More about the winged Cat, taken from the Cambridge Weekly news, 10th August 1894
A similar account to the one above was attributed to a Peterborough correspondent by the Cambridgeshire Weekly. A sceptical correspondent (says the daily chronicle) asked for further particulars of the winged cat which flies about in the village of Reach, near Peterborough. He suggests that there must be some reason why a cat kept its wings to itself for 12 months and only unfolded them as the big gooseberries were ripening! Our correspondant might not have heard that there was a winged man in kent who kept his wings to himself just as the cat of Reach did till the psychlogical moment for using them arrived. Then he started to fly and credible witnesses declare that nothing would have prevented him shooting over St. Pauls and setting off round and round the world like a satellite, but that his flying machine, after mounting 4 feet in the air came down again. We should advise our correspondent not to make light of cats. Creatures that are as much at home on the roof as in the cellar, that are never reached by stones, bullets, bootjacks or water thrown out of the window, are quite likely to be the cat of reach in disguise.