RECORD LARGEMOUTH BASS:
ANGLING'S MILLION DOLLAR PRIZE
by Louis Bignami
The most valuable fish in the world?
Bob Kutz, when Director of the National Freshwater Fishing Hall
of Fame, said, "The next world-record largemouth bass,
if it ever comes, will be worth a million dollars. Prizes,
endorsements, outdoor shows; it could be incredible." Stu Tinney, when publisher of Striper Magazine, once noted,
"A million? I could make more than that the first year. If
you could keep the bass alive there's no telling how much you
could make." Times do change. George Perry caught his fish
on a shared rod and reel that cost $1.33 with a $1.35 lure. This
with some 25-pound test waterproof silk line from a row boat
built from 75 cents worth of second-hand lumber scraps. It was
1932. The depression raged. Perry took his fish home and ate it.
His bass was so big it took his family two days to finish the
fish.
THE PERRY RECORD
Mr. Perry's wife, now deceased, and daughters holding a
replica of his record fish.
PHOTO: Bill Baab
As Perry noted, in interviews before his 1974 death in a plane
crash:
"We were out to catch dinner. We only had one lure, so we
shared the rod and the rowing. When it was my turn I tossed the
lure back into a pocket between two fallen trees and gave the
plug a couple of jerks.
"All at once, the water splashed everywhere! I do
remember striking, then raring back and trying to reel. But
nothing budged. I thought I'd lost the fish -- that it had dived
and hung me up. What had me really worried was the lure, it was
the only one we had between us."
As Perry remembered it, the fight wasn't much. It rarely is
with really huge bass. After the fish was landed, Perry toted it
over to the J. J. Hall and Co. General store. In a Sports
Afield article Perry said, "It was almost an accident
that I had it (the fish) weighed and recorded." A buddy
mentioned the Field & Stream Contest with its $75
merchandise prize. So Perry took his fish to the post office
where, several hours after it was caught, the big female weighted
22 pounds 4 ounces and measured 31 inches long and 27 inches
around.
As Perry remembered it, "It created a lot of attention
that day in Helena. The old fellow in the general store weighted
it. He was also a notary public and made the whole thing
official."
Perry's family remembers the story a bit differently,
According to Baab's report in the February, 1989 Bassin',
"Someone at the store mentioned the (Field &
Stream) Big Fish Contest and urged Daddy to enter it. He had
the fish weighed on a set of certified scales at the post office.
According to the contest rules, he had the fish's dimensions and
weight notarized. The fish weighted 22 pounds four ounces."
"Then Perry took his fish home and his mother, Laura,
fried one side for supper, along with onions and tomatoes from
the garden. They ate the other fillet later. Nobody took a photo,
but the family does have a replica of the record bass and the
lure Perry used."
There does seem to have been much confusion about the lure.
According to Baab's Bassin' article -- he is the top
authority on Perry and other bass record holders -- "The
lure was a Wiggle Fish in perch scale manufactured by the Creek
Chub Bait Co." For a time, few could agree on the lure's
identity. It was variously identified as a Fantail Shiner,
Jointed Wag-Tail, Creek Chub Minnow, Creek Chub Wiggler and Creek
Chub Wiggle Fish. Baab discovered a letter from the son of one of
Creek Chub Co. co-founders that, on the basis of conversations
with George Perry, identified the lure as a # 241 jointed perch
Wiggle Fish. Even today the makers of the line, rod and reel used
by Perry remain unknown.
Perry, except for his name, remained relatively unknown too.
He never seemed very impressed with his record. Such shouldn't be
a surprise. Perry, according to George Baab, then Outdoor Editor
of The Augusta Chronicle, "Was a quiet, modest, but
confident man."
In 1932, when Perry caught his big bass, he was a poor
youngster of 20 whose father had died the year before. Perry had
to help support his five brothers and sisters. With only an
eighth grade education, and barely literate, he educated himself
and worked his way up to owning Perry's Flying Service at the
local airport. He eventually died in an air crash.
Naturally, he won the Field & Stream contest with
his 22-pound fish. He took his $75 prize out in a Browning
automatic shotgun, a rod and reel, shotgun shells and some
outdoor clothing. Prices have gone up! At the time this seemed to
Perry like all the gear in the world. Then, just to show his
first fish was not entirely an accident, he won the Field
& Stream Contest again in 1934 with a 13-pound 14-ounce
largemouth.
Today there is a commemorative marker next to Georgia Route
117 just 2 1/2 miles from Montgomery Lake, a side channel wide
spot in the Ocmulggee River near Perry's home in Helena, Georgia.
Perry might not have understood that. Like most brought up in the
depression, he knew the difference between the necessary --
shelter, family, food and job -- and the merely nice, like record
fish. He did understand the changing economics of recreation. In
1973, when interviewed by Baab just before his death, he
mentioned that the record, if caught then, might be worth
$10,000. Today, the record is clearly worth 100 times that. Even
so, his daughter noted, "If Daddy had been a different sort
of person, he could have made a pile of money doing public
speaking about his record." Another friend, Dr. William F.
Austin of nearby Brunswick noted, "George was never very
impressed by the fish, or interested in impressing anyone about
it."
THE LOST RECORD
Most bass fishermen know, and many lust after, the Perry
Record. Almost nobody every wondered about the record Perry
broke. Bill Baab did wonder. While the old Field & Stream
records -- from days before IGFA and NFWFHF handled this chore --
had been destroyed, Baab turned up a 20-pound 10-ounce
largemouth. It was caught by Fritz Friebel and had held the
record for nine years prior to Perry's fish. It reportedly came
from Moody Lake in the Florida panhandle. Friebel's brother
claimed the fish came from nearby Big Fish Lake though. This
record is listed by Florida, but is considered
"uncertified" under the Sunshine state's new, tough
rules.
In any case, Friebel, a traveling hardware salesman who always
toted fishing gear, fished Sunday morning in May of 1923 with a
couple of friends. Friebel took his fish with a Creek Chub
Straight Pikie Minnow. It measured 31 inches long with a 27 inch
girth. The girth might have been off. Friebel's daughter, in a
later interview, noted, "A fellow accused Daddy of loading
his fish with lead sinkers. So daddy cut the fish open and let
the fellow feel inside." Like the Perrys, the family ate the
fish soon after.
RACCOON FISH, WEIGHT EATING BASS AND "MAYBE
"RECORDS
When Baab researched bass records, he discovered an account in
an Indiana newspaper of a 24-pound 12-ounce fish caught from Lake
Tohopekaliga near Orlando, Florida in April of 1974. This
suggests DisneyWorld visitors who skip the fishing might be
missing out!
Raymond Tomer reportedly caught the fish on a dark plastic
worm. His fishing partner and two witnesses testified to the
weight, and that it measured 39 1/2 inches long and 30 inches
around. Tomer put the fish in his cooler, but the cooler lid
wouldn't shut. So when he filleted the fish to cook it, it had
spoiled. So he threw it out. He did nail the head on a post, but
raccoons ate the head that night. Without the fish, its head and
supportive photos, Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission,
and others, refused to recognize the record.
While all of these records are in the Southeast, you can make
a case that the next world record bass will come out of a
Southern California Reservoir some time between December and
April.
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