxi (take Fremont C.R. 12 north to intersection with C.R. 2, thence east). The container is a standard ammo box.
On April 30, 1904, a short way northeast of here on Black Mountain (as the crow flies), bear hunters James Anthony of Caņon City and Wharton Pigg, owner of the nearby Stirrup Ranch, killed the grizzly bear they called “Old Mose.”

The bear’s home territory was roughly bounded by Waugh Mountain, Black Mountain, and Thirty-nine Mile Mountain, over which he moseyed, hence his name.

In the 1870s, this area had a small but self-sustaining population of grizzlies. By 1904, he was the last one, a mature bear of 10 or 12 years of age.

He was called “the bear no man can kill,” and after his death the Denver Post described him as “the most dreaded grizzly bear in the entire United States,” saying that he was 45 years old and had killed three men and hundreds of cattle.

In fact, Mose never killed any people and only a handful of livestock, if that. He was blamed for attacks and deaths that occurred before he was ever born, notably that of Jacob Radliff, which occurred near here on November 18, 1883.
 
Made into a rug, his remains now repose in a zoological museum at the University of California, Berkeley, cataloged as MVZ #113385.
 
To learn more about Mose, James Anthony, and Wharton Pigg, read Old Mose by James E. Perkins (2002), which separates the facts from the legend very well.
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Aspens, suspicious pile of sticks

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5 Logs: Found it 5  

Found it 04/18/2016 By Team landsman
During geotrip found it. Thank you

Found it 10/27/2015 By FindmeVailTree
Snow on the ground and about 1030 pm... but a very fun drive! Tftc

Found it 10/01/2014 By d.digger
Decided to do some leaf peeping today and grabbed this cache. Took nothing, left nothing and signed the log. It IS a great view to the west, but the Sawatch's were hidden behind storm clouds, so I turned around and headed for home after this one.

Found it 06/17/2014 By dew2hunt
like the history of where this was hidden

Found it 06/09/2014 By jedr2313
I pass by here all the time. Finally got a chance to stop by!