New Brunswick

A walk down memory lane: 1965 photo of woman with pet raccoon resurfaces online

Susan Harrison was surprised to see a photo of her 16-year-old self appear on social media last week. She was pictured in 1965 walking her pet raccoon down Queen Street.

Susan Harrison was photographed 60 years ago walking Mickey, on a leash, on Fredericton sidewalk

Ever seen a raccoon on a leash? This woman’s pet was caught on camera in 1965

6 hours ago
Duration 1:47
Susan Harrison, of Upper Hainesville, about 50 kilometres northwest of Fredericton, recounts the day she took her pet raccoon on a walk in downtown Fredericton in 1965. Just recently, a photo of the pair taken that day resurfaced on social media.

It sounds like something out of a Disney princess movie — a girl, who also loved nursing baby rodents back to life, walking her pet raccoon down a city street.

But that was life for young Susan Knox — now Harrison — of Upper Hainesville, about 50 kilometres northwest of Fredericton.

And given how many decades have passed, you can imagine her surprise when a photo of her, at the age of 16, walking Mickey on Queen Street in downtown Fredericton, resurfaced on the internet just last week.

"That was a shock," Harrison, now 75, said of the moment one of her friends told her the photo was floating around online.

A grinning woman with glasses and shoulder-length hair holds a small white dog in her arms.
Harrison, pictured here with her dog Katy, has always been an animal person. She also has eight cats. (Hannah Rudderham/CBC)

The archive photo, which originally appeared in the Daily Gleaner, was posted to social media on the Associates of the Provincial Archives of New Brunswick Facebook page and later on the N.B. Heritage page, where it garnered hundreds of shares and comments. 

Seeing the photo brought back memories of that day in 1965 and of the year she spent with Mickey. 

Harrison said she got the raccoon after her dad and a neighbour went to an abandoned farm where her neighbour was the caretaker. Inside, they found three baby raccoons that had been left there and decided to keep them.

Her neighbour took the two females, while Harrison's dad brought home the baby male.

"I was the only one who could handle him," Harrison said, describing Mickey as a "devil." 

She had to bottle feed Mickey at first, which wasn't difficult for her as she was used to taming wild animals.

One time, Harrison said she brought home a baby mouse, which her mother fed with a doll's bottle. And Harrison even raised an injured Blue Jay for 16 years, much to the disdain of her cats.

Mickey's trip to Fredericton

For the most part, Harrison played with Mickey on their rural farm, but one day, she decided she wanted to take Mickey into Fredericton.

"Dad, can I take the raccoon to town?" Harrison remembers asking.

"I could talk him into … anything."

A newspaper clipping of a girl walking down the street with a raccoon on a leash. The photo's caption says "UNUSUAL SIGHT: Susan Knox, 16, Upper  Hainesville, takes a stroll down Queen Street with Mickey, her pet raccoon. Susan, who says Mickey eats mostly cookies, doughnuts and bread, found the animal about two months ago on an abandoned farm near her home. 'He's as tame as any house,' she says."
Harrison dug up the original newspaper clipping from when she was photographed walking down Queen Street with her pet raccoon, Mickey. (Hannah Rudderham/CBC)

While walking Mickey down Queen Street that day, Harrison said the staff at the Daily Gleaner spotted them out the window and hurried down to snap a picture.

She remembers being excited to have her photo in the paper.

But as Mickey grew, he developed quite the attitude, Harrison said.

She remembers one day, she saw her dad was carrying two pails of milk up from the barn, complete with a thumb dripping blood because Mickey wanted a drink. 

And when Mickey outgrew his harness, she bought him a new black leather one. When trying to put it on him, her boyfriend at the time, who later became her husband, was bitten by Mickey and carried that scar for life.

That later led the family to release Mickey on a game reserve.

But Harrison still remembers him with fondness.

"You had to keep your eye on him," she said.

"[Those] little hands were just like little black leather gloves. They could open anything."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Hannah Rudderham is a reporter with CBC New Brunswick. She grew up in Cape Breton, N.S., and moved to Fredericton in 2018. You can send story tips to [email protected].