Sunday, September 28, 2014

Tulsa, the Dog Who Survived


Tulsa, the Dog Who Survived
Bernard Pyron

When Tulsa, the dog shown in the photo here taken September 26, 2014, was born in March of 2004 his mother had only two, and the other looked just like Tulsa. Both got parvo virus in July of 2004 and his brother died. The old Christian Media Network group, or several in it, were praying for Tulsa to live and on a Saturday morning suddenly he was up and playing with his mother. He got over the parvo virus.
Tulsa, who is part Walker, and part Wolfus Spaniel and Beagle was not named for Tulsa, Oklahoma, but for a famous South Texas coyote hound, who was written up in the journal, The Hunter's
Horn. Tulsa, the famous hound, ran in the area of Devine. In a Hunter's Horn article from the thirties the the writer said the famous Tulsa of the thirties would "sit up in front of a pack behind a Wolf and scream every time his feet hit the ground." 


LIFE magazine on December 7, 1936 had an article on the South Texas Wolf Hunters Meet held on the Story Ranch at Cotulla. Julian Roberson was the owner of Tulsa the hound who won both the hunt and bench show.

 Running hounds after coyotes in the thirties and forties was part of another time and another culture, very different from the one we live under now..........You might say that being interested in running hounds after coyotes is now politically incorrect - and thats partly why it is interesting. Few now can understand why men would go out in the country, build up a camp fire and sit around it for hours in the night listening to the barking of their hounds on coyote trails maybe a mile or two away. See: http://www.texashuntingforum.com/.../ubb.../topics/2473692/2.............

"There are still a few "Wolf Hunters" out there. I just visited with a buddy who had been up around Decatur where he hunted with a couple of fellows who still had running dogs..

 Gary Roberson says "My Grandfather, Julian Roberson bred and hunted a dog by the name of Tulsa. Tulsa won the meet in the late 30's and is considered by most of the South Texas Wolf Hunters to have been the greatest of all time. Walt Disney sent a sound crew down to Cotulla, TX and recorded the dog running a coyote and it was Tulsa who actually provided the sound track of the hound in the Disney movie, "Voice of Bugle Anne". He later sold the hound to Preacher Balkham from San Antonio. To everyone's disappointment, Tulsa never reproduced any offspring with his great classic bugle mouth.."

"Preacher Balkham" is Robert Gaddy Baucom, in the thirties preacher of the South San Antonio Baptist Church, who had coyote hounds and sometimes ran them with those of my older brother and father. Baucom, or as the coyote hunters called him "The Preacher," had a Model A truck which was equipped to hold several of his hounds - and he had built along the sides of the back shelves and  cupboards like in the old chuck wagons the cowboys of the open range used. Baucom would arrive in the Somerset area on a Saturday night  before dark with his rig and park it at our house near town. When my Father Blake Pyron and my older brother George got off from work after dark on a winter night, they would head out to the Quesenberry, the Ballard, or wherever the group was going that night.

 http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0028471/plotsummary...

The Movie Voice of Bugle Ann, 1936


"The countrymen in the hills of Missouri take the hounds on night fox hunts. This goes on until Jacob Terry comes into the county and decides to raise sheep and install a woven wire fence. This upsets the neighbors since the dogs would not harm the sheep and they will be hurt running into the fence at night. Jacobs vows to shoot any dogs or people that he finds on his land. But Bengy Davis is in love with Camden Terry and that alone causes problems. But when the hound, Bugle Ann is missing one night, both sides are out with guns to settle the score." 

http://immortalephemera.com/.../the-voice-of-bugle-ann.../

http://www.tcm.com/.../Voice-of-Bugle-Ann-The-Original...

This is a two and a half minute clip from the 1936 movie Voice of Bugle Ann, which has a few seconds of the distinctive voice of a hound, which, if
Gary Roberson is right, is the voice of the famous South Texas coyote hound, Tulsa recorded in 1936. The voice of Tulsa, if it is him, does sound like a bugle. And Gary Roberson is the grandson of Julian Roberson the owner of Tulsa.

The Voice of Bugle Ann as a full movie is online, but I did not find one on youtube. The others involve signing up for something... As Bugle Ann, the dog with the voice of Tulsa, was killed in the movie, so the lead dog, Pep, that belonged to my older brother George, in 1935 or 1936, was shot and killed by a farmer, Cleve Kight, when she was leading a pack through Kight's place. There was an article on the killing of the Lead Dog, Pep in the Hunter's Horn, April 1936 page 16, about how in a Bexar county, Texas court trial in San Antonio my father, Blake Pyron, testified that he could tell what his hounds were running by the sound of their barking. He said the dogs "never changed their tune," when the lead Dog Pep was killed. Cleve, or Cleveland L. Kight, who killed her, said the hounds were running his hogs. Since the address of Kight who killed Pep and another Pyron hound that night was given as Von Ormy, its likely that the incident occurred in the general area of the Quesenberry ranch on the north banks of the Medina. I am not sure how Kight got in position to shoot dogs running on a coyote trail. George was only about 16 when his dog was killed. A lead dog is one who gets out in front of the pack of hounds which are usually scattered behind the lead dog. The lead dog is responsible for staying on the trail of the coyote, though when trailing becomes difficult, other hounds who are the trail dogs who first find trails of coyotes, may come up and help the lead dog find the lost trail.



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