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Graphic Enterprises - Home of the Pioneer Times - A Web Site for Living History
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We are preserving living history today so that the past will not be forgotten. Jim Cummings
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Bill Smith aka The Ratcatcher
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What gives Smith away to those who have never seen him dressed as the ratcatcher is his distinct voice. One former student athlete heard the ratcatcher speak and knew instantly that it was his former coach under the dirty clothes and bad teeth. “Coach,” he said, ” I’d know that voice anywhere. After having heard you from the sidelines for all the years I was playing - you may look different - but the voice is the same.”
The first time his granddaughter saw him - she was frightened. Now the entire family has grown use to the look. At some point you may see grandfather and granddaughter together (with the rat) as a ratcatcher and his apprentice.
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But Silas Moore does not only appear at local events. He has appeared at George Washington’s home - Mt. Vernon for the last 6 years, at Pemberton Plantation in Salisbury, MD, at Endview Plantation in VA, at Locust Grove in Louisville, KY, at Cumberland Gap Natl Park, at the Lincoln Homestead in Springfield, KY, and at Friendship Hill in western PA (Natl site-home of Albert Gallatin).
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At the 2007 Fair at New Boston Smith donned other period atire - to appear in a play, that was part of the fair. I admit that I walked right past him at first - being so used to seeing him as the ratcatcher. It took a bit of hunting to find other photos of Smith. But sure enough from the GRCHA’s Battle of Peckuwe, there were photos of a different Bill Smith talking to the crowd.
But Smith admits playing Silas Moore is the most fun. He loves the interaction with the crowds - especially the children. And nothing is more fun than seeing him approach a well dressed lady at someplace like Locust Grove and hearing a most ungentlemanly sound emit from his person. Only after a while do you realize that it wasn’t flatulence but that the sound came from the little gizmo in his pocket.
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Part of the fun comes from the spontaneity of re-enactors. Several years ago Silas Moore married Hester Purefinder the beggar woman at the Fair at New Boston. It drew quite a crowd. Never ones to let things get stale, Hester (Colleen Gilbert) and Silas (Smith) followed it up a year or so later with an improvised sketch on the front porch at Locust Grove during the fall 18th century Market Fair.
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It’s great fun to have someone like Hester to play off of admits Smith. Although Smith’s wife travels with him to some events - you will rarely see them together. They don’t want to ruin the impression of the ratcatcher by having him seen too often in the presence of a better dressed 18th century women.
But all joking aside Smith takes his role seriously. He trains his rats for a month or so before an event. He handles them frequently so that they will become used to people. You never know, he told me when a little child will surprise you and stick a finger right in the cage. It really helps to have a well trained rat!
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