WILD WHITE CATTLE. 231 
exceeded thirty; yet in April, 1851, according to 
Mr. E. P. Shirley, there were forty-eight, and in 1873 
there were twenty-seven. In July, 1874, Mr. Storer 
found only twenty-five—namely, ten breeding cows, 
four bulls (two adult), six steers, and five heifers, of 
various ages; the finest old bull and one of the 
cows, besides some calves, having died since the 
previous autumn. In June, 1877, when Mr. A. H. 
Cocks visited this park, as described by him in The 
FE 
ee 
N 
WILD BULL OF CHARTLEY. 
Zoologist (1878, p. 276), the herd, consisting of 
twenty animals, was thus constituted: One nine- 
year-old bull, one five-year-old bull, one bullock, five 
or six young bulls of different ages, two young bull 
calves (one called two months old, the other two or 
three weeks), the remaining nine or ten being cows 
and heifers of various ages. 
In appearance the Chartley cattle—independently 
