The Solid Muldoon
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The Solid Muldoon was a supposedly prehistoric "petrified human body" unearthed in 1877, at a spot now known as Muldoon Hill, near
Beulah, Colorado Beulah is an unincorporated community and a post office located within the Beulah Valley census-designated place in Pueblo County, Colorado, United States. The Beulah Post Office has the ZIP code 81023. Beulah is a part of the Beulah Valley C ...
. The figure enjoyed a brief tour of the United States before it was revealed to be a hoax. It was said to have been named after wrestler
William Muldoon William A. Muldoon (May 25, 1845 – June 3, 1933) was the Greco-Roman Wrestling Champion, a physical culturist and the first chairman of the New York State Athletic Commission. He once wrestled a match that lasted over seven hours. Nicknamed "Th ...
, whose nickname was "The Solid Man". This nickname was itself a reference to a comic song called "Muldoon, the Solid Man", written by Edward Harrigan.


History

The Solid Muldoon was created by George Hull in 1877, seven years after his infamous
Cardiff Giant The Cardiff Giant was one of the most famous archaeological hoaxes in American history. It was a , 3,000 pound purported "petrified man" uncovered on October 16, 1869, by workers digging a well behind the barn of William C. "Stub" Newell in Cardi ...
hoax. It was made of mortar, rock dust, clay, plaster, ground bones, blood and meat. It was kiln-fired for several days and buried near Mace's Hole in
Beulah, Colorado Beulah is an unincorporated community and a post office located within the Beulah Valley census-designated place in Pueblo County, Colorado, United States. The Beulah Post Office has the ZIP code 81023. Beulah is a part of the Beulah Valley C ...
.Shackle, Eric (May 2000)
"Letter to Walt Whitman: Jimplecute, Tombstone Epitaph, Flume and the Solid Muldoon"
Three months later, it was "discovered" by William Conant, who reportedly visited the area often to hunt for fossils. He claimed that while eating his lunch, he had spotted an unusual stone that resembled a human foot, and upon digging away at the surrounding earth, discovered a seven-foot human form lying beneath the ground. The entire figure, according to Conant, was embedded in hard clay which required the use of a pick-axe to remove, and was entangled in the roots of a cedar tree. He eventually unearthed it, however, and took it to Pueblo, where it was placed on display. Closer examination quickly dispelled the notion that the Solid Muldoon was a "petrified man"; instead, it was taken to be an ancient work of art, sculpted by an unknown primitive race."Discovery of a Singular Stone Figure Near Pueblo, Col. - What Is It?"
''The Carroll Herald''. October 31, 1877.
The ''Denver Daily Times'' dismissed the possibility of a hoax, asserting that "there can be no question about the genuineness of this piece of statuary".Calhoun, Patricia (May 8, 2003)
"Go Figure"
''Denver Westword''.
Following the successful Colorado exhibition, the Solid Muldoon went on the road, attracting crowds all the way to
New York City New York, often called New York City or NYC, is the List of United States cities by population, most populous city in the United States. With a 2020 population of 8,804,190 distributed over , New York City is also the L ...
. The well-known showman
P.T. Barnum Phineas Taylor Barnum (; July 5, 1810 – April 7, 1891) was an American showman, businessman, and politician, remembered for promoting celebrated hoaxes and founding the Barnum & Bailey Circus (1871–2017) with James Anthony Bailey. He was ...
was rumored to have offered $20,000 for the body. The hoax was eventually revealed to the ''New York Times'' as a man-made figure of modern origin, "with a knowing smile on his face as if enjoying the joke", one reporter noted. Following a lack of visitors, the Solid Muldoon disappeared from public attention.


Description

The figure represented by the Solid Muldoon is approximately seven feet, six inches tall, and lies on his back, with one arm crossed over his chest and his other hand resting upon his leg. His appearance was described by one contemporary account as "Asiatic ... a cross between an ancient Egyptian and an American Indian". Aside from his height, the figure has several other unusual characteristics; each arm is nearly fifty inches long, and his feet are long, flat and slim. The end of the backbone protrudes outwards some two or three inches in the manner of a tail, which was seen as "strongly suggestive of the truth of the Darwinian theory".


Legacy

''The Solid Muldoon'' was the name of a local newspaper in Ouray, Colorado, founded on September 5, 1879 by
David F. Day David Frakes Day (1847 – 1914) was a Union Army soldier during the American Civil War, and later a newspaper publisher. He received the Medal of Honor for gallantry during the Siege of Vicksburg on May 22, 1863. Early military service Day e ...
. Through a series of name changes and merges, it eventually became the present-day ''
Durango Herald ''The Durango Herald'' is a newspaper in Durango, Colorado. The first edition of the ''Herald'' came out June 30, 1881. Two years later, the ''Herald'' merged with the ''Record'', which had started publishing in 1880, seven months before the ''H ...
''. In 1976, almost a century after the original was crafted, an art student recreated the Solid Muldoon out of an iron beam, molded stucco wire and plaster, to celebrate the centennial of Colorado's statehood.{{citation needed, date=September 2012 The new Solid Muldoon was displayed in
El Pueblo History Museum El Pueblo History Museum is a local history museum in Pueblo, Colorado, United States. The museum presents the history of Pueblo, together with the cultural and ethnic groups of the region. The historical site includes an 1840s-style adobe trading ...
after a brief local tour. In 1984, it was buried in a marked plot near Highway 78 between Pueblo and Beulah."Beulah Grave Marker Memorializes the Solid Muldoon"
American Profile. August 25, 2007.
"Solid Muldoon" is the name of a run at Deer Valley ski resort.


References

Hoaxes in the United States Archaeological forgeries 19th-century hoaxes 1877 in the United States 1877 in science