North Carolina writer Will Harlan describes Carol Ruckdeschel as the “wildest woman in America.” She eats roadkill, shot a man in self-defense and cuts open turtle guts.
But she also published groundbreaking science and shaped public policy on Cumberland Island for four decades. And she did it all from a rickety shack in the wilderness. Harlan’s new biography, Untamed, recently released by Grove Atlantic, gets behind her outer image.
“She embodies the spirit of Cumberland Island, that wild, untamed spirit,” Harlan says. “And I think that’s why people gravitate toward her because she embodies what we love most about that island.”
Ruckedeschel has been at the center of raging debates on Cumberland Island, a National Seashore owned by the American people, since she moved there in 1974. Those debates often pit this scrappy, pig-tailed naturalist in overalls and boots against well-heeled and bejeweled descendants of the nation’s industrial elite.
“What is most important to her is the wild, unmanipulated and unmanaged part of the island,” Harlan says. “She thinks nature should be allowed to run its course.”
Harlan worked with Ruckdeschel for two decades as a fellow naturalist and wilderness advocate. He had unprecedented access to her letters and journals. And his biography uses these intimate details to splay open Ruckdeschel’s innards, like the turtles she guts.
And there are many details to explore. Three close male companions died near her little house in the woods. There was the lover who attacked her in a drunken rage, the friend who couldn’t swim and the husband who collapsed from a stroke on her front porch.
Harlan’s reckoning of these tales is largely positive toward Ruckdeschel. But he doesn’t miss the central hypocrisy in her politics. She believes the National Park Service ought to restrict human access to the wilderness. But she still lives in it.
“All of the gory details are in there if you want to read it,” Harlan says. “But what she wants to come from this book is a renewed interest in protecting Cumberland.”
The island faces many challenges. Wealthy islanders want to extend their residencies on the island, even though they sold their land to the Park Service and agreed to leave. And of course, rising sea levels eventually will threaten the entire Georgia coast.
I was just amazed to learn about Ruckdeschel’s scientific accomplishments. She became one of the nation’s foremost experts on sea turtles. But she didn’t do it from the halls of academe. She did it the old-fashioned way. She used keen, first person observation, and good notes, over a long period of time.
Harlan’s narrative is engaging and always forward-moving. Characters leap off the page. Colorful figures, including developer Charles Frasier and Carnegie heir Lucy Ferguson, all have their own shining roles in this real-life drama.
Critters also end up being big characters. Turtles, horses and snakes. Ruckdeschel gave them all funny names, like Pretty Butt and Stumpy. She is a Georgia original.
I had the pleasure of meeting the woman herself on three occasions. Back then, it was a lot more difficult. There wasn’t a Park Service van running up to the remote north end every day. These trips were highlights of my 18-year career in radio.
So, here in this podcast, I’m presenting a 14-minute interview with Harlan. I recorded the conversation at Scott Stell Park just off I-95 in west Chatham County. Harlan was on his way down the highway to St. Simons Island. He graciously agreed to meet with me.
Hopefully, Harlan will find his way to Savannah soon to talk about Ruckdeschel and her beloved Cumberland Island home. It’s also our national treasure.
Theme Music:
Open Those Bright Eyes” Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
I love these stories of our fabulous coastal region! So fun to hear the voice of one who knew this wonderful woman. Thank you Orlando.
You’re welcome. It was a pleasure reminiscing about my time on Cumberland Island.
I lived on Cumberland Island back in the mid 80’s for about 6 months. I worked at Greyfield Inn. I loved Carol and Bob! Here’s my Carol and Bob story: there was a 4th of July potluck picnic just for the residents of the island. Everyone brought something a dish to share. Carol and Bob brought meatloaf. Now, I’ve never been a meatloaf fan but I tried a couple of bites to be polite and although I don’t have a memory of the taste, I know it wasn’t particularly delicious. Carol and Bob asked me how I liked the meatloaf. To be polite, I told them it was very good. They giggled and then proudly exclaimed, “oh, that was Chester”! I had just eaten horse-meatloaf. Chester was an old palomino that someone gave to Carol and Bob because he was old and infirm. When Chester no longer had a good quality of life, they “euthanized” him and turned him into meatloaf, jerky, and other Chester-delicacies. This is how Bob and Carol lived off the land. Nothing goes to waste!
That’s my Carol and Bob story! I really liked Carol and Bob. She was such an interesting woman and so dedicated to the preservation of wildlife and always very pleasant whenever I encountered her.
Thanks for the story. I suppose that I’m lucky that I don’t remember what I ate at Carol and Bob’s.
She did not kill McKee in self defense. It was murder. As someone who’s read the evidence over and over. Kills me how the media portrays her a hero, but that’s just it, the media lies and so did she.
You appear to have an incomplete understanding of domestic abuse. Thankfully,
the law didn’t
No. my grandfather wrote a book where this crime is mentioned in the book, Libensraum by Ard Eulenfeld. His best friend, someone he grew up with was the man Carol claimed threatened her and she shot in self defense. Police reports are in that book. I have the facts in my position. I am not mistaken. It was murder, / conspiracy theory actually which was helped to be covered thanks to Carols friend Mr Jimmy Carter . That land was in his possession to which Carol claimed before he died he signed to her. Signatures do not match, nothing in documents add up especially since there had been plans for Cumberland island that Carol did not agree with and once again thanks to her “high friends” there was nothing so much as a trial.
A bunch of falsehoods with no evidence, I think, because it is so poorly written, I have no idea what’s really being said here. The bottom line according to the law, is that she didn’t murder anybody.
You are sadly mistaken. Until you have the documents in your hands you can’t say. He worked for the government himself which is how he came to the documents. Everyone may see her as they wish but truth and evidence is out there. Sorry you and everyone else are so mislead but that’s what the government does to people and always will.
Looks like someone delete my reply… not surprised. Doesn’t matter. Everyone’s bill comes due..
Cumberland is once again under threat from development. Please sign the petition to preserve it.
https://www.change.org/p/citizens-opposed-to-the-10-lot-development-on-cumberland-island?recruiter=339682115&utm_source=share_petition&utm_medium=facebook&utm_campaign=share_facebook_responsive&utm_term=des-md-no_src-no_msg