- Gay's Lion Farm
Gay's Lion Farm was a public
selective breeding facility andtourist attraction located at the south-east junction of Peck Road and Valley Boulevard in the town ofEl Monte in theSan Gabriel Valley in Los Angeles CountyCalifornia ,USA . It operated from 1925 through 1942, when it was closed temporarily due to wartime meat shortages. It never reopened.The early years
Founders Charles and Muriel Gay were Anglo-French circus performers who arrived in
Los Angeles in 1914. They established an attraction inMacArthur Park (then known as Westlake Park) where the public could watch Charles Gay working with three adult lions. The lions were trained as animal actors in the burgeoningmotion picture industry.Needing more room for their animals, the Gays found a large plot of un-zoned property in
El Monte , east ofLos Angeles , where in 1925 they opened Gay's Lion Farm, a public attraction dedicated to the breeding, training and exhibition of African lions. The Farm quickly became one of the most popular tourist attractions in the Southland, doing a brisk trade in souvenir photographic postcards. Among the famous animals raised on the Farm wereMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studio lionsSlats (1924- 1927, died of appendicitis and was stuffed) and his lookalike successorJackie , and the celebrated comic lionNuma (1912-1930, died of cancer and was stuffed), named for the lion in theTarzan books and a co-star inCharlie Chaplin 's "The Circus" (1928).The five acre farm with its thatched roof, African-inspired architecture (a likely inspiration for
Walt Disney 'sAdventureland ), was a U-shaped compound, with separate cages for each adult cat, a nursery, and a central caged arena where Charles Gay, with whip and gun, performed a classic lion tamer act for the crowds. Feedings were also a big draw, with a ton of meat being consumed daily.In 1925,
El Monte High School adopted the Lions name for its teams, and the Gays provided a lion mascot for big games.Visitors
Starting in 1927, the Farm hosted organized visits from men's clubs, such as the
Lions Club and theAdventurers Club . These events centered around outdoor banquets set in a clearing among the animal cages, at which guests were served small samples of barbecued lion meat in addition to steak and chicken. An honored guest at these meals, toasted and encouraged to walk the length of the table, wasNuma the lion.When
Greta Garbo first came to Hollywood in 1926, she didn't speak much English. PublicistDon Gillum arranged a publicity stunt at the Farm where the actress was to be photographed cuddling lion cubs, and in a stunt cage so it looked like she was sitting withNuma . Although Gillum told her what she would be doing, Garbo didn't recognize the word lion, and so didn't realize what was in store for her until she was almost in the cage, at which point she shrieked "Oh! Dos terrible animals!" But she was a good sport and posed for the pictures.Lions escape
In September 1928, while the Gays were traveling in Europe, a trainer failed to close a runway while lions Nigger, Ike and Short-Tail were being moved between cages. Nigger made a dash for freedom, and slashed the arm of farm manager
John Rounan at the moment Rounan fired a shot at the animal; the wound required 100 stitches, and Rounan later died. TrainerJoe Hoffman took off after Nigger and killed him with a bullet in the brain. Short-Tail walked into an open cage, and Hoffman was able to lock him in. But Ike got shot in the leg and ran around the farm in a rage, menacing a cow, a cage full of baby lions and arriving police officers. Ike finally died in a hail of bullets from many guns.The later years
At its high point, there were more than 200 adult lions living at the Farm. The farm closed in December 1942, when wartime rationing made it impossible to get the ton of horse meat required daily for the cats, and the lions were loaned to zoos around the country. But by the time the war ended, Charles Gay was too ill to reclaim his cats. He retired to Balboa Island, where he died in 1950. He is buried at San Gabriel Cemetery.
The site of the Farm is now an overpass of Interstate 10, the location distinguished by a life-sized bronze statue of a male lion behind a large metal fence beside the sidewalk. A larger lion statue, which commissioned for the Farm, stands in front of nearby
El Monte High School .
=ee also
*
List of abandoned amusement parks External links
* [http://www.alamedainfo.com/Gays_Lion_Farm2.htm A private collection of Gay's Lion Farm postcards and pamphlets]
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