[log in to unmask] wrote: > In Cooperstown, New York there is a museum that still displays the so-called > "Cardiff Giant," Sorry I got in on this late as my other email addresses have been bursting at the seams for the past two weeks.... Here's an excerpt from a newspaper column I wrote in 1991: ...The perpetrators of the Piltdown hoax were never discovered, but the most amazing hoax of the 19th century, the Cardiff Giant, did have a motive and an identified perpetrator. In 1866 a tobacco farmer in Iowa named George Hull decided to play a joke on the town's minister. Hull became so mad about the minister's belief in Biblical giants that he resolved to fool people with a giant hoax. In 1868 Hull bought a huge block of gypsum and had a 10 foot giant secretly carved in Chicago. The 3,000 pound statue was aged with acid and a special spike-studded hammer was used to produce pores on the giant's surface. Hull had the figure secretly shipped to a relative's farm in New York where it was buried. The relative casually instructed his workmen to dig a well and the giant was "discovered" on October 16, 1869. Hull began to charge admission for people to view what many believed to be a giant fossilized man. P.T. Barnum offered Hull $60,000 for the giant. Finally, Hull admitted the true story , but even then well-known Americans continued to insist it was an ancient fossilized man. German author Kurt Marek wrote in his excellent book, _The First American_, that the great essayist Oliver Wendell Holmes drilled a hole into the ear region and said the figure had marvelous anatomical detail. And the great writer Ralph Waldo Emerson said the giant was "very wonderful and undoubtedly ancient." The Cardiff Giant, sometimes called the American Goliath, was exhibited for many years all across America. Finally the biggest forgery in the history of American archaeology was placed in the Farmer's Museum in Cooperstown, N.Y. All the best, Russell Smith Abilene, Texas