Harold MacDougal

"I was right all along! The savage heart cannot be conventionally civilized!"

- Harold MacDougal

 is a Major character featured in Red Dead Redemption.

With the addition of the Liars and Cheats DLC pack,  is also a Multiplayer character model that may be selected in the 'Damnation' section of the Outfitter.

Background
MacDougal is on a sabbatical from Yale, writing a book on Native Americans and the last days of the Old West, and he is very much an East Coast turn-of-the-century man. It could be said that he has taken his study of cocaine a little too seriously, and that his 'sabbatical' from Yale might have been forced. He is an optimist who loves the American way of life and speaks in large metaphors at times.

Red Dead Redemption
When John Marston and Archer Fordham retrieve Nastas from Dutch's trap at the Wreck of the Serendipity, they drop him off at Professor MacDougal's hotel room to recover. Edgar Ross then instructs Marston to pay him a visit later.

When John Marston visits MacDougal again, he finds him comparing blood samples of, in his opinion, the 'savage' Native Americans and the 'civilized' white man. After observing them, he is absolutely shocked to see that they are exactly the same. Nastas then enters, and MacDougal tries to communicate with sign language and metaphors, but Nastas responds to him by speaking in a perfectly normal manner. Nastas claims to know the location of Dutch van der Linde, and both Marston and MacDougal follow Nastas into Tall Trees, where MacDougal rides back to Blackwater, obviously frightened. After Marston gets knocked out, Nastas runs up the mountain and carries him back to MacDougal, where he revives him with smelling salts. MacDougal claims that he and Nastas carried Marston back, but after an angry glare, he reveals that he was not involved.

When John Marston encounters MacDougal again, Nastas arranges a meeting with Dutch's men at Bearclaw Camp. On the way, they encounter a Grizzly Bear, and MacDougal, horrified, shoots and makes the bear angry. When it attacks, Marston kills the bear before it could do any damage. Nastas then says that the Bear meant no harm and would not have attacked if MacDougal had not shot first. The meeting with Dutch does not go very well. Nastas is shot after being called a traitor. The professor cowers in fear as Marston fights Dutch's men, and the two of them escape back to Blackwater. During the escape trip, MacDougal is saddened that Nastas was killed, thinking he was "a brilliant savage companion".

Marston next finds him packing in a hurried state, repeatedly calling the natives "Fucking savages!", and aiming to take the next train back to Yale. Dutch van der Linde approaches his house from the street, telling John to send MacDougal outside they could show him their own method of 'Anthropology'. Marston and MacDougal escape via the rooftops, but Dutch has snipers all over the city. After a battle, Marston and MacDougal get on their horses and run full speed to the train station at Manzanita Post. Marston along the way kills any of Dutch's men trying to pursue them.

When they reached the station, MacDougal thanked Marston for his help. He shakes his hand but gives up and gives him a big hug before boarding the train. He is not seen again for the rest of the game.

Epilogue
MacDougal succeeded in returning to Yale University. In 1914, MacDougal is caught beating a fellow scholar, Fortisque, on the head with a croquet mallet before climbing a building completely naked and demanding fine food and drink. He is in a drunken state and is then kicked out from the university. The newspaper article detailing this event emphasizes the "savagery" of the attack; an ironic choice of words, since MacDougal accuses Native Americans of being savages.

Undead Nightmare


MacDougal appears in the mission &quot;Curious Tales from Blackwater, USA&quot;. John Marston happens to cross over the professor while looking for survivors in the overrun town of Blackwater, to which MacDougal claims to have returned for "more research". Marston attempts to ascertain the nature of the plague through the professor, to which he replies he doesn't have "a fucking clue." Seeing as MacDougal is unarmed, John implores the frightened professor to stay with him, to which he agrees on the condition that Marston allows him to wander down a lonely, deserted road to get his bags, which he left with Nastas. As Nastas was killed in the original Redemption story, MacDougal is able to manage a few paces before being assaulted and devoured by the undead native. Marston has the choice to kill both of them afterwards. However, due to the prescence of more Undead in the streets, it may be wiser to simply outrun them.

Red Dead Redemption

 * &quot;Bear One Another's Burdens&quot;
 * &quot;At Home With Dutch&quot;
 * &quot;For Purely Scientific Purposes&quot;
 * &quot;The Prodigal Son Returns (To Yale)&quot;

Undead Nightmare

 * &quot;Curious Tales from Blackwater, USA&quot;

Trivia

 * MacDougal is an exceedingly incompetent scholar, demonstrating a terribly inaccurate understanding of Charles Darwin's Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection (Not to be confused with the modern Theory of Evolution which includes Genetics) MacDougal demonstrates his misunderstanding after noticing a Buffalo hunt. Nastas comments correctly that the Buffalo will be hunted to extinction if the westerners do not stop hunting at the rate they are. MacDougal responds that extinction cannot happen, species only evolve. In reality, extinction is one of the mechanisms by which evolution is driven.
 * While MacDougal is extremely bigoted and prejudiced against Native Americans in general, he does show some redeeming qualities in that he greatly respects Nastas, going so far as to publish a touching obituary for his faithful Indian friend after Nastas' death in the main storyline. The final line of the epitaph, "May you find God", could be seen as an indication that MacDougal considered Nastas good enough to get to heaven, even though he was not Christenized. (It could also be seen as another indicator of MacDougal's bigotry, which does seem more likely.)
 * Later in the game, a newspaper talks about how he savagely attacked another man at Yale. It mentions a rumor that he apparently tried to get the grounds keeper to cut the top of his scalp off so he could see a living human brain.
 * MacDougal is a fairly realistic depiction of early pseudoscientific "arm chair" anthropology, as practiced by individuals such as Paolo Mantegazza. During the time period, the discipline saw an overhaul of the anthropological method by academics such as Franz Boas, E.B. Tylor and Bronislaw Malinowski.
 * MacDougal is a chronic cocaine addict, shown both by his outlook on it being "a wonderful way to relax the body and strengthen the mind", but mainly by the collection of injection marks on both of his forearms. He also takes some in the introduction cutscene for his final mission.
 * Oftentimes when Marston encounters MacDougal he is very jittery, a sign that he is under the influence of cocaine.
 * MacDougal is exceedingly bigoted, stereotyping all natives as "Savages." However, he is shown to be completely oblivious to this.
 * He got into Yale and was discredited amongst his peers because he didn't understand evolution. He is unwilling to accept the "savages" as normal human beings despite taking blood samples when it turns out they were exactly the same according to his later tests.
 * It is strange he is in Undead Nightmare, because he would've already left Blackwater. Marston makes note of this, but MacDougal then says that he's returned for more research. He is eaten by a zombified Nastas.
 * In light of that statement, he may have jinxed himself minutes before meeting undead Nastas, by saying "I'm going to wander down that lonely, deserted street and get my bag." Something that is considered a stereotypical scene from a horror film just before that person is attacked.
 * After he is bitten by the zombified Nastas, he turns into a zombie and therefore, gives Marston the choice to kill him or just walk away and let him give chase.
 * MacDougal claims that cocaine "Restores the ego, and helps his thinking enourmously". It is found in the last version of the Blackwater newspaper that while this is true, the drug has overwhelming effects if used chronically. This is most likely what led to his expulsion from Yale (also found in the last edition of the Blackwater paper).
 * The player can still enter his hotel room.
 * Harold MacDougal seems to resemble Ken Rosenberg from the Grand Theft Auto Series. Both have "smart" jobs (Harold is a scientist, Ken is a lawyer), both act mad due to cocaine addictions, and both are friends of the protagonist.
 * It is also suggested he is an insomniac due to the cocaine, in one case mentioned he hasn't slept for days.

Quotes
"I wanted to report the last days of the old West. The honor, the romance, the nobility! But it turns out it's just people killing each other!"

"I'm going to wander down that lonely, deserted street and get my bag."

- 's last words in Undead Nightmare

"Well, sir, I'm a man of science, a man of great learning, a thinker, a wise man and I'll be honest with you, sir... I haven't got a fucking clue."

- in Undead Nightmare

"I don't want a bullet in my flippin' neck!"

"Species don't die, they evolve. Hunting, in time, will make the buffalo stronger."

Gallery
Harold MacDougal