Feb 8

Catman Road In Alabama

Many visitors to Orange Beach may have wondered about the origins of Catman Road, a trail which runs through Alabama Gulf State Park as part of the Hugh S. Branyon Backcountry Trail.

Legend has it that on the eve of a big cat hunt, a local medicine man would give Native Americans of his tribe drops of a serum that would give them great strength and stamina. The story goes that one young warrior snuck into the medicine man’s hut and drank an entire bottle of this potion. He was last seen running into the woods with a pack of wild cats.

Another story suggests that the Catman was actually a child who disappeared during the Hurricane of 1906 and was raised in the wild.

Local lore also asserts that the Catman was a victim of the Great Depression. After the crash in 1929 it is said that three hermits decided to live on the land in Gulf State Park. Several years later a man was fishing on the beach when he noticed a man approaching him from the distance. He thought nothing of it and went back to his fishing when suddenly he was attacked from behind. The man smelled like a wild beast, and his long fingernails scarred the fisherman. Fortunately, a Jeep was driving in the direction of the altercation, and the man quickly escaped, leaving the fisherman alive to tell the tale of the Catman. After the attack, a search was made across the island. Two shallow graves were discovered in Gulf State Park, and it was believed to be the other hermits.

According to historian Margaret Childress Long, the story of Catman gained more traction in the late 1950s, thanks to a prank pulled by her brother, Foster Childress and his friends Mike Micelli and James Huff. At the time it was common for girls to visit the area from Mobile, and the boys had decided that they would take some of these girls on a ride through the state park on Catman Road. When Micelli saw the lights of their car he was to jump out of the woods and scare the girls, wearing a crude cat costume. The stage was set, but the boys did not know another car was ahead of them on the road. Micelli saw headlights and jumped out of the wilderness on cue, to which the other car quickly sped away. On Monday, the school in Foley was abuzz with stories of the Catman.

The legend persisted, and other students attempted a similar prank themselves. In the early 1960s Lewis Bennet, a lifeguard with the City of Gulf Shores, donned a cat costume to scare some girls with his friends, one of whom was Tem Blalock. According to Blalock, the plan was to use logs to block the road, while Bennet hid in a tree. When the boys exited the car to move the logs, Bennet jumped from the tree, he then grabbed one girl and carried her 20 feet before stalking back into the wilderness. Several hours later, the boys returned for Bennet and jokingly said to him, “We started to leave you out there just to meet the real one.”

However, Blalock asserts that later he actually saw the real Catman. The sighting happened one summer evening as Blalock was driving down on what is now Catman Road trail on the way back from the A&W Rootbeer stand where he worked in Gulf Shores. As the car passed two lake cabins, the headlights shined briefly on a figure who darted across the road and hid behind a tree. Blalock, who was with friends, exited the vehicle with a tire iron. While they did not get another glimpse of the Catman, they did hear the sound of someone wading in the lake behind the cabin.

The Catman Road trailhead can be found on Highway 161, across from Marina Road. Today the road is a paved 2.2-mile trail for walkers, bicyclists and joggers.”

4 Responses to “Catman Road In Alabama”

  1. Jeremiah S

    I just sent this story to my sister who lives in Gulf Shores right now. I wonder if I’m going to get a response. I already been putting Sasquatch in one ear now I got cat man in the other ear. ????

  2. Jeremiah S

    She says she lives 3 miles away from the Gulf State Park and her and her husband ride their bikes through there. She says that she hadn’t heard anything about a cat man but they haven’t been living there that long either she said she would ask around.

  3. Colleen C

    I live ab 20 miles from Gulf State Park and have lived in the area most of my life. Never heard this Catman legend before but my ears always prick up when an AL encounter is mentioned.
    Jeremiah – Your sister and I live very close to each other for sure!

  4. Jeremiah S

    Hey Colleen, that’s super cool that you live close to her, the area, and this somewhat unknown legend. I’ve never heard of this Catman either until recently when the guest on the most recent episode 827 mentioned it. But it was no where close to Alabama. When I saw this blog post and read Gulf Shores and Orange Beach. I said I got to send this to my sister down there. I wasn’t sure I was going to get a response because it might freak her out, on top of me already filling her ear with so much Sasquatch stuff.
    But to my surprise, she did respond and got a kick out it. She said she tried to leave a comment but found out that only subscribed members can comment. I told her I would pass her word along to my Sasquatch peeps, lol. She told me when I come to visit that she would take me there. Silently I thought, I ain’t in no hurry to visit Katmandu (Bob Seger song reference).
    I’m glad that you, as a fellow Alabamian, popped your head up. I always wonder if there is other members here from Ala. I’m on the MeWe Sasquatch Chronicles Forum. To me its easier to post pictures and other content to share with other members. Reason I bring it up is because thats where I posted a pic of a road sign ,up close to where I live, Wildman Bottom Rd. Its in Russell County 4 hours north of you. I thinks its cool to know about your local lore. Especially if I need to be keeping my eyes peeled and my head on a swivel, lol.
    I will share your post with her. Who knows, we might have a member in the making.

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