The Shark Attacks That Were the Inspiration for Jaws
One rogue shark. Five victims. A mysterious threat. And the era of the killer great white was born
- Smithsonian.com, August 07, 2012, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
What actions were taken in these New Jersey towns after the string of attacks began?
On the coast, many communities put up fences around their beaches. Other communities put up money or rewards to people who could bring in sharks—so much a head per shark, which prompted a bunch of fishermen to go out and fish. Shark fishing became the rage. One of the newspapers declared it a new sport. It is like what happened when the book and the movie Jaws came out in the 1970s. It spawned a huge upswing in recreational fishing for sharks with fishing tournaments. There was this collective testosterone rush that occurred on the East Coast of the United States following those events because every guy wanted to go out and catch a shark, have his picture taken with his foot on the head of a shark and have a shark jaw hanging up in his house.
The rogue shark was ultimately caught, right?
The final story was that a white shark was caught nearby. According to the newspapers of the time, it yielded body parts of two of the victims from Matawan Creek. The shark itself was put on display in somebody’s shop in New York and yielded a nice dividend of money for the owner, who charged so much per head to see it.
The question we at the International Shark Attack File have is, how good was the report that the animal was, one, a white shark and, two, really had human remains that could be identified as those two people? Of course, we don’t have the benefit of the kinds of things we would have today, such as good photographs of that shark. We could have used photographs to confirm the species. Also, there was no coroner’s report to prove the human remains part. All we can do is believe what was said in the press at the time. The press identified it as a white shark.
Did the 1916 shark attacks inspire Peter Benchley’s Jaws?
Certainly, Benchley was aware of the 1916 stuff. As part of his book, he had done some looking back at the attacks. It was inspirational to him in terms of getting the feeling of the social terror. The first Jaws movie was a masterpiece in capturing those feelings.
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Comments (4)
Just seen 12 days of terror. This was great reading. *****?
Posted by ron bodnar on October 20,2012 | 10:39 PM
It was most likely a Bull shark and NOT a Great White but otherwise good article.
Posted by Logan on August 12,2012 | 09:53 PM
Interesting!I saw this story on "Real Story: Jaws" on the Smithsonian Channel this past June.
Posted by Mike on August 8,2012 | 06:27 PM
As printed in the NY Times Benchley also received inspiration from a series of shark attacks that occurred in the summer of 1916. A shark staked its claim along the New Jersey shore, killing four people and wounding one. Correction appeared in NY Times - http://www.nytimes.com/2001/09/08/nyregion/c-corrections-091162.html?pagewanted=all An article on Wednesday and one in the New Jersey section on Sunday about fears over sharks referred incorrectly to the inspiration for the 1974 novel ''Jaws.'' Its author, Peter Benchley, says the book was not inspired by attacks off New Jersey in 1916. If he was alive you'd be printing a correction.
Posted by Alb on August 8,2012 | 08:29 AM