The story of Alferd Packer, "The Colorado Cannibal," is one of the most notorious - and most misunderstood - tales from the pages of Colorful Colorado's history.
Packer, as you might know, was a prospector who set out for Colorado's gold fields with a party of five other men across the rugged San Juan Mountains during the winter of 1874. Packer was the only man who would survive that ill-fated trip with his life. His reputation (as evidenced by the fact that we're writing about him today) did not survive.
The soon-to-be-notorious Packer aroused suspicion when he emerged from the woods with a pocket full of cash and no traveling party. After being accused of murdering the other men, Packer told the story that would define the rest of his life and earn him a permanent place in Colorado history.
According to Packer, the members of his party died one at a time and were consumed by the other members until it came down to just him and one other member, Shannon Bell. In Packer's story, a desperately hungry Bell attempted to beat the Grim Reaper by killing the Colorado Cannibal before he died of natural causes. Bell was killed in the ensuing fight and Packer was left with no choice but to eat the man who would have eaten him.
Not surprisingly, local authorities weren't convinced by Packer's story and he was eventually charged with murder. Packer promptly escaped from the Saguache jail and stayed on the lam for eight years before authorities tracked him down. He was eventually found guilty of Bell's murder in 1883. He was originally sentenced to death, but after a second trial in 1885 he received a 40-year sentence, of which he served 16 years before being released and living out his life in relative peace.
Though Packer himself died peacefully, his legacy has been anything but settled, and his story has been the subject of historical and popular discussion ever since.
Alferd Packer: Fact vs. Fiction
The story we know about Alferd Packer and the story that actually occurred are not always the same story. Fortunately, the real story of Packer's crimes, trials and life can be found right here at the Western History/Genealogy Department.
Take, for example, Judge M.B. Gerry's famous quote that was supposedly uttered while handing down the sentence in Packer's first trial:
Stand up yah voracious man-eatin' sonofabitch and receive yir sintince. When yah came to Hinsdale County, there was siven Dimmycrats. But you, yah et five of 'em, goddam yah. I sintince yah t' be hanged by th' neck ontil yer dead, dead, dead, as a warnin' in reducin' th' Dimmycratic populayshun of this county. Packer, you Republican cannibal, I would sintince ya ta hell but the statutes forbid it.
As it turns out, Judge Gerry, like most Colorado residents, didn't talk like Yosemite Sam, which Fred M. Mazzula points out in his book, Al Packer, A Colorado Cannibal. Mazzula used transcripts from the trial to discover that what Judge Gerry actually said was:
Alfred Packer, the judgment of this court is that you be removed from hence to the jail of Hinsdale County and there confined until the 19th day of May, A.D. 1883, and that on said 19th day of May, 1883, you be taken from thence by the sheriff of Hinsdale County to a place of execution prepared for this purpose, at some point within the corporate limits of the town of Lake City, in the said country of Hinsdale, and between the hours of 10 A.M. and 3 P.M. of said day, you, then and there, by said sheriff, be hung by the neck until you are dead, dead, dead, and my God have mercy upon your soul.
While Gerry's real quote is less colorful, it does have the benefit of being accurate.
Finding the Truth for Yourself
Researchers and history buffs who want to learn more about Packer's life and crimes can find an array of materials at Denver Public Library that can be used to prove, or disprove, various pieces of the Packer legend.
Besides microfilm of Denver and Colorado newspapers of the era (including a complete run of the Denver Post and Rocky Mountain News), WH/G visitors can access a number of Packer books, including books like The Alfred G. Packer Victims Exhumation Project Lake City, Colorado, July 17, 1989 that utilizes archeology to get to the truth of what really happened during that ill-fated journey. Of course, we also have a few unique items (we wouldn't be a special collection if we didn't!) including copies of Packer's confession and an unused warrant for his execution...which obviously never happened.
Finally
Packer's story involves a whole lot more than a starving man who was reduced to consuming human flesh in an effort to survive a high country winter. Indeed, Packer was a Civil War veteran who spent nearly a decade on the run from justice and, ultimately, found some redemption from the people of Colorado, or at least from the justice system.
And while Packer's story has long been the subject of gallows humor and amusements, such as Alferd Packer's High Protein Gourmet Cookbook, there's really nothing funny about the tale at all. In the end, five men died agonizing deaths in the cruel mountain cold, while a sixth had his own life irrevocably altered.
But if you're looking to find out the real story behind the story you think you know, the truth is out there.
Comments
Thanks for sharing some
Thanks for sharing some accounts of the Alferd Packer story. I first learned about him when I was attending CU Boulder and finding out how the Alferd E Packer Grill was given its name.
Suzanne
Thanks for the kind words,
Thanks for the kind words, Suzanne! I think many of us shared that experience, along with the memorable Alferd Pack Day events at the UMC.
The Lake City museum has
The Lake City museum has items Packer created while in prison, including a large and beautiful doll house for the warden's daughter. I believe they still race coffins on the main street 4th of july in his honor.
Thanks for passing that along
Thanks for passing that along, Frank. By all accounts, it seemed like Packer was a model prisoner who made the best of the 16 years he spent in incarceration.
In the picture above he bears
In the picture above he bears a strong resemblance to Charles Manson.
Good call, Christi!
Good call, Christi!
I remember back in the 60's
I remember back in the 60's as a young boy.....my dad had taken us to the site or marker of the dinner event. My little brother asked my dad why Mr. Packer didnt just go into town and eat.
That's pretty rich! Thanks
That's pretty rich! Thanks for sharing the memory, Gene.
Is this revisionist history
Is this revisionist history really necessary? Is nothing sacred? Can we not eat our Alferd Packer burgers in peace without some one trying to mess up what is a perfectly good story with all this truth? What did you really correct besides the judge's speech? Yosemite Sam, indeed. Please... let us keep our lore of the Old West sans modern day filtering. One last parting shot: you misspelled his name about half the time...
Hi Ron! Sorry to wreck the
Hi Ron! Sorry to wreck the lore of the Old West for you, but that doesn't mean you can't still enjoy your Packer burgers.
Also, you are correct in noting that Alferd's name is sometimes spelled, "Alfred," in this blog. That's because we pulled quotes that spelled it that way and we can't really correct those (but we would if we could!).
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