Jigger Johnson
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Jigger_Johnson an entity of type: Thing
Albert Lewis Johnson (1871–1935), better known as Jigger Johnson (also nicknamed Wildcat Johnson, Jigger Jones, or simply The Jigger), was a legendary logging foreman, trapper, and fire warden for the U.S. Forest Service who was known throughout the American East for his many off-the-job exploits, such as catching bobcats alive barehanded, and drunken brawls. The U.S. Forest Service maintains the Jigger Johnson Campground in the White Mountain National Forest, which they named in honor of him.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Jigger Johnson
rdf:langString
Albert Lewis Johnson
rdf:langString
Albert Lewis Johnson
xsd:date
1871-05-12
xsd:integer
53427129
xsd:integer
1097389904
xsd:date
1871-05-12
xsd:integer
700
rdf:langString
Johnson in 1922
xsd:integer
500
xsd:integer
300
rdf:langString
Jigger Johnson as a fire warden on Carter Dome
rdf:langString
left
rdf:langString
Lumberjack, fire warden, trapper
xsd:integer
159
xsd:integer
30
rdf:langString
Albert Lewis Johnson (1871–1935), better known as Jigger Johnson (also nicknamed Wildcat Johnson, Jigger Jones, or simply The Jigger), was a legendary logging foreman, trapper, and fire warden for the U.S. Forest Service who was known throughout the American East for his many off-the-job exploits, such as catching bobcats alive barehanded, and drunken brawls. Logging historians, such as Stewart Holbrook, Robert Pike, and others, have called him "the last lumberjack" of the old-fashioned type who "cut a swath of timber from Maine to Oregon" and "yelled like crazy devils every spring when they pounded the bars in Bangor, Saginaw, St. Paul, and Seattle". The U.S. Forest Service maintains the Jigger Johnson Campground in the White Mountain National Forest, which they named in honor of him.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
19959
xsd:gYear
1871