20071228

October 21, 1999 - Dallas Morning News


Man or beast? Goatman lore reborn in Fort Worth

The Dallas Morning News
By Jacquielynn Floyd, October 21, 1999

The summer of '69 left a lot of people reeling with disbelief. Woodstock happened, and Chappaquiddick. Neil Armstrong strolled on the lunar surface, and there was a rock festival in Lewisville with naked hippies. The Goatman didn't seem much less plausible than anything else.

He was the local Sasquatch, a hairy apparition detailed by credulous sightseers and wild-eyed teenagers and even improbable news accounts. For a few glorious weeks in 1969, as summer stretched toward fall, Fort Worth was feverish with Goatman delirium.

"Everyone talked about it. It was in the newspapers," said Robert Hornsby, then an imaginative 9-year-old with an avid interest in monster stories. "It was as real as a man going to the moon."

Mr. Hornsby, a New York artist who grew up in Fort Worth, has revived the Goatman legend with a series of stories, pictures and sculptures. His exhibition opens this weekend to coincide with the downtown public library's reopening after an elegant renovation.

It's a logical site, since Mr. Hornsby spent months researching the Goatman's history at the library.

The creature's story

According to Goatman lore, the half-man, half-goat lived on a scraggly island in Lake Worth, which was accessible to the shore by a muddy car track, making it a popular venue for necking and beer ingestion.

Teenagers spread tales of being chased and hooted by a 7-foot-tall, 300-pound Goatman. A posse of Goatman-seekers reported the monster appeared on a bluff and hurled an old tire at them, frightening one man so badly he backed his car into a tree.

Mr. Hornsby dug up pictures of a Goatman statue sculpted by an Azle man at the height of the hysteria and used them to produce his own series of sculptures.

The result is a long-necked, flop-eared, slope-shouldered, pot-bellied, Neanderthal-browed, unihorned anthropoid goat with an expression of undeniable malice but also of a certain cunning charm. Like the legend, he is temptingly believable and utterly memorable.

Because the Goatman was sometimes attributed to a prank by kids at nearby Brewer or Castleberry high schools, Mr. Hornsby invited art students from those campuses to contribute their own interpretations of the legend to the exhibition.

The legend died out long before these students were born, but they loved the story Mr. Hornsby related.

Two halves, two sides

Their artworks reflected two obvious schools of interpretation on the Goatman's character. Some, like an ominous silhouette of a slouching, menacing beast, suggest a sinister, malevolent Goatman, angry and bent on violence.

Then there's a tragic, misunderstood Goatman, a lonely figure exiled by his hybrid status from both human and goat societies.

"I don't think he's really evil," said Brewer senior Melissa Rodriguez, whose Goatman is a series of mournful sketches. "It's like people were scared of him, but it wasn't his fault."

The story faded with time. The only remnant of the myth is that the unofficial name "Goat Island" stuck to the weedy little spot where the Goatman capered and howled and hurled tires so many years ago.

Maybe he was enraged, or maybe he was lonely. Maybe he was just curious, according to one young artist, who wrote:

He creeps at night through brush and tree / Or scraggly grass to peek at me.

Or maybe the Goatman was just passing through, camping out on his way to someplace more private or more scenic or more hospitable.

After all, it was an awfully strange summer.

© The Dallas Morning News

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

I was a little girl living in Ft. Worth during this time and I remember this. We used to drive by Lake Worth all the time and I would look for the Goatman...Glad your doing good...sorry about the misunderstanding.

Mr. Mystery said...

I remember my parents recounting stories about the Goatman, they were among the people who went in search of the beast. I myself was not born until November of '70. I remember one of my mothers accounts of having seen a pair of red eyes staring at them from the brush at the side of the road, most likely a common animal, but who knows. Three of my friends and myself went to see the area in 1986, we did not see the Goatman or any evidence of his presence, but it was exciting to let our imaginations run wild. Those same friends and I have seen a strange creature lurking around our hometown, although, it has been a long time since then. Perhaps there is a relation, ours resembled a horse more than a goat. Fact or fiction, I am pleased to see that the legend has not died, society needs its imagination stimulated from time to time. Keep the Goatman alive!!!

Anonymous said...

I had never heard a Lake Worth monster, until I was out doing my usual walk at night in a new area... I saw aomething weird, figured it was just someone out in a costume or something. I jokingly told a friend at work about it, and she referred me here. Wow.

Unknown said...

I THAT SO WELL. GOATMAN IN JULY, I MARRIED AUG. 1ST. SO MUCH GOING ON. MY HUSBAND TOOK ME TO GREER ISLAND AND SCARD ME HALF TO DEATH! CREEPY PLACE IT WAS . WILL NEVER FORGET THAT TIME.

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