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Bear Attack Victim Marks 50th Anniversary of Mauling

By Beacon Staff

Fifty years after he survived one of the longest known bear attacks in history, Joseph Williams is visiting the Flathead to commemorate the near-fatal ordeal.

Williams will give a presentation on the attack this Friday, June 19 at Flathead Valley Community College. Free and open to the public, the lecture will take place at 7 p.m. in the Arts and Technology Building large community meeting room. He also plans on revisiting the park with the ranger who helped save his life.

Williams’ is a pretty remarkable story. From an Associated Press story about his visit:

Joseph Williams was a 20-year-old Midwesterner hungry for adventure in 1959 when a hike through Glacier National Park turned into a vicious encounter with a grizzly bear.

Williams tangled with the bear for 45 minutes, getting mauled, fighting back and breaking free before the beast chased him down and attacked again. Then a young park ranger showed up and shot the bear dead.

Fifty years later, Williams and the ranger, Don Dayton, plan to visit the park together Thursday to commemorate the near-fatal ordeal.

“I’ve forgotten my own wedding anniversary enough times that no one would accuse me of getting caught up in anniversaries,” said Williams, 70, and a food broker in Missouri. “But this one is different.”