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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
June 30, 2005
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Thursday, June 30, 2005
The Sea Serpent of the Sound: Spotted in Pelham Waters in 1877
(Part II)
Beginning in 1947, people across the United States began reported
strange things in the sky that looked like "flying saucers". The
Unidentified Flying Object ("UFO") craze had begun. For many years,
ordinary citizens of unquestionable reputation claimed to see UFOs.
Seventy years before the UFO craze, there was a "Sea Serpent" craze along
the east coast of the United States. As noted in yesterday's Historic
Pelham Blog posting entitled "The
Sea Serpent of the Sound: Spotted in Pelham Waters in 1877 (Part I)",
in July 1877 a sea serpent known as the "Sea Serpent of the Sound" first
appeared. The serpent (or serpents, some might say) supposedly returned
each year for several years and was even referenced several years later in
The New York Times as "Our Perennial Visitor". See Our
Perennial Visitor, N.Y. Times, Aug. 1, 1879, p. 4.
In late August 1877, the Sea Serpent of the Sound was seen off the
shores of Pelham near City Island. As with most such unusual events, there
may well have been a plainly plausible explanation for the sighting.
Today's Blog posting will detail that explanation.
Readers of the daily Historic Pelham Blog will recall that yesterday, I
related an account published in the September 2, 1877 issue of The New
York Times saying that a steamship from Bridgeport passed near the
Execution Lighthouse northeast of City Island and supposedly struck the
beast while it lay asleep on the water. According to the account, the
collision "caused the boat to tremble from stem to stern" and a "black
object rose angrily to the height of the flagstaff with a hissing sound,
and water was dashed upon the deck." The Sound Sea-Serpent, N.Y. Times,
Sep. 2, 1877, p. 7.
What could possibly serve as a plausible explanation for a "black
object" rising "angrily" from the water to the height of a flagstaff on
the ship while making a hissing sound? Less than two weeks after the
account appeared in the newspaper, a wise old Captain from Darien,
Connecticut named E. E. Tooker offered just such an explanation. The
Times published it on September 14, 1877. It read:
"THE SEA-SERPENT IN THE SOUND.
The Norwalk (Conn.) Hour says: 'On the night of the 21st of
July, the schooner Mary of Dennysville, Me., Capt. Holloway, was run into
and sunk by the steamer Elanore, of Providence, off Lloyd's Neck, Long
Island Sound. The only person saved from the wreck was a lad named
Preston. Capt. E. E. Tooker, of Darien, for several weeks has been
actively engaged in stripping the hull by the aid of divers. The divers
found the body of a man who proved to be Charles A. Loughton, of West
Pembroke, Washington County, Me. The bodies of the Captain, mate, and
sailors have not yet been recovered; they are doubtless in the cabin of
the vessel. And now, as regards this sea-serpent business: During the past
week or two we have been amused by reading accounts of a monster serpent
being struck by a steamer off the Norwalk Islands; how the vessel trembled
at the shock, and how the huge form was seen rising several feet above the
water. The mystery is explained this way: When Capt. Tooker found the
sunken vessel, all the spars were standing, the top of the mainmast being
only about two feet under water at low tide. One morning when the diver
descended to resume his work, he found that the mast had been struck by
some passing vessel. A sheet of copper was picked up on the deck that had
been torn from the bottom of some steamer or sailing vessel. As the wreck
is exactly in the line of the Sound steamers, it was, without doubt, the
cause of the recent scare."
Source: The Sea-Serpent In The Sound, N.Y. Times, Sep. 14,
1877, p. 3.
A plausible explanation, indeed, although news reports indicate
countless sightings of the Sea Serpent of the Sound in many different
places throughout the Sound for the next several years . . . . . . . .
Tomorrow: a plausible explanation for other sightings of the Sea
Serpent of the Sound in the 1870s?
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
posted by Blake A. Bell @
5:17 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
June 30, 2005.
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