Historic Nantucket, January 1979, Vol. 26 No. 3

Page 30

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Nantucket Quintuple ts by Theodore C. Wyman IN "THE ISLAND STEAMERS" by Paul C. Morris and Joseph F. Morin there is an interesting story about Marshall Barrett and the cats who made Steamboat Wharf their home. And about how he fed them and encouraged them to stay on as part of the local rat control program. Of especial interest to me as I had the great privilege of knowing a most unusual cat named Mehitable who lived on the wharf in 1935. Not only did she take care of the rat control problem all by herself, but she also presented Nantucket with quintuplets (five kittens). So I had an interview with her about her great achievement and it was published in the Boston Globe. And here is a report of that interview. Nantucket, Mass., March 13, 1935 The honor of the United States and the glory of Nantucket were upheld and added to on the third of March when Mehitable, the wharf cat, presented five kittens to a palpitating world that had been eagerly anticipating the blessed event. News of her great achievement was at first withheld from the general press, as Mehitable was afraid that her children might be taken away from her and established in some cat hospital where more elaborate equipment for their care could be had. Now, however, she has decided to let the glad tidings ring forth throughout all the land, and for that purpose granted an interview to-day. A few intimate friends of the family have been allowed to gaze upon the new born marvels, but until now no sanctioned interview has been granted. Mehitable, as many local Nantucket people know, is a most unusual member of the feline family, and has made quite a reputation for herself by her eccentric habits and by her ability to keep the freight shed free of mice and rats. The impressionable months of her early life were spent on the Coast Guard cutter ARGO, and she has never quite relinquished the roll in her walk or the sound of rumbling surf that creeps into her purring. It was only natural, considering her early seafaring life, that she should choose the steamboat dock as her new home after leaving the ARGO. There, at least, she could still hear the steamboat whistles and could instill in her children the love of the sea that is so deeply intrenched in her soul.


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