The Susquehanna River Legend
The Susquehanna River is a major river located in
the north eastern mid-Atlantic United States. It is 444 miles (715 km) long and drains into the Chesapeake Bay. Kettle Creek
is a tributary of the West Branch Susquehanna River running through Tioga,
Potter, and Clinton counties, in Pennsylvania. It is 43 miles (69 km) long.
There is a legend of a monster or unknown creature
in the river around Kettle Creek.From the 1800’s it was variously called the Kettle Creek Monster, the West Branch Dugong, or the
Susquehanna Seal.It swam in the waters of Kettle Creek and the
Susquehanna River, overturning lumber rafts and howling at night. Some thought it was a creature from the sea that swam in during a flood and got
trapped.
An article in the Daily
Democrat on February 27 1897 said the creature had got trapped in the river and
now inhabited the area around Kettle Creek.The article said that it was big
having the bulk of an ox or hippopotamus. Some people thought it was a shark or whale. Others that
it was it was a marine creature left
over from prehistoric times such as an ichthyosaurus or prehistoric whale. The
article described it as terrible and as not
having the form or image of anything
else on earth.There was speculation that it could be travelling back and forth to the ocean through a series
of underground caverns. It was active at night . The Democrat reported ”Those
who have crossed the animal’s path heard its terrible roar, his disturbing the
waters and lashing them into a foam.”
As the reports of this creature
dwindled as the years progressed the article presumed this meant it had died,
or perhaps escaped back to the ocean during the 1889 flood.
Locals said it may just have
returned to the caves or tunnels through which it had travelled and may return.
Others, believed it was still
about and lumber rafts that overturned were blamed on the creature, which was
said to still be swimming around and looking for prey. The article ended by saying no one seemed willing to investigate
because the water is said to be of great
depth and there was great danger, as the creature was said to be a man eater.
Most would say this was just a tall tale and I was
inclined to agree until I saw this
reported below.
Posted May 28, 2020
A likely new Pennsylvania record for flathead catfish – a monster weighing
56.3 pounds – was pulled from the Schuylkill River in the Philadelphia area on
Sunday night. When certified by the Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission,
Pierce’s flathead will top the existing record by almost 6 pounds. That
50-pound 7-ounce fish was caught in the Susquehanna River, near the Muddy Creek
public access in York County, on April 6, 2019, by Jeff Bonawitz, of East
Lampeter Township.
Could the Susquehanna Seal have been a large catfish? Large catfish have been
known to drag people under water .They are often mistaken for river monsters .
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