08/02/09

Brutus the Cat: The Mayor of Gilpin Avenue
Karen Nichols


This week, Kathleen Keane’s essay at Delaware Online describing the special relationship between a man and his cat brought both a smile to my face and a tear to my eye. It really is the best thing you’re likely to read all week. Grab a hanky.

Brutus and Hoppy: Two voices, one heart

This is the story of the ties between an ordinary man and an extraordinary cat

By KATHLEEN KEANE
Special to The News Journal

WILMINGTON — This is a simple story, uncomplicated, and life-affirming. A story about an old man and his best friend, which happened to be a cat

Earl Hopkins Sr., or Hoppy as he preferred to be called, was an ordinary old man living out his days on the back porch of his house on a tree-lined street in Trolley Square, drinking non-alcoholic beer, watching John Wayne movies on TV, and listening to music on the radio his daughter bought for him last Father’s Day.

He saw nearly everything that needed seeing, done nearly everything that needed doing. His life, without digging too deeply, was ordinary. Married a few times, widowed, children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, he spent his working life as a long-distance hauler, driving rigs from Florida up to Canada. He served his country as a Marine in the South Pacific from 1942 to 1946.

An ordinary 86-year-old man waiting for the end of days.

His days came to an end on July 15. Hoppy died of complications of a stroke. He will be missed by his family, his neighbors and his friends. He will be sorely and sorrowfully missed by his extraordinary feline friend, Brutus.

Though his pedigree is a bit murky, Brutus resembles a rather fat Siamese.

“We look kinda alike,” said Hoppy in an interview only weeks before he died. “We both have blue eyes and a big chunk of our ear is missing. He lost his in a catfight, and I lost mine to cancer.”

Brutus was a present to Hoppy from a daughter, who worked at Faithful Friends and took a liking to him.

“We figured he was about 6 years old, and he came into the house, and took over the place, and adopted me. He follows me wherever I go. Likes to be outside on the front porch, just sits there and watches folks go by when he’s not following me around.

“I was in the hospital a few weeks back, getting my blood pressure under control, and you would have thought the world had come to an end, as far as Brutus was concerned. He went around the neighborhood looking for me, crying and hissing, and generally making a nuisance of himself.

“I’ve always had pets, raised Dobermans for a while, and had all sorts of dogs and cats over the years. But this guy, Brutus, he is something else, almost human. Knows all the kids on the street, I call him the Mayor of Gilpin Avenue. Knows everyone, talks to everyone, and yeah, he goes out at night, and I don’t ask where he goes. That’s his business. When I call, he comes. That’s all that matters to me.

“People walking down the avenue call out, ‘Hey, Brutus,’ and he goes bounding off the porch to be greeted. He is so darn popular, I had my son-in-law erect a wooden stand on the corner with a beautiful picture of him along with his biography for the enjoyment of the neighbors. (see photo, right)

“Brutus knows all the regulars who walk on this street,” said Hoppy’s daughter, Dot Nead, 63. “He knows the time of day each one comes by, and he actually waits on the front steps for them. A runner comes by daily and of course, Brutus is waiting for him. The runner stopped me one day and asked if he was special, because the cat always made such a fuss over him, and I told him, no, everyone is special to Brutus.”

Although Brutus’ lineage is unknown, Hoppy and his family have been in these parts for generations.

“I was born up in Forty Acres; do not confuse Forty Acres with Trolley Square. Trolley Square is a shopping center; remember when it was the old trolley barn. My grandfather delivered mail in the neighborhood, and my father was a city firefighter.

“Brutus eats the same food as I do, give him a filet now and then, and he loves the inside of my sandwiches.

“He’s my baby and my friend. We love each other. And sure, he sleeps with me. At 7 a.m. on the button, he puts his nose right up to mine.”

Hoppy will no longer be wakened by his pal Brutus. And Brutus is distraught. He either roams about the house looking for Hoppy, or sits likes a sphinx on the porch waiting for the master who will never arrive.

Brutus will still greet his neighbors on Gilpin Avenue. He is simply moving his perch several doors away to take up residence with one of Hoppy’s neighbors, who lives with her 8-year-old grandson Matthew and his bunny, Pichu.

But cats like Brutus don’t forget. Brutus won’t forget the days on the back porch with Hoppy. Or he nights they snuggled close.

Brutus is waiting.

Waiting for the day to come when they will again sleep together. Brutus and Hoppy, faithful friends, forever.

The Hopkins family has allowed this reporter to become Brutus’ new caretaker. Brutus has had no comment.

[LINK: DelawareOnline.com]

See related Cat's Meow entries:
05/15/09

Happy Birthday to Catster Superstar Toulouse!
Skeezix the Cat

toulouse_birthday

birthday_skeezixHey evrybuddy, Skeezix heer. Today thare are 2 vary speshul berthdays being sellubrated on Catster. The ferst, as yoo mite alreddy have gessed, is Toulouse’s berthday. He is 14 yeers old today. PHEW!!! That’s OLD!

Toulouse is one of the ferst frends I made on Catster, and I consider myself vary lucky to be counted among his 1000+ frends. Toulouse is always thare to help anycat in need, and he’s at praktikly evry pawty thare is on Catster! It’s cats like Toulouse hoo help make Catster the most magical spot on the innernets.

Reesintly, when a groop of Tennessee cats needed to be rehomed, Toulouse helped form a groop to get the cats adopted out and organize an auction to raze munneys for expenses. Toulouse does stuff like that all the time. Yoo can count on him no matter what.

Win peeple ask me whut I do on Catster, it’s an easy qweschun to anser: I make lifelong frends like my buddy Toulouse. Happy Berthday, Toulouse!

And check back a little later today for an in-depth interview with a Catster Fashionista hoo is sellubrating his 20th berthday today!

See related Cat's Meow entries:
01/18/09

Seven Garbage Bags of Dead Siamese Cats Dumped in Texas
Karen Nichols

siamese.jpg

A passerby made a gruesome discovery along Cibolo Creek outside of San Antonio Texas this week: seven garbage bags full of dead cats. All of the cats were adults and all appeared to be purebred Siamese, about 49 cats in all.

Guadalupe County Animal Control responded to the call on Wednesday, according to Sheriff Arnold Zwicke. The cats appeared to have been frozen before being dumped.

“We brought some of them to a local veterinarian and he’s checking them out,” Zwicke said. “The rest we buried by the (county) road and bridge yard in Marion.”

The vet will attempt to determine the cause of death. Additionally, the sheriff’s department is analyzing the bags for fingerprints.

“It needs to be taken seriously,” Zwicke said. “It’s not every day that someone does something like this.”

At this point, the best guess is that the dead cats were dumped by a breeder. They may have been killed after an outbreak of a communicable disease in the breeding facility made it too expensive to provide the cats with medical treatment. Another theory was that the cats died from carbon monoxide poisoning after a heater malfunctioned.

Tonja Pfister, director of Texas Siamese Rescue agrees that it’s likely the cats were dumped by a breeder or perhaps a desperate cat hoarder. “Let’s regulate breeders,” Pfister said. “Is there any reason the U.S.D.A does not require breeders to be licensed?”

Sheriff Zwicke promised a full investigation. “There is a better way to handle it if it was an accident,” Zwicke said. “And if it was on purpose, we need to bring this person to justice.”

Pfister said she was encouraged that the Sheriff’s Department appears to be taking the case seriously. “Sheriff Zwicke is an animal person and he does care,” she said. “I congratulate the sheriff, and I usually don’t do that with sheriffs.”

The incident is being investigated currently as a littering case, but could become an animal cruelty case, pending the results of the veterinarian’s findings.

Anyone with information about the cats should call the Guadalupe County Sheriff’s Department at (830) 379-1224.

See related Cat's Meow entries: