Did the Lake Clinch Serpent kill a man?
Does Lake Clinch in Polk County
have a lake serpent? The lake contains quite a large fish stock of
Largemouth Bass, Bluegill and Black Crappie. There is a food source to
sustain something in the lake. However there is some controversy over whether there is a tradition of a creature in the lake.
“There
is a tradition that a sea serpent, or lake serpent, used to haunt Lake
Clinch,” M.F. Hetherington wrote in his 1928 “A History of Polk County.”
“The Indians many years ago insisted there was an immense serpent in
this lake. In 1907 residents of Frostproof declared they had seen the
monster, and that it must be 30 feet(10 metres) long - this, too, before
post-prohibition liquor was known.”
And the opposite opinion:
“My own inquiries to local libraries and newspapers failed to produce any leads or archival reports,” Newton wrote. “It is entirely possible that Lake Clinch
has produced some cryptid sightings in the past, or that it may figure
in aboriginal mythology, but as of press time for the work in hand, no
further information was available.”
However I found this, an interesting story from 1926 about a man thought to have been killed by a large serpent in the lake:
“but
talk about a lake creature persisted. Settlers spoke of something in
the lake and early pioneers, including citizens, claimed to have seen a
30 foot [9.1 m] long “sea serpent” while boating or from the shore. On
the night of August 30,1926, 49-year-old Charles M.Mallet stepped out of
his simple Florida
Cracker style home wearing a bathing suit and carrying a tackle box and
bait. Mallett was a businessman, founder of the town’s first bank, and a
partner in a prosperous fertilizer and supply company that served the
local growers .He was a practical man and tales about a giant serpent
inhabiting the lake adjacent to his home did not worry him as he
prepared to venture onto the legendary monster’s domain. Before going
fishing, Mallett had told several associates that he would be leaving
for Sarasota the next day and absent from his usual haunts in the coming week. He
stopped long enough to wave to a neighbor then made his way down to the
dock. Like other men in Frostproof, he kept a small boat at the pier
and frequently fished for the Largemouth Bass that were, and are,
abundant in the lake. It was Florida’s
“monsoon season” and there had been heavy rain that afternoon, but now
it was clear skies as Mallett boarded his boat and headed out onto
smooth dark water.
Three days later, on Thursday morning, G. D. Moree cast a fishing line into Lake Clinch from the eastern shore. While reeling it in, he snagged something big - a human body. The
features were so mangled, that given the condition, it might have
remained unidentified but for a ring on the corpse’s finger; the name
faintly engraved on the inside of the band was “Charles M.Mallet”. To
confirm the identity, a person was dis-patched to see if Mallet had
returned from his trip. One of Mallett’s employees, C.C. Matthews,
dis-covered the door to the Cracker house unlocked and Mallett’s
personal effects and suitcase awaiting his return from the lake. There
was no doubt that the body was that of
Charles Mercer Mallett, but what happened out on Lake Clinch?It is likely that a physician or district coroner examined Mallett’s body (Polk County did not have a medical examiner until the 1970s). A record of the death has been found
in the state’s official Death Index “
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