57:. In the book, the story of Two-Toed Tom, often referred to simply as Two-Toe or Red-Eye, refers to a red-eyed, 14-foot alligator who would regularly eat farmers livestock as well as men and women, the latter of which he was also said to have raped before eating. The story continues to tell of multiple failed attempts to kill the alligator, including an ex-military sharpshooter who spent over a week in a hunting blind, waiting for the creature, and another incident where the alligator was chased into a pond by farmer Pap Haines, into which 15 syrup buckets of dynamite were lit and thrown into, in an unsuccessful attempt to kill Two-Toe. The story ends with it being mentioned the gator was said to have made his way down to Florida, though the narrator, an old man named Gilmore, believed he'd be back to Alabama eventually.
68:. In a chapter dedicated to the legend in the book Holmesteading by E.W. Carswell, it's described that the creature continued to frequently eat livestock, and would also bellow in response to the whistle at the Alabama-Florida Lumber Company mill in Noma. Further failed attempts at killing Two-Toed Tom are described here as well, with a group of local boys shooting at it with .22 caliber rifles and shotguns, to no effect.
116:, where Hazel and a big talking catfish encounter him while searching for Hazel's mother, it is depicted as a ginormous albino alligator with a island attached to his back, in order to distract Tom, Hazel must ring the bell of a abandoned church in order to get past him.
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Starting in 1987, a festival has been held in Esto, Florida dedicated to Two-Toed Tom, however as of 2019, its future has been called into question, due to a lack of support.
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councilman Ralph Dupree, born in 1912, who said that he had heard the story "since he was 10 years old". One of the earliest written accounts can be traced to the 1934 book
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206:"Fate of Esto, Florida's 'Two-Toed Tom Festival', a Springtime Celebration of The Area's Most Notorious Reptile, Remains in Question"
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37:. The name originates from the legendary alligator having lost all but two toes on one or more feet to a steel trap.
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138:"Residents Celebrate The Legendary - and Nasty - 'Two-Toed Tom'"
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Two-Toed Tom - The
Alligator Monster of Florida and Alabama
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Two-Toed Tom arises again in 1972, when an article in the
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180:"Who Knows? Two-Toed Gator Still Alive?"
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163:Carmer, Carl (1985).
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144:. September 3, 1987
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