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PIRT: PGF Image Resource Thread

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Image: Cibachrome copy of PGF frame 352.

Description: Cibachrome of frame 352. Made by Bruce Bonney for Rene Dahinden. This is a scan of the page from the book Manlike Monsters on Trial: Early Records and Modern Evidence (1980). This is the first time that this Cibachrome image appeared.

Note: This specific image is the most famous from the PGF. It is unique and characteristic because it shows what may appear to be a curled right hand. Some have said this may be an accidental artifact of processing. This image also accounts for more than 99% of all representations of frame 352. Representations that are from sources other than this Cibachrome do not show the "curled hand". This image is copyrighted to Rene Dahinden 1968 and may actually not be public domain as is commonly thought. This Cibachrome image shows that the original PGF may not be as blurry as many have presumed. (WP)

Tag words: Cibachrome, Rene Dahinden, Bruce Bonney, Frame 352, copyright, public domain
 
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Image: Contract between George and Vilma Radford detailing the lending of $700 to Patterson by the Radfords.

Description: After being struck by a drunk driver in May of 1965, Vilma Radford received $14,000 in a court settlement. Jerry Lee Merritt, a close friend of Roger Patterson's also involved closely with his Bigfoot film project, was the promoter of the Velvet Illusions, a rock band funded by the Radfords of which their son was a member. Jerry had borrowed money from the Radfords and told Patterson of Vilma's court settlement. Jerry introduced Roger to the Radfords in May of 1967.

Roger Patterson was creating the film Bigfoot: America's Abominable Snowman when he ran out of funding and could no longer pay for the services of Fred Smith, a cameraman from Yakima's largest TV station, KIMA TV and the 16mm camera he brought with him. Roger told the Radfords about sighting Bigfoot personally and how many people were trying to prove the creature's existence. He told the Radfords that he needed money to be able to film a Bigfoot in California to prove the claims he had made.

From p. 302 of The Making of Bigfoot: The Inside Story by Greg Long. Prometheus Books 2004:

"All he had to have was something to prove that he had seen the thing." - Vilma Radford

What Patterson asked the Radfords for was money to pay for the 16mm camera they no longer had so that he could film the creature for his movie. This is exactly what the Radfords gave him...

"I gave him just enough money to rent a camera. He immediately went down and found a Bigfoot." - Vilma Radford (TMoB, p. 303)

Patterson never used the $700 for the camera. He failed to pay anything at all for rental fees to Sheppard's Camera Shop where he got the Cine Kodak 100 camera that he filed Patty with and was eventually arrested over the matter. Bigfooter Peter Byrne tracked down and spoke to Harold Mattson, the owner of Sheppard's Camera Shop in 1967...

"He confirmed that Patterson rented the camera in May 1967 and never paid the rental fees to where in November 1967 they went to his house after sending him several warnings and a registered letter. The Yakima County Sheriff's Department finally went out and arrested him and hauled him in. I wasn't so much interested in the wrongdoing as much as I was interested in the numbers on the camera and the number of the lens.

It's difficult, very difficult after all these years. A lot of people have died since then. Patterson hadn't paid any rental. It was something simple like $30 dollars a month, or mabye $50. And he didn't pay it. And there was something else. The check bounced. He bought something like $300 or $400 worth of film, and something about a check bouncing. Roger wasn't very good with money. And Roger didn't have a very good reputation as far as paying his bills. Most of us believed that when he left, there were bills all over the place, from what we heard. He didn't have a very good reputation in that area."
- Peter Byrne (TMoB, p. 186-187)

On October 17, 1967 the Superior Court of Yakima issued an arrest warrant. This was three days before he was supposed to have filmed Patty on October 20, 1967. The warrant was served on November 28, 1967. So Patterson borrowed $700 from Vilma Radford he said he needed for a camera. One that he never paid anything. But there is a problem - he already had the camera from Sheppard's. The arrest warrant issued gives May 13, 1967 as the day Patterson took the camera. So if he got $700 from Vilma, where did it go?

""We ran out of money (for the film). We had $700. Well, Roger and I went down to Hollywood to try to get some money." - Jerry Merritt (TMoB, p. 110)

Note:

- Witnesses signatures are Jane King and Nora Hanharan, Radford's nextdoor neighbours.

- When Vilma Radford came to Patterson's home in early 1968 to try and get her money returned after months of letters threatening legal action (She was in Los Angeles at the time), Patterson responded to her, "Awww, I don't even know where that note is. You've got to prove it to me."

- In the file that Vilma Radford kept the original contract, she also kept the receipt for a check for $200 that George Radford had lent to Jerry Merritt one week before Patterson came to Vilma for money. A note on the receipt states, "Contingent on 10% share of Big Foot contract." It was signed by Merritt.

Tag words: Vilma Radford, George Radford, Jerry Merritt, contract, swindled.
 
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Image: Roger Patterson and his Volkswagen van, with Rene Dahinden on the left.

Description:
Roger Patterson with a young welsh pony in his Volkswagen van with Prop Lock ad. This Prop Lock was Patterson's invention, used on fruit tree props.

Tag words: Roger Patterson, Rene Dahinden, Prop Lock ad, Volkswagen van, related footage
 
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Image: Bob Gimlin's truck.

Description: Bob Gimlin's green one ton Chevy said to be used to transport Pattterson, Gimlin, three horses and supplies and equipment for three weeks stay at Bluff Creek.

Note: Bed is not the same as the modified bed used in 1967. Photo taken by Daniel Perez in 2009 during the Yakima Round-Up.

Tag words: Gimlin's truck, green, Chevy, horses.
 
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Image: Roger Patterson on horseback (#1)

Description: Close-up of Roger Patterson on horseback.

Note: This shirt is not seen in other photos or footage (WP). This may be a still image from film (WP).

Tag words: Roger Patterson, horseback, horse, shirt
 
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Image: Roger Patterson Bigfoot Film (PGF) Fond du Lac Wisconsin 1970 newspaper advertisement.

Description: Roger Patterson's Bigfoot motion film advertisement from the Fond du Lac (Wisconsin) Commonwealth Reporter (newspaper), March 13, 1970.

Tag words: Roger Patterson, Bigfoot Film, PGF, Fond du Lac Wisconsin, related footage, Newspaper ads, Northwest Films, British Broadcasting Corp, BBC.
 
William Parcher contribution from another thread...

This diagram was put together by Chris Murphy. The red line is Patty's path and the blue line is Roger's path. The photo is not actually an aerial shot - it was taken by somebody standing on the hillside (mountain) in 1971.

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Much needed addition of overview of film site.
 
Request for William Parcher:

WP, can you nail up your collage image of Bob Heironimus in various Patterson film frames?
 
We know BH is in that campfire scene but I forgot which guy is him - so I didn't put an arrow. I can also provide you a version of this collage without any arrows.


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Excellent. Thank you. You probably saw I had to make due with an older collage of yours without the campfire scene. Your arrow needs to indicate the guy in black right above Patterson in the red plaid shirt. It's Bob and he's got his jacket on because it is getting dark, I presume. That guy is for sure Bob. You can see in certain frames the vest under his coat.
 
Image of Bob Heironimus (second from left) that was shown on a news clip from KIMA-TV. I don't know the actual origin or context of the scene.


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Still from "roll 2", unknown date and location and cameraman. Possibly shot at Bluff Creek, CA, on Oct 20, 1967 by Roger Patterson. Said to be part of a bigfoot trackway. First shown in Vancouver BC on Oct. 26, 1967. Shown is a pool of casting material in an impression in the earth. Loose dirt surrounds the impression. Arrows show prints/impressions probably made by the person who poured the casting material.
 
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Place and Date unknown, possibly early 1967, near Yakima. Rene Dahinden and Roger Patterson, at Patterson's 1959 (?) Volkswagen Transporter.
 
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We need perfectfoot and blockfoot for reference. also, the pour-scene and the display-scene, and the one of RP reclining in a chair.

WP- These are all linked to your imageshack on the PGF3 thread, I'd just copy and paste them, but you know more about them to give a reasonable caption.

Also, a link that I always use for reference should be included here:
http://www.southwestdj.com/patterson.html
 
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Frame 61. From Cibachrome. From Meldrum's paper on Sasquatch footprints. AKA "perfectfoot" because the right foot is perfectly shown including individual toes.
 
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Frame 72. From Cibachrome. AKA "blockfoot" because the left foot appears as a rectangular block without any toes visible (F323 may also be called "blockfoot").
 
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Frame 323. From Cibachrome. From Meldrum's paper on Sasquatch footprints. AKA "blockfoot" (F72 may also be called "blockfoot").
 
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All known Cibachrome prints. Created by Bruce Bonney for Rene Dahinden. From The Munns Report. Note: This is the source for Frame 352 seen everywhere on the Internet, in print and other mass media. It is presumed to be public domain but may actually be officially copyrighted to Dahinden.
 

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