List of historical cats

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of historical cats.

Contents

[edit] Cats famous in their own right

  • All Ball, the first cat of Koko the gorilla.
  • Amber, one of two cats in the title role of the movie The Cat from Outer Space. [1]
  • Andy, cat owned by Florida State Senator Ken Meyer that has the cat record for non-fatal fall. Andy fell 200 feet (60 m) and survived. [2]
  • Ariel, the "Orange Persian" pet of author Carl Van Vetchen, title character in the book The Tiger in the House. [3]
  • Arthur the cat, British advertising icon who appeared in 309 advertisements, scooping cat food out of a can with his paw. [4]
  • Binky, the cat that inspired Susan Becker's book All I Need to Know I Learned from My Cat.[5]
  • Blackberry, the first munchkin cat. [6]
  • Blackie, a cat that inherited 15 million British Pounds and thus became the richest cat in history. [7]
  • Boche, cat found by the family of Anne Frank in the attick they lived in. [8]
  • Bonkers, the cat from television's All My Children. [9]
  • Bouhaki, a cat long alleged to be the first cat known to have a name.[10]
  • Brownie, a housecat that inherited $415,000.00 when its owner Dr. William Grier died. [11]
  • Burbank, Danny Glover's pet cat from Lethal Weapon. [12]
  • Catarina, Edgar Allan Poe's pet cat and the inspiration for his story The Black Cat.[13]
  • Chessie, the mascot of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway, and later the Chessie System, whose slogan was "sleep like a kitten." [14]
  • Childebrand, from Theophile Gautier's book La Menagerie Intime.[15]
  • Cleopatra, tawny-black cat from Gautier's La Menagerie Intime. [16]
  • CopyCat (CC), the first cloned cat.
  • Dalton the Wonder Cat, author of My Litter Box Was Dirty..., television host. [17]
  • Dick Marino, MTM's diminutive version of the MGM lion.[18]
  • Don Pierrot de Navarre, father and pen-stealer from Gautier's La Menagerie Intime. [19]
  • Emily American cat who, after being lost, was found to have gone to France[3]
  • Enjoras, black kitten of white parents from Gautier's Le Menagerie Intime. [20]
  • Eponine - cat with table manners like "one would like to see in many children" from Gautier's Le Menagerie Intime. [21]
  • Faith, London cat that took up residence in St Faith & St Augustine's church (by St Paul's cathedral) in wartime, and received a PDSA Silver Medal for her bravery in caring for her kitten when the church was bombed.
  • F. D. C. Willard (Felis Domesticus Chester Willard). Named for his sire (Willard of Aspen, Colorado), Chester acquired a resume of two research papers in low temperature physics after entering this unlikely field in collaboration with his keeper, J. H. Hetherington of the Michigan State University. Belatedly learning of a style rule for Phys. Rev. Lett. prohibiting the use of the authorial pronoun we in single-author papers, Hetherington solved the problem this presented to him by appending the name of his cat on the title page of a draft paper rather than by rewriting the body of the text. The dearth of word processing facilities in the mid-1970s made this a cost effective response.
  • Feathers, Karl van Vechten's cat, the subject of the dedication to and the inspiration for the book The Tiger in the House. [22]
  • Foss - Inspiration of the cat from "The Owl & the Pussycat" and of several of owner Edward Lear, who survived the cat by only two months. [23]
  • Fred the Undercover Kitty, a cat famous for assisting the NYPD and Brooklyn District Attorney’s Office in 2006.
  • Gavroche, from Gautier's Le Menagerie Intime. [24]
  • Grampa, oldest domestic cat ever recorded, born in Austin, Texas, in 1964, died in 1998. [25]
  • Hamlet, Considered by Guinness to be "the world's most travelled cat." He flew approximately 600,000 kilometers because he managed to get stuck in a Canadian airplane for seven weeks.
  • Hamlet, long-time mascot of the Algonquin Hotel and title character of the book Algonquin Cat. [26]
  • Harry, Cat who replaced Lucky in the role of Morris the cat. [27]
  • Hellcat, like Brownie, a cat of Dr. William Grier left $415,000.00 in the doctor's estate. [28]
  • Henrietta, the now-deceased cat of New York Times foreign correspondent Christopher S. Wren, made famous by the book The Cat Who Covered the World (ISBN 0-684-87100-9 in one printing).
  • Himmy, a neutered tabby who weighed 46 pounds, recorded in The Guiness Book of World Records. [29]
  • Hodge, one of Samuel Johnson's cats, famously recorded in James Boswell's Life of Johnson, as shedding light on his owner's character.
  • Humphrey, a cat who took up residence at 10 Downing Street in during John Major's tenure as Prime Minister, and was banished when Tony Blair came to power - named for the character of "Sir Humphrey Appleby" in Yes Minister.
  • Inga, member of the crew at Mt. Washington Observatory in New Hampshire until 1993, subject of magazine articles. [30]
  • Kallibunker, with his mother Serena, one of the two founders of the Cornish Rex breed. [31]
  • Karoun, whom Jean Cocteau dedicated Drôle de Ménage to and described as "the king of cats. [32]
  • Kaspar, wooden cat used at the Savoy Hotel in London to round out unlucky parties of thirteen[33]
  • 'Kiki-la-Doucette, Angora cat of Colette, fictionalized in Sept Dialogues de Bêtes. [34]
  • Kinlee, founding father of the Devon Rex breed. [35]
  • Lewis, a cat who became infamous after being placed under house arrest.
  • Little Tyke, subject of Georges H. Westbrau's book Little Tyke: The True Story of a Gentle Vegetarian Lioness. [36]
  • Madame Théophile, cat of Gautier who liked to steal food off his fork. [37]
  • Moortje, cat of Anne Frank's family who was left with neighbors when they fled the attic. [38]
  • Mrs. Chippy, cat on Ernest Shackleton expedition
  • Little Nicky, first cloned animal for commercial reasons.
  • Morris the Cat, one of Burt Reynolds' most beloved movie Co-stars, this finicky Commercial Mascot charmed his way into America's hearts with his calm demeanor and orange-striped style. [39]
  • Morris II, successor of Morris, ran for president in 1988. [40]
  • Mouschi, Pet of friends of Anne Frank's family, came to live with them in the attic. [41]
  • Mrs. Poodles, first ever Siamese cat shown at an English cat show, in 1871. [42]
  • 'Munchkinlane's Maggie Mae - munchkin cat who has appeared in several United States national media. [43]
  • Nedjem, now regarded as the "first cat known to have had a name." [44]
  • Nin, cat who replaced at Mount Washington Observatory, named for Anias Nin or short for "nincompoop". [45]
  • Norton the cat, subject of three nonfiction books by author Peter Gethers. [46]
  • Patsy, cat photographed with Charles Lindbergh in the cockpit of the Spirit of St. Louis just prior to Lindbergh's transatlantic flight. [47]
  • Peake, Chessie's mate, the character is based upon an actual railroad stray. [48]
  • Peter, the Lord's cat, the only animal to have an obituary in Wisden Cricketers' Almanack.[49]
  • Poppa, 2nd heaviest cat ever, weighed in at 44.5 pounds at eleven years of age. [50]
  • Puss, cat that held the record for longest life, 36 years, until the lack of documentation caused the title to pass to Ma. [51]
  • Rutterkin, black cat alleged to help its owner Joan Flower magically kills the sons and render the wife of the Earl of Rutland infertile in the 1600's. [52]
  • Scarlett the cat, mother cat whose rescue of her kittens from a burning building won her international media attention and an award for heroism named in her honor. [53]
  • Seraphita, pure white cat who loved perfume, mother of three of Gautier's cats with Don Pierrot. [54]
  • SH III, Chinhilla Persian cat who appeared in Fancy Feast advertisements and the movies The Jerk and Scrooged. [55]
  • Simon, celebrated ship's cat of HMS 'Amethyst', the only cat to have won the PDSA's Dickin Medal, for his rat-catching and morale-boosting activities during the Yangtse Incident in 1949.
  • Sinh, founding father of the Birman breed. Legend says he was the pet of the High Priest Mun-Ha, and absorbed his soul when Mun-Ha was killed. [56]
  • Sir Isaac Newton's cat, whose incessant desire to be let in or out allegedly drove him to devise the cat flap.
  • Smokey, wild bobcat trapped and given to Calvin Coolidge as a gift. [57]
  • Snowy, who replaced Arthur in the advertisements and learned the same trick. [58]
  • Spot, Data's cat from Star Trek: The Next Generation. [59]
  • Sugar, a cat who followed his human family 1,500 miles after the left him behind when they moved. [60]
  • A cat who wandered on stage during the premiere of Rossini's The Barber of Seville, sending the audience into gales of laughter.
  • Pangur Bán, the cat who inspired an otherwise unknown 8th (or 9th) century Irish monk to write a poem cataloguing their similarities.
  • Red, a cat who recently became a millionaire.
  • Rumpler with Amber above, one of the two cats, with Amber, who played the title role in The Cat from Outer Space, [61]
  • Scarlett the cat who in 1996 saved her kittens one by one from a fire in Brooklyn NY, suffering horrible burns in the process. Named Scarlett by the fireman who rescued her. She became a famous example of the power of a Mother's love[62]
  • Tarawood Antigone, a brown Burmese who holds the record for most kittens in one litter with nineteen. [63]
  • Tibbles, singlehandedly wiped out the Stephens Island Wren.
  • T.K., the feline companion of Tondayelo, an orangutan in a Florida zoo.
  • Tiger, a long-haired Persian mixed breed who once held the record for heaviest cat at 43 pounds. [64]
  • Tiki, cat who appeared in the movie Homeward Bound and the television series Caroline in the City. [65]
  • Tinker Toy, a male blue point Himalayan who held the record through at least 1997 as smallest domestic cat known, at 2.75 inches tall and 7.5 long. [66]
  • Tommy, the cat the family of Anne Frank found when they moved into the attic in 1942. [67]
  • Tonto, who played one of the title characters in the movie Harry & Tonto. [68]
  • Towser, cat that held the record for most mice killed (over 28,000) through at least 1997. [69]
  • Trim, was the first cat to circumnavigate Australia. Belonged to Matthew Flinders.
  • Tullia, cat appeared in the 1969 movie Eye of the Cat. [70]
  • Tyler, played Kitty Kitty, the cat in the movie The War of the Roses. [71]
  • Unsinkable Sam', most famous mascot of the British navy, was aboard and rescued from the Bismarck, the HMS Cossack, and the HMS Royal Ark when they sank. [72]
  • Whitey, played Eve's cat in the movie Stage Door. [73]
  • Willow, first pet on the television program Blue Peter to be "fixed." [74]
  • Wimauma Masterpiece of Chalsu - blue Persian male selected as Cats Magazine's first "Cat of the Year". [75]
  • Zizi, Angora cat of Theophile Gautier who enjoyed walking along the keys of a piano. [76]

[edit] Pets of famous people

[edit] Famous pets of United States Presidents and their families

See also the complete List of U.S. Presidential pets, famous and not so

[edit] Famous pets of other famous people

Banquo, Banshee, Carl, and Nero belonging to Agnes Repplier.

  • Cake, belonging to Warren Beatty.
  • Calvin, Maltese stray belonging to Harriet Beecher Stowe; sat on her shoulders while she wrote.
  • Caruso, belonging to Roberta Flack.
  • Cat, first of three owned by Winston Churchill. Others were; Nelson a black cat that sat in a chair next to Churchill in both the Cabinet & dining rooms (named after Lord Nelson but wasn't nearly as brave) and afterwards Jock. Jock was a ginger kitten, Churchill called this cat his special assistant and mentioned Jock in his will. Blackie, Bob (black & white cat), Margate (black stray) and Mr. Cat also were his or his family's.
  • Catarina, belonging to Edgar Allan Poe. Poe took her everywhere, and she frequently sat on his shoulder as he wrote; she inspired The Black Cat.
  • Chanoine Anogora belonging to Victor Hugo; originally called Gavroche, renamed because it was so indolent.
  • Charles, belonging to Michael Joseph.
  • Charo, belonging to Yoko Ono.
  • Cheeser, belonging to Jay Leno.
  • Childebrand, black & tan striped cat belonging to Théophile Gautier; mentioned in La Ménagerie Intime.
  • Chilla and Chin; Two Ukrianian gray cats belonging to Paul Gallico.
  • Chloe, Tabby belonging to Sally Gunnell.
  • Chopin, belonging to F. Scott Fitzgerald.
  • Cleopatra, belonging to Beryl Reid.
  • Cléopatre, belonging to Théophile Gautier; liked to stand on 3 legs; mentioned in La Ménagerie Intime.
  • Cobby, Blue Persian belonging to Thomas Hardy; given to Hardy late in life, he vanished when Hardy died in 1928.
  • Cody, belonging to Henri Sauguet; became ecstatic when it heard Debussy being played on the piano.
  • Columbine, belonging to Thomas Carlyle.
  • Cookie, a stray belonging to Sir Angus Wilson; the last of many pet cats in the author's life.
  • Crushinto, or Crushy, Orange rescuee belonging to Evan Dorkin & Sarah Dyer.
  • Elvis, belonging to John Lennon.
  • Enjoras, black kitten belonging to Théophile Gautier; born to white parents Don Pierrot & Séraphita; named for character in Les Miserables; mentioned in La Ménagerie Intime.
  • Eponine, black fur, green eyed cat belonging to Théophile Gautier; daughter of Don Pierrot & Séraphita; named for character in Les Miserables; mentioned in La Ménagerie Intime.
  • F. Puss (a.k.a. "Mr. Feather Puss"), Yellow-eyed cat belonging to Ernest Hemingway; so trusted that the Hemingways allowed him to babysit their infant. He had 30 cats in all. Among the others are Boise, Crazy Christian, Dillinger, Ecstasy,Fats,Friendless Brother, Furhouse, etc.
  • Fatima, belonging to Horace Walpole.
  • Feathers, Persian kitten belonging to Carl Van Vechten; inspiration for The Tiger in the House.
  • Félimare, striped like a tiger, belonging to Cardinal Richelieu; one of many cats Richelieu had when he died.
  • Fellini, Maine coon belonging to Gene Shalit; rescued from a shelter in Pittsfield, MA.
  • Flower-Face, Siamese belonging to James Mason; talked about in Mason's The Cats in our Lives 1949.
  • Folly, belonging to James & Pamela Mason.
  • Foss, belonging to Edward Lear; subject of many drawings, some published in The Heraldic Blazon of Foss the Cat; inspired The Owl & the Pussycat; Lear buried Foss in his garden and died himself only two months later.
  • Foxie, belonging to Brian Aldiss.
  • Fred, belonging to R. Crumb; inspiration for the infamous Fritz.
  • Fritzi, mackerel tabby belonging to Paul Klee; depicted in Marina Algerghini's Il Gatto Cosmico di Paul Klee, 1993.
  • Fuckchop, belonging to Trent Reznor.
  • La Chatte belonging to the writer Colette. The cat's name means The (female) cat in French and the name of her cat La Chatte Dernière means the last (female) cat in the same language. Other cats of hers include Kapok, Kro, La Touteu, Mini-mini, Minionne, Muscat, One and Only, Toune, Zwerg, and others.
  • Lady Arabella, belonging to John Spencer Churchill. When Princess arrived, Arabella was elevated to the rank of "Duchess of Catalunya and Countess of Barcelona."
  • Langbourne, belonging to Jeremy Bentham; over time, Langourne's name became The Reverend Sir John Langbourne, D.D. (Doctor of Divinity).
  • Le Docteur, belonging to Alexandre Dumas.
  • Leo, belonging to Ruskin Spear.
  • Lilly, white kitling belonging to Samuel Johnson
  • Lipstick, the second cat of Koko the gorilla.
  • Little Teddy, rescued stray belonging to Enrico Colantoni.
  • Lord Nelson, belonging to Robert Southey; over the years, Nelson went through the ranks of Lord, Baron, Viscount, & Earl for "services performed against the Rats."
  • Louisa, belonging to William Makepeace Thackeray.
  • Lucifer, jet black cat belonging to Cardinal Richelieu; one of many cats Richelieu had when he died.
  • Luck, attributed name of King Charles I's black cat.
  • Ludovic le Cruel, belonging to Cardinal Richelieu. Savage rat-killer; one of many cats Richelieu had when he died.
  • Ludoviska, belonging to Cardinal Richelieu. Polish cat; one of many pets Richelieu had when he died.
  • Lulu, belonging to Beryl Reid; one of many.
  • Macramé, belonging to Brian Aldiss.
  • Madame Théophile, red & white cat belonging to Théophile Gautier; liked to steal food from author Gautier's fork; mentioned in La Ménagerie Intime.
  • Madame Vanity, belonging to Michel de Montaigne.
  • Magritte, belonging to Gloria Steinem.
  • Manny, belonging to Ruskin Spear.
  • Marcel, belonging to Jeanne Beker.
  • Marcus, Siamese belonging to James Dean; gift from Elizabeth Taylor.
  • Marilyn Miste, belonging to Whitney Houston.
  • Marmoutte Blanche, Black & white angora belonging to Pierre Loti; featured in Lives of Two Cats.
  • Marmoutte Chinoise, belonging to Pierre Loti; stowaway kitten from China featured in Lives of Two Cats.
  • Master's Cat, The, belonging to Charles Dickens. The only of Williamina's kittens Dickens kept; she would snuff his reading candle to get attention.
  • Maurice, belonging to Jean-Claude Suarès. Named for artist Suarès' wife's lover, who was "not allowed on the bed either."
  • Meatball, belonging to Jane Pauley.
  • Micette or Micetto, grayish-red cat with black stripes (tabby) belonging to Pope Leo XII; born in the Vatican, lived among the Pope's robes.
  • Mimi, belonging to Rosa Luxemburg.
  • Mimi-Paillon, Angora belonging to Cardinal Richelieu; one of many cats Richelieu had when he died in 1642.
  • Mimsy, belonging to Evan Dorkin & Sarah Dyer; formerly feral rescuee.
  • Minna Minna Mowbray, belonging to Michael Joseph; an entire chapter is dedicated to her in Cat's Company 1946.
  • Minou, belonging to George Sand; Sand ate her breakfast from the same bowl as her cat.
  • Mirza Murad Alibeg, belonging to T.S. Eliot. More often called "The Musical Box" or "Cockalorum" because its given name was too long for the size of the apartment.
  • Misha, belonging to Yoko Ono.
  • Mitsou, white Perisan belonging to Marilyn Monroe.
  • Moon, belonging to Robert Wagner; gift from Moon Unit Zappa (see Dweezil above).
  • Moortje, belonging to Anne Frank; left with neighbors when her family fled to the attic.
  • Mouche, belonging to Victor Hugo; French for "fly" (as in the insect).
  • Mounard le Fougueux, belonging to Cardinal Richelieu Described as "quarrelsome, capricious, & worldly;" one of many cats Richelieu had when he died in 1642.
  • Mourka, belonging to George Balanchine and the subject of Mourka: the autobiography of a cat by Tanaquil LeClercq, Stein & Day, NY, 1964.
  • Mouschi, belonging to Anne Frank. The warehouse and office cat that came to live with the Franks in the attic; the pet of some family friends.
  • Mousetrap, belonging to Van Heflin.
  • Mr. Cat, belonging to Phyllis Diller.
  • Mr. Jinx or Jinxie, belonging to Evan Dorkin & Sarah Dyer.
  • Mr. Peter Wells, belonging to H.G. Wells.
  • Muezza, belonging to Mohammed. It is said that once when Mohammed was called to prayer, he cut off the sleeve of his robe rather than disturb his sleeping pet, who was nestled upon it.
  • Murphy, belonging to Bernadette Peters.
  • Myobu No Omoto, belonging to Emperor Ichijo of Japan; "Omoto, Lady-in-Waiting" ; Ichijo once imprisoned the owner of a dog that chased his pet.
  • Mys, dark long-haired cat belonging to Paul Klee; depicted in Marina Algerghini's Il Gatto Cosmico di Paul Klee, 1993.
  • Mysouff, belonging to Alexandre Dumas. There was a Mysouff I & Mysouff II - Mysouff II was black & white and Dumas' favorite, even though it once ate all his exotic birds.
  • Nichols, belonging to Vivien Leigh.
  • Nemo, Seal point Siamese belonging to PM Harold Wilson (UK); used to accompany the Wilsons on holiday.
  • New, belonging to Vivien Leigh; named after "New Theater."
  • Nickie, belonging to Brian Aldiss.
  • Nigger Man, belonging to H. P. Lovecraft as a boy. Also a cat in his story "The Rats in the Walls."
  • Nightlife, belonging to Charles Mingus.
  • Noilly Prat, belonging to T.S. Eliot.
  • Norton, Scottish fold tabby belonging to Peter Gethers; memorialized in novels The Cat Who Went to Paris, A Cat Abroad & The Cat Who'll Live Forever.
  • Nuggi, long-haired cat belonging to Paul Klee; depicted in Marina Algerghini's Il Gatto Cosmico di Paul Klee, 1993.
  • Numbers One through Eight, Siamese cats belonging to Beverley Nichols; owned 7 cats all given numbers as names; "Six" was not used, Eight's original name was "Oscar."
  • Pulcinella, belonging to Domenico Scarlatti; inspired The Cat's Fugue as she liked to walk up & down his keyboards.
  • Punky, belonging to Doris Day; one of 10+ Day rescued
  • Purdoe, belonging to Samuel Butler.
  • Pyewacket, belonging to Kim Novak; starred with Novak in Bell Book and Candle.
  • Pyrame, belonging to Cardinal Richelieu. He & Thisbe were named after the mythological lovers because they slept together with paws intertwined.
  • Racan, belonging to Cardinal Richelieu. Named for the academic Racan out of whose wig he fell, as a kitten, at Richelieu's feet.
  • Reverend Wenceslas Muff, The, black tomcat belonging to Sir Roy Strong.
  • Rhett Butler, belonging to Vanna White.
  • Rita, black cat belonging to Julia Sweeney.
  • Romeo, belonging to Peggy Guggenheim.
  • Rubis sur l'Ongle, belonging to Cardinal Richelieu. Especially fond of milk; one of many cats Richelieu had when he died in 1642.
  • Rumpel, belonging to Robert Southey. Full title was The Most Noble the Archduke Rumpelstizchen, marquis Macbum, Earle Tomemange, Baron Raticide, Waowler, and Skaratchi. Other cats of his include Madame Bianchi, Madame Catalini, Othello, Ovid, Pulcheria, Sir Thomas Dido, and The Zombie.
  • Rupi, belonging to Jethro Tull leader Ian Anderson; inspired title song of his 2004 solo album Rupi's Dance.
  • Rybolov, tabby belonging to Alexander Borodin; Russian for "fisherman."
  • Weasel, belonging to Cyndi Lauper.
  • White Heather, black & white Persian belonging to Queen Victoria in her old age; upon her death became the pet of Edward VII.
  • Whitey, belonging to James & Pamela Mason.
  • William/Williamina, belonging to Charles Dickens; was "William" until she had kittens which she insisted on moving into Dickens' study.
  • Willie, belonging to George Burns. Why was he so named?; explained Mr. Burns, "When you told the cat what to do, it was always a question of will he or won't he!!"
  • Windy, belonging to Guy Gibson; as a WWI dambuster, Gibson took Windy on many of his wartime missions.
  • Wiscus, belonging to T.S. Eliot.
  • Woody, belonging to Jean Michel Jarre.

[edit] Unnamed

[edit] Wild cats

  • Ba-tou, African wildcat and pet of Colette, from La Maison de Claudine. [99]
  • the Champawat Tigress, a tiger which killed 439 people before being killed by famed hunter Jim Corbett.
  • Chauncey, the cougar, (1964-1975), winner of the 1969 PATSY Award for his television commercial for Ford Motor Company.
  • Chiquita, Josephine Baker's pet cheetah.
  • 'Clarence the cross-eyed lion, from the Daktari television series.
  • The Darkness, one of the two maneaters of Tsavo that killed over 100 bridge builders in Kenya in 1898. [100]
  • Dreyfus, advertising mascot of Dreyfus Financial Services. [101]
  • Elsa the lioness, lion hand raised by Joy Adamson and featured in Born Free as well as her other books. [102]
  • The Ghost, one of the man-eaters of Tsavo that killed over 100 bridge builders in Kenya in 1898.
  • Heller, cougar who won the 1977 PATSY award for work on the Shazam! television show. [103]
  • Hubert, the Harris Lion, advertising mascot of Harris Bank. [104]
  • Italia, Benito Mussolini's pet lioness.
  • Kamuniak, Kenyan lioness who adopts oryx calves.
  • Jackie, the second lion used as MGM's Leo the lion.
  • Neil, the lion who won the 1984 PATSY award for his film and television work.
  • The Panar Leopard, killed 400 people before being shot by Jim Corbett. [105]
  • Penny, the spotted leopard from Joy Adamson book The Spotted Sphinx. [106]
  • Pippa, the cheetah from Joy Adamson's book Pippa the Cheetah and Her Cubs. [107]
  • Raunchy, jaguar that won the 1964 PATSY award. [108]
  • Rocky, bobcat that played the Mercury bobcat for a time.
  • Slats, first lion to play Leo the Lion the MGM Pictures trademark/mascot.
  • Smokey/Smoky, bobcat belonging to Calvin Coolidge; trapped wild in Tennessee and given to him as a gift.
  • Tanner, the third lion used as MGM's Leo the Lion, appeared in all the Technicolor pictures. (Note: two other unnamed lions have taken on the role later).
  • The Thak Tigress, man-eating tiger killed by Jim Corbett. [109]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Index of Famous Cats, A through D
  2. ^ Index of Famous Cats, A through D
  3. ^ Index of Famous Cats, A through D
  4. ^ Index of Famous Cats, A through D
  5. ^ Index of Famous Cats, A through D
  6. ^ Index of Famous Cats, A through D
  7. ^ [1]
  8. ^ Index of Famous Cats, A through D
  9. ^ Index of Famous Cats, A through D
  10. ^ Index of Famous Cats, A through D
  11. ^ Index of Famous Cats, A through D
  12. ^ Index of Famous Cats, A through D
  13. ^ Index of Famous Cats, A through D
  14. ^ Index of Famous Cats, A through D
  15. ^ Index of Famous Cats, A through D
  16. ^ Index of Famous Cats, A through D
  17. ^ Index of Famous Cats, A through D
  18. ^ Index of Famous Cats, A through D
  19. ^ Index of Famous Cats, A through D
  20. ^ Index of Famous Cats, E through L
  21. ^ Index of Famous Cats, E through L
  22. ^ Index of Famous Cats, E through L
  23. ^ Index of Famous Cats, E through L
  24. ^ Index of Famous Cats, E through L
  25. ^ Index of Famous Cats, E through L
  26. ^ Index of Famous Cats, E through L
  27. ^ Index of Famous Cats, E through L
  28. ^ Index of Famous Cats, E through L
  29. ^ Index of Famous Cats, E through L
  30. ^ Index of Famous Cats, E through L
  31. ^ Index of Famous Cats, E through L
  32. ^ Index of Famous Cats, E through L
  33. ^ Index of Famous Cats, E through L
  34. ^ Index of Famous Cats, E through L
  35. ^ Index of Famous Cats, E through L
  36. ^ Index of Famous (Wild) Cats
  37. ^ Index of Famous Cats, M through R
  38. ^ Index of Famous Cats, M through R
  39. ^ Index of Famous Cats, M through R
  40. ^ Index of Famous Cats, M through R
  41. ^ Index of Famous Cats, M through R
  42. ^ Index of Famous Cats, M through R
  43. ^ Index of Famous Cats, M through R
  44. ^ Index of Famous Cats, M through R
  45. ^ Index of Famous Cats, M through R
  46. ^ Index of Famous Cats, M through R
  47. ^ Index of Famous Cats, M through R
  48. ^ Index of Famous Cats, M through R
  49. ^ Wisden's only animal
  50. ^ Index of Famous Cats, M through R
  51. ^ Index of Famous Cats, M through R
  52. ^ Index of Famous Cats, M through R
  53. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  54. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  55. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  56. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  57. ^ Index of Famous (Wild) Cats
  58. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  59. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  60. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  61. ^ Index of Famous Cats, M through R
  62. ^ [2]
  63. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  64. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  65. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  66. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  67. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  68. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  69. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  70. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  71. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  72. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  73. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  74. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  75. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  76. ^ Index of Famous Cats, S through Z
  77. ^ Index of Famous People's Cats
  78. ^ Index of Famous (Wild) Cats
  79. ^ Index of Famous People's Cats
  80. ^ Index of Famous People's Cats
  81. ^ Index of Famous People's Cats
  82. ^ Index of Famous People's Cats
  83. ^ Index of Famous People's Cats
  84. ^ Index of Famous People's Cats
  85. ^ Index of Famous People's Cats
  86. ^ Index of Famous People's Cats
  87. ^ Index of Famous People's Cats
  88. ^ Index of Famous People's Cats
  89. ^ Index of Famous (Wild) Cats
  90. ^ Index of Famous People's Cats
  91. ^ Index of Famous People's Cats
  92. ^ Index of Famous People's Cats
  93. ^ Index of Famous People's Cats
  94. ^ Index of Famous People's Cats
  95. ^ Index of Famous People's Cats
  96. ^ Index of Famous People's Cats
  97. ^ Index of Famous People's Cats
  98. ^ Index of Famous People's Cats
  99. ^ Index of Famous (Wild) Cats
  100. ^ Index of Famous (Wild) Cats
  101. ^ Index of Famous (Wild) Cats
  102. ^ Index of Famous (Wild) Cats
  103. ^ Index of Famous (Wild) Cats
  104. ^ Index of Famous (Wild) Cats
  105. ^ Index of Famous (Wild) Cats
  106. ^ Index of Famous (Wild) Cats
  107. ^ Index of Famous (Wild) Cats
  108. ^ Index of Famous (Wild) Cats
  109. ^ Index of Famous (Wild) Cats
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