Advertisement

Kate “Rattlesnake Kate” <I>McHale</I> Slaughterback

Advertisement

Kate “Rattlesnake Kate” McHale Slaughterback

Birth
Longmont, Boulder County, Colorado, USA
Death
6 Oct 1969 (aged 76)
Greeley, Weld County, Colorado, USA
Burial
Platteville, Weld County, Colorado, USA GPS-Latitude: 40.2182196, Longitude: -104.8145621
Memorial ID
View Source
This headstone lies next to our Camp family headstones and I was very intrigued by the name. I asked our living Camp relatives about Kate and did some research on this fascinating person and here is what I found:
Kate was riding out to a pond to gather some injured ducks with her son Ernie who was 3 years old. When she climbed down off her horse to open a gate, a rattle snake appeared. She shot it with her rifle, then 3 more snake appeared. She shot those but more rattlers appeared and she became aware that she did not have enough ammo to kill at the snakes. She uprooted a "No Hunting" sign and began to use it to kill the snakes. After a two hour fight the snakes were gone and she could safely return to her home. A neighbor saw her return and went to talk with her. The neighbor and Kate rode back to the site and found 140 dead rattlesnakes. She became an overnight hero.
She used over 50 of the skins to make a dress for herself, which is currently on display at the museum in Greeley. She also make a pair of shoes and a neck band which she often wore.
She also was a nurse in WW2. She had to parachute out of a plane and had broken her hip. The plane crashed and everyone still aboard died.
Her farmhouse was purchased in 2002 and moved to Centennial Village where is it now a part of the museum.
TO see photos of Kate, go to http://www.greeleyhistory.org/pages/rattlesnake_kate.htmlKatherine “Rattlesnake Kate” McHale Slaughterback, age 76, passed away on October 6, 1969. Kate was born in a log cabin about 9 miles east of Longmont on July 25, 1893 to the late Wallace and Alvina McHale. In her early life, she was known to enjoy wearing pants instead of dresses, and loved shooting guns and working hard.
An independent lady, Kate was progressive for the time—she had married and divorced several times and had been a trained nurse and taxidermist. Rumor has it that she was also a bootlegger.

On October 28, 1925, Katherine McHale Slaughterback (1863-1969) was out with her 3-year old adopted son Ernie. They were on horseback and headed toward a lake near her farm in Hudson, Colorado after hearing what sounded like hunters. Slaughterback hoped they would find ducks left by the hunters, but what they found instead were over a hundred migrating rattlesnakes. Kate fired the bullets in her .22 Remington rifle until none remained. She had disturbed the snakes and soon Ernie, Kate and her horse were surrounded.
Worried about Ernie and her horse, and with nothing left in the gun, Kate grabbed a nearby sign—ironically it’s believed to have been a “No Hunting” sign—and began killing the rattlesnakes, one-by-one, until all were dead.
According to Kate, “I fought them with a club not more than 3 feet long, whirling constantly for over two hours before I could kill my way out of them and get back to my faithful horse and Ernie, who were staring at me during my terrible battle not more than 60 feet away.
All totaled, she killed 140 snakes.

The story immediately spread like wildfire and according to Kate, “Soon a newspaper reporter came and had me string 140 dead rattlesnakes on a wire and have my photo taken.”

The story of her bravery earned Kate national notoriety. Reports of her snake-killing story and photos emerged, and the incident earned her the nickname “Rattlesnake Kate.”

Kate was a lady of many talents and someone who did not waste anything. Prior to the incident, Kate had taken a correspondence class from the Northwestern School of Taxidermy in Omaha, Nebraska. She was also proficient at sewing. Putting both skills to work, she used a fair amount of the snakeskins and rattles to create a one-of-a-kind flapper-style dress with matching shoes and accessories.
The snakeskins were attached to a simple-style underdress.
According to Ernie, Kate wore the dress to a few parties and supposedly wore the dress while she danced on top of a tavern bar in Juarez, Mexico.
Kate would ultimately go on to raise rattlesnakes on her property, extracting their venom for profit. She would also make and sell snakeskin souvenirs.

Visitors can see the original dress, which is kept in an air-tight, climate and light controlled case at the Greeley History Museum.
Three weeks before her death, Kate donated the dress to what was then called the Greeley Municipal Museum. She claimed the dress was patented and that she once had an offer from the Smithsonian Institute to purchase the dress.
She died in 1969 at the age of seventy-five. At her request, her headstone in the Platteville cemetery where she is buried reads, “Rattlesnake Kate.”
In 1987 and 1988, Ernie donated additional items of Kate’s to the museum including her .22 Remington.
This headstone lies next to our Camp family headstones and I was very intrigued by the name. I asked our living Camp relatives about Kate and did some research on this fascinating person and here is what I found:
Kate was riding out to a pond to gather some injured ducks with her son Ernie who was 3 years old. When she climbed down off her horse to open a gate, a rattle snake appeared. She shot it with her rifle, then 3 more snake appeared. She shot those but more rattlers appeared and she became aware that she did not have enough ammo to kill at the snakes. She uprooted a "No Hunting" sign and began to use it to kill the snakes. After a two hour fight the snakes were gone and she could safely return to her home. A neighbor saw her return and went to talk with her. The neighbor and Kate rode back to the site and found 140 dead rattlesnakes. She became an overnight hero.
She used over 50 of the skins to make a dress for herself, which is currently on display at the museum in Greeley. She also make a pair of shoes and a neck band which she often wore.
She also was a nurse in WW2. She had to parachute out of a plane and had broken her hip. The plane crashed and everyone still aboard died.
Her farmhouse was purchased in 2002 and moved to Centennial Village where is it now a part of the museum.
TO see photos of Kate, go to http://www.greeleyhistory.org/pages/rattlesnake_kate.htmlKatherine “Rattlesnake Kate” McHale Slaughterback, age 76, passed away on October 6, 1969. Kate was born in a log cabin about 9 miles east of Longmont on July 25, 1893 to the late Wallace and Alvina McHale. In her early life, she was known to enjoy wearing pants instead of dresses, and loved shooting guns and working hard.
An independent lady, Kate was progressive for the time—she had married and divorced several times and had been a trained nurse and taxidermist. Rumor has it that she was also a bootlegger.

On October 28, 1925, Katherine McHale Slaughterback (1863-1969) was out with her 3-year old adopted son Ernie. They were on horseback and headed toward a lake near her farm in Hudson, Colorado after hearing what sounded like hunters. Slaughterback hoped they would find ducks left by the hunters, but what they found instead were over a hundred migrating rattlesnakes. Kate fired the bullets in her .22 Remington rifle until none remained. She had disturbed the snakes and soon Ernie, Kate and her horse were surrounded.
Worried about Ernie and her horse, and with nothing left in the gun, Kate grabbed a nearby sign—ironically it’s believed to have been a “No Hunting” sign—and began killing the rattlesnakes, one-by-one, until all were dead.
According to Kate, “I fought them with a club not more than 3 feet long, whirling constantly for over two hours before I could kill my way out of them and get back to my faithful horse and Ernie, who were staring at me during my terrible battle not more than 60 feet away.
All totaled, she killed 140 snakes.

The story immediately spread like wildfire and according to Kate, “Soon a newspaper reporter came and had me string 140 dead rattlesnakes on a wire and have my photo taken.”

The story of her bravery earned Kate national notoriety. Reports of her snake-killing story and photos emerged, and the incident earned her the nickname “Rattlesnake Kate.”

Kate was a lady of many talents and someone who did not waste anything. Prior to the incident, Kate had taken a correspondence class from the Northwestern School of Taxidermy in Omaha, Nebraska. She was also proficient at sewing. Putting both skills to work, she used a fair amount of the snakeskins and rattles to create a one-of-a-kind flapper-style dress with matching shoes and accessories.
The snakeskins were attached to a simple-style underdress.
According to Ernie, Kate wore the dress to a few parties and supposedly wore the dress while she danced on top of a tavern bar in Juarez, Mexico.
Kate would ultimately go on to raise rattlesnakes on her property, extracting their venom for profit. She would also make and sell snakeskin souvenirs.

Visitors can see the original dress, which is kept in an air-tight, climate and light controlled case at the Greeley History Museum.
Three weeks before her death, Kate donated the dress to what was then called the Greeley Municipal Museum. She claimed the dress was patented and that she once had an offer from the Smithsonian Institute to purchase the dress.
She died in 1969 at the age of seventy-five. At her request, her headstone in the Platteville cemetery where she is buried reads, “Rattlesnake Kate.”
In 1987 and 1988, Ernie donated additional items of Kate’s to the museum including her .22 Remington.

Inscription

Rattlesnake Kate, daughter of Wallace & Albina McHale, July 25, 1893; Oct 6, 1969.

Gravesite Details

Rattlesnake Kate's tombstone is located on the west side of the cemetery. It is in the middle of the row.



Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement

See more Slaughterback or McHale memorials in:

Flower Delivery Sponsor and Remove Ads

Advertisement