John (left) with a friend, at the main frog tank. |
Always very interested in frogs, John began collecting them from the ponds and ditches around his home.
His forays gathered the amphibians for use by hospitals and
universities in medical research. Soon, thousands lived in a big tank at the
yard where he kept his lorries.
John’s home became known as
The Froggeries, a notice by his gate advertising ‘England’s Largest Frog
Dealer’. Frog requirements grew ever greater; John advertised for more,
at 2s 6d (12½p) a dozen. Local children caught them to supplement their
pocket-money, but John was picky and would accept only prime specimens.
During 1949 John agreed to
sell a motorbike to his neighbour, Albert Shortman. The price agreed between the two men was 2,500 frogs, in
John’s mind equivalent to £25. The motorbike changed hands; however,
time passed and John claimed Albert only ever made a down-payment of 88 frogs; finally the case went
to court at Redruth.
At the hearing there was
much deliberation over the habits of frogs, and methods of capturing them.
John’s (estranged) wife testified that Albert had actually paid 1,000 frogs,
leaving an outstanding balance of only 1,500. Perplexed Judge Scobell
Armstrong, presiding, felt he was dealing with “a little community of
people who appeared to think of currency in terms only of frogs.”
Eventually, the hearing
found for John. Albert was ordered pay the remaining amphibians.
John’s council, Mr Caffin, when awarded costs, was asked by the exasperated judge whether he’d prefer money or frogs.
John developed other
interests; snails, dogs and pigeons all fascinated him. But always, his frogs
came first. Despite many accidents while catching frogs – he often tumbled in streams and twice fell into the same
quarry – John lived to a ripe old age.
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