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‘The great escape!’ by 43 monkeys from Yemassee, SC facility were no surprise to residents

As a steady flow of rain fell on Yemassee, South Carolina Thursday morning, the search was on for a troop of female monkeys on the loose.

There are more monkeys than people in Yemassee, a town 25 miles northwest of Beaufort off of Interstate 95 with a population of just over 1,000. Last night around 9 p.m., 43 of the 6,000 Rhesus macaque monkeys from the Alpha Genesis facility, a primate research center on Castle Hall Road, escaped when three doors were left open.

The people who call Yemassee home were not entirely shocked by the news. In 2014, 26 monkeys escaped and 19 more escaped two years later in 2016. But they were surprised by the number of escapees this time around.

Tabitha Jackson has lived in Yemassee for her entire life. She jokingly said that her uncle, Willie Frazier, who lived behind the post office in town would tell her stories about waking up in the morning to a monkey swinging from muscadine vines eating grapes in his backyard.

Primates can be seen from Salkehatchie Road as they seek refuge in their enclosure from the rain as photographed on Nov. 7, 2024 in Hampton County, S.C. This expansion of Alpha Genesis was not the facility where the 43 female primates escaped from but is located about five miles from the Castle Rock Facility which is located in the Town of Yemassee.
Primates can be seen from Salkehatchie Road as they seek refuge in their enclosure from the rain as photographed on Nov. 7, 2024 in Hampton County, S.C. This expansion of Alpha Genesis was not the facility where the 43 female primates escaped from but is located about five miles from the Castle Rock Facility which is located in the Town of Yemassee. Drew Martin dmartin@islandpacket.com

“I say just let them roam. They’ll come home when they’re ready,” Jackson said Thursday morning.

Karl Nettles, an ice distributor in town, playfully called the incident “the great escape,” as he unloaded bags of ice off his loading truck into a storage room. Like Jackson, he thinks the monkeys will eventually make their way back to the facility, where they “eat better than we do,” or will face the unfortunate fate of running into the occasional territorial hog or black bear in the wooded areas throughout Yemassee.

Karl Nettles, delivering ice to a storage facility off Guess Drive, speaks about the “great monkey escape” while pushing pallets full of ice into a freezer on Nov. 7, 2024 in the Town of Yemassee. Nettles, who is accustomed to the occasional escape of the biomedical primates, believes the monkeys will make their way back to the facility or face their demise from blacks bears or alligators.
Karl Nettles, delivering ice to a storage facility off Guess Drive, speaks about the “great monkey escape” while pushing pallets full of ice into a freezer on Nov. 7, 2024 in the Town of Yemassee. Nettles, who is accustomed to the occasional escape of the biomedical primates, believes the monkeys will make their way back to the facility or face their demise from blacks bears or alligators. Drew Martin dmartin@islandpacket.com

The monkeys are so well taken care of that he “wouldn’t mind being down there” with them, Mayor Colin Moore said.

Mayor Colin Moore speaks about the Alpha Genesis monkey escape in the waiting room at the Yemassee Municipal Complex on Thursday, Nov. 7, 2024, in the Town of Yemassee, S.C. Moore says locals are accustomed to the occasional escape of the small monkeys and says they usually find their way back to the biomedical research facility on their own.
Mayor Colin Moore speaks about the Alpha Genesis monkey escape in the waiting room at the Yemassee Municipal Complex on Thursday, Nov. 7, 2024, in the Town of Yemassee, S.C. Moore says locals are accustomed to the occasional escape of the small monkeys and says they usually find their way back to the biomedical research facility on their own. Drew Martin dmartin@islandpacket.com

This story was originally published November 7, 2024 at 2:41 PM.

Chloe Appleby
The Island Packet
Chloe Appleby is a general assignment reporter for The Island Packet and The Beaufort Gazette. A North Carolina native, she has spent time reporting on higher education in the Southeast. She has a bachelor’s degree in English from Davidson College and a master’s degree in journalism from Columbia University.
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