Mysterious “Jan Klement” Story Resurfaces

Posted by: Loren Coleman on March 26th, 2009

The Creature by Jan Klement

It is always good to kick up the dirt, so to speak, once in awhile, and put more eyes on a cold case.

Yesterday, I revisited the misunderstood “Is Bigfoot Gay?” theme, which, once again, often has more to do with what people project on it than about the reality of the question. But in the midst of the mini-furor, I received what seemed like a good suggestion at the time to answer an old riddle.

I thought perhaps the mystery had been solved in the long-standing enigma about the author of that infamous story about that Bigfoot who enjoyed some special time with a cow.

For years I have asked “Who is Jan Klement?“.

Recall the subquestions that I’ve asked about the guy? Was Klement an earth sciences professor? A biology professor? A high school science teacher? Is he still alive? Did he ever exist? Did he see what he says he saw happening between a cow and a Bigfoot?

As noted in The Field Guide of Bigfoot and Other Mystery Primates, Jan Klement was the source of the “Kong” eyewitness stories that related to the following hominoid drawing illustrating Klement’s “creature.”

The Creature by Jan Klement

I once wrote that Jan Klement is the "Deep Throat" of the Bigfoot field.

Jan Klement is listed as the author of a book surrounded by controversy. The name of that book, which experienced its 30th year of publication in 2006, is The Creature.

First published in 1976, the thin volume, The Creature: Personal Experiences With Bigfoot was republished in 2006 with the addition of "notes and sketches previously eliminated from the first edition."

The slightly revised book, about close encounters of the Bigfoot-human-cow kind in southwestern Pennsylvania, actually added very little, but did note some data corroborated “with newspaper accounts.”

In my and Patrick Huyghe’s 1999 book, revised and republished in 2006, as The Field Guide to Bigfoot and Other Mystery Primates, we discuss Klement’s case, which allegedly did happen within a context of an ongoing and active Bigfoot sighting flap:

Beginning in the summer of 1973, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, experienced a high number of encounters with 7-to-8 feet tall hairy upright creatures. Between July 1973 and February 1974, at least 50 individual eyewitnesses reported sightings of Bigfoot-like creatures in 22 different incidents. These sightings involved mostly single creatures, one involved two, and another involved three in an apparent family group. Most were dark colored, but one was white, another was one tan-colored, and another had a white mane. In three of the encounters, attempts were made to shoot the creatures. Blood was found in one case.

The whole tale (and the homophobic reaction it evoked) is told in Bigfoot! The True Story of Apes in America, in the chapter “Sex and the Single Sasquatch.”

Yesterday, I received the following information that, at first, appeared to make some sense regarding the identity behind the mysterious author, Jan Klement.

Andrewzoo wrote me:

“After reading the background on the ‘Is Bigfoot Gay’ post, I did a bit of digging. Here’s some info I was able to find with a little web research:

Jan Klement = John Tomikel?

The letters in ‘John Tomikel’ can be rearranged to spell ‘John Klemiot.’ Coincidence?

Consider that both authors published books through Allegheny Press around the same time.

I also found an interesting bio that describes Tomikel :

‘John Tomikel was born in Cuddy, Pennsylvania in 1928. He received four advanced degrees, including a Bachelors of Science from Clarion State College and a Ph.D. from the University of Pittsburgh. He has been an earth sciences teacher and professor, spending a large portion of his career at California University in California, Pennsylvania. Tomikel is also a founder of the Pennsylvania Earth Science Teachers Society, as well as an author of fiction under a pseudonym. He currently lives in retirement in Corry, Pennsylvania.'”

Indeed, Tomikel seems to match what has always been described of “Jan Klement,” who was supposedly an Earth Sciences former professor and resident of this area of Pennsylvania.

Here’s more information on Tomikel:

Tomikel, John
Born: April 30, 1928, in Cuddy, Pennsylvania
Vocations: Professor, Author
Geographic Connection to Pennsylvania: Clarion, Clarion County; Edinboro & Corry, Erie County; California, Washington County; Meadville, Crawford County; Pittsburgh & Cuddy, Allegheny County

Keywords: Allegheny College, California University, Clarion University, Edinboro University, United States Army, University of Pittsburgh

Biography:

John Tomikel was born on April 30, 1928 in Cuddy, Pennsylvania. After high school, Tomikel attended Clarion State College (now Clarion University) and received a Bachelors of Science in 1950. Following graduation he enlisted in the United States Army and served from 1952-1954.

After serving in the army for two years, Tomikel then went on to obtain three more degrees: a Masters in Literature from the University of Pittsburgh (1956), a Masters of Science from Syracuse University (1962), and a Ph.D. from the University of Pittsburgh (1972). Tomikel also did graduate study at Allegheny College from 1958-1961.

Tomikel taught earth sciences at both the high school and college level. He held the position of Assistant Professor at California University in California, Pennsylvania from 1965-1966. From 1966-1972 Tomikel was an Associate Professor. He then was named Professor of Earth Sciences in 1972 until his retirement.

A founder of the Pennsylvania Earth Science Teachers Society, Tomikel is an expert in his field. He is the author of 24 books, including textbooks on natural resources, geography, and earth environments. In addition, Tomikel has published two books of poetry, two novels, and three travel diaries under a pseudonym. In his writing, he searches for and discusses a connection between poetry and science in general literature as well as exploring questions about God and religion.

John Tomikel currently lives in retirement in Corry, Pennsylvania, having taught several classes at nearby Edinboro University through the 2004-2005 academic year.

This biography sketch was prepared by Kim Murray.

A mystery solved? Could John Tomikel be the mysterious “Jan Klement”?

Well, it seemed like the answer was close.

But then I decided to do a little digging myself, and I found the telephone number of John Tomikel. I called him, and we had an extensive conversation.

Tomikel told me that while, yes, he was the publisher of The Creature, he was not the author of the book.

He shared with me that he had met the author and his wife during the 1970s, and he was asked to publish the book under a “pen name” because the elderly educator needed to be careful about his local reputation. Tomikel’s small Allegheny Press was well-known by area residents for discreetly publishing books by local authors who wished to hide their identities. For example, Tomikel said he often created “names” for the authors for both fiction and nonfiction books, because the locals wished to not have their wives or employers know they were the ones writing this material. Indeed, he told me the name “Jan Klement” was the name of one of his own grandfathers from the old country, because he’d run out of ideas for new pseudonyms.

Tomikel told me the author, who passed away ten years ago, wished to retain the anonymous nature of his nonfiction book because that’s just the way he was. The publisher, even though he knows he is advancing in years, refused to reveal the name or even initials to me. He said the man was a well-known author of mainstream titles about wild places, and at one time was a teacher in the Mckeesport school system. (McKeesport is a city in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, U.S., at the confluence of the Monongahela and Youghiogheny Rivers.)

The publisher said he was skeptical of the story, but he thought the author believed it all had happened and presented the book as completely nonfiction to him. Tomikel says the book has never been a big seller, and he has barely made back the money ($400) he gave the author in 1977, just to cover his expenses.

Tomikel was relatively unaware of the interest of this book within the Bigfoot community, and merely said that he only recalls hearing from a WV Bigfoot group and a SE PA paranormal group, down through the years. He said he couldn’t really help them.

Still, he knows people have shown a little interest in the story.

All he mainly has heard is that a couple folks had tried to follow clues in the book, about the Bigfoot being buried near Sandy Creek and Winds Gap on the PA-WV border, to find the body.

Sandy Creek is a tributary of the Allegheny River in Crawford, Venango, and Mercer Counties in Pennsylvania in the United States. The run is 41.0 miles (66.0 km) long, flows southeast 24 miles (39 km), then east 16 miles (26 km), and its watershed is 161 square miles (417 km2) in area.

Tomikel recalled that The Creature’s author had buried metal wheels with the body of “Kong,” the Bigfoot, and felt that metal detectors might find the body someday along that border. But Tomikel had only heard of two instances where people had searched, with negative results.

The Allegheny Press is closed and nearing extinction, Tomikel will die with the secret of the name of Jan Klement, and only 30 or so books remain in stock for sale.

Tomikel is so unaware of the celebrity nature of the book that he was mildly interested to hear that it had been mentioned by myself and others online and in books for years. He quietly said that he was surprised when there was a “huge jump” in sales about a couple months ago, and wondered if someone, someplace, had mentioned the book.

I asked him what he meant by a “huge” amount of books selling.

John Tomikel paused a minute and said calmly, “Oh, there were three orders in one day on Amazon.”

Make your quest of cryptids and the people behind them important to you. I appreciate all the communications that have taken place with those individuals who have utilized the direct email route to me when you have contributed to the museum fund, whether to critique my work or ask a question. When you push the following button, and…

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Loren Coleman About Loren Coleman
Loren Coleman is one of the world’s leading cryptozoologists, some say “the” leading living cryptozoologist. Certainly, he is acknowledged as the current living American researcher and writer who has most popularized cryptozoology in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Starting his fieldwork and investigations in 1960, after traveling and trekking extensively in pursuit of cryptozoological mysteries, Coleman began writing to share his experiences in 1969. An honorary member of Ivan T. Sanderson’s Society for the Investigation of the Unexplained in the 1970s, Coleman has been bestowed with similar honorary memberships of the North Idaho College Cryptozoology Club in 1983, and in subsequent years, that of the British Columbia Scientific Cryptozoology Club, CryptoSafari International, and other international organizations. He was also a Life Member and Benefactor of the International Society of Cryptozoology (now-defunct). Loren Coleman’s daily blog, as a member of the Cryptomundo Team, served as an ongoing avenue of communication for the ever-growing body of cryptozoo news from 2005 through 2013. He returned as an infrequent contributor beginning Halloween week of 2015. Coleman is the founder in 2003, and current director of the International Cryptozoology Museum in Portland, Maine.


9 Responses to “Mysterious “Jan Klement” Story Resurfaces”

  1. Loren Coleman responds:

    Updated.

  2. Storfot responds:

    Loren:

    Interesting to read about your research. It makes me wonder how you do your work in the field of cryptozoology. How about a blog entry about the methods you use and perhaps a little summary of a typical “case”?

    It would be very interesting to read. I have done some research in the field of pedagogy and language learning and it would be interesting to compare methods and approaches. Obviously (I guess) the fields are very different but in my opinion all research has the same goal, to explain a situation or theory.

    Thanks for an interesting entry.

  3. DNS responds:

    Isn’t it customary to reveal the real name of a deceased author in situations like this? Seems like if Tomikel is not the author, it should not be very hard to figure out who it is. It would be someone an awful lot like Tomikel, who passed away ten years ago. If nothing at all can be learned about the author, then the book has no more use to a researcher than any silly yarn on the Innernets. That is apparently just how the author wanted it, which could tell us something.

  4. red_pill_junkie responds:

    I wish Mr. Tomikel would consider arranging for the disclosure of the author in the future. I don’t see the point in taking the secret to the grave.

  5. kgehrman responds:

    I don’t get it. The part about “Is Bigfoot Gay?

    I read the Klement book and the description of the Kong and Cow interlude.

    The Cow was a female (though not the best looking of the cows in the pasture that day).

    So why would that make Bigfoot gay? Calling Kong a zoophile I could understand.

    Men have been have been hooking up with cows for centuries. I believe that is the origin of the word “Cowpoke”.

    And also the theme behind this popular theme song from a TV show back in 1959. (For you younger folks, this was Clint Eastwood’s first gig.)

    Everyone now, crank up your speakers at high volume and go to this link.

    You old guys I know you know the words and I want you to sing and sing them strong. You too, Loren sing loud and clear.

  6. cryptidsrus responds:

    Whoever the author was, he left behind an unusual and provocative document of possible Sasquatch interaction with humans.

    Hopefully, his identity will one day be known.

  7. shimmeringsoul responds:

    How nice it would be to one day find out his true identity, and if the things he left behind in writing were actually true!

  8. alcalde responds:

    I’m still not convinced that, with facts like the pseudonym being one of Mr. Tomikel’s relatives, etc., that he isn’t the author and spun another yarn. Still, perhaps the next avenue of research is to search obituaries in the area given you have a window for time of death.

  9. andrewzoo responds:

    Initially, it sounds like it wouldn’t take a lot to hit the obituary indexes to find out if there was an earth sciences teacher/author/wilderness expert who died around ten years ago, however, I’ve found only one source of the obituaries that would possibly reveal that information. The McKeesport Heritage Center keeps obituaries dating back to 1884, but that information is not online, as far as I can tell. Their website is mckeesportheritage.org. It is assumed that “Klement” did not retire to another area of the country before his/her death. A costly assumption to someone like me who does not have the time or money to travel to McKeesport to pore over volumes of obituaries in search of the mysterious Mr. Klement.

    I, too, am not convinced that Tomikel is not the same person as Klement, however, it would be difficult to prove it. The only thing that might be disproved (and therefore might make his claim dubious) is the existence of Tomikel’s grandfather, Jan Klement. I’ve tapped a coupe of sources to see if I could find any genealogy that would validate/invalidate his claim that the name Jan Klement came from his grandfather, but no dice.

    I suppose at a certain point, it is time to stop digging and let the dust settle for a while. I’m sure that we’ve not heard the last of this. Maybe the next time the story resurfaces, we’ll be hearing about bigfoot remains being dug up near the PA-WV border. One can only hope!

Sorry. Comments have been closed.

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