Fighting Bob

Origin
Fighting Bob was an ostrich brought to Boise, Idaho's White City Park in 1910. White City was an amusement park named after and because of the amusement section of the Columbian Exhibition of 1893, which inspired dozens of similar parks around the country during the 20th century. Boise's iteration had a wooden rollercoaster, carousel, miniature railroad, boating pond, dance pavilion/roller rink, photography studio, concession stands and a penny arcade, as well as several animal exhibits.

Unlike other White City amusement parks, however, Boise's White City Park was built next to and marketed with an indoor spa named the Natatorium, a deluxe facility that took advantage of Boise's access to geothermal springs. The Natatorium included a 125-foot-long swimming pool, geothermally heated, with an artificial waterfall that fell over a 40-foot lava rock diving platform at one end. Visitors to one location were only a short train jaunt away from the other, making both extremely popular.

Though small compared to other male ostriches (Bob was just shy of six feet), Bob also brought in a fair amount of popularity to White City, due to his impressive, vocal, and violent personality. His most viscious attack occured when he slaughtered his "wife" Desdemona in a family battle. He eventually died in 1930, and was memorialized by being stuffed and donated to the Orma J. Smith Museum of Natural History, along with a few of his own eggs.

Effects
Imbued with his anger in life, the stuffed body of Fighting Bob comes to life whenever he is not contained, and he will visciously chase and attack anything he sets his eyes on. For everyone's safety, he is permanently sealed in a large wooden crate in Lupis-912F.

2018 Release and Recapture
An incident in 2018 accidentally released Fighting Bob into the Warehouse, where he and several other roaming artifacts wreaked havoc until they were neutralized.