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| The Great New England Sea Serpent |
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| "Probably the stuffed skin of this monster is never destined to adorn the walls of any museum, or his remains to repose in any pickle other than his native brine." Waldo Thompson Swampscott: Historical Sketches of the Town 1885 |
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| Introduction to THE GREAT NEW ENGLAND SEA SERPENT - AN ACCOUNT OF UNKNOWN CREATURES SIGHTED BY MANY RESPECTABLE PERSONS BETWEEN 1638 AND THE PRESENT DAY by J.P. O'Neill - Paraview Press In August of 1817, members of the New England Linnaean Society found themselves in the unique position of conducting the first ever scientific investigation of an unknown marine creature, supposed to be a sea serpent, which had appeared in the harbor at Gloucester, Massachusetts. This was not the first sighting of a strange creature in the Gulf of Maine; nor was it the last. However, that August remains singular in that it was the first time that men of scholarship and means had an opportunity to conduct a scientific study of a creature thought to exist only in myth. Eager to “collect evidence with regard to the existence and appearance of any such animal,” the members of the investigative committee of the Linnaean Society set about collecting sworn statements from a variety of credible witnesses. Others, less inclined to scholarship, pursued it with every available weapon. The creature remained elusive. As recorded in the published report of the Linnaean Committee in 1817 the witnesses’ accounts agreed that the creature “was said to resemble a serpent in its general form and motions, to be of immense size, and to move with wonderful rapidity; to appear on the surface only in calm bright weather; and to seem jointed or like a number of buoys or casks following each other in a line.” Similar descriptions of a creature bearing little resemblance to any known animal had been reported as early as 1638 and would be repeated over and over again for the next 150 years. |
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| Buy the book |
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| “It has been my belief for some years that there is some fitful, gigantic wanderer inhabiting the ocean; ...no one who saw what I did would ever entertain the suggestion that it was a school of porpoises, a grampus, or a horse-mackerel. Because some have been deceived by these, or a floating spar or a mass of seaweed, it does not follow that others have not seen a genuine monster." "...there remains a residuum of evidence which cannot justly be ignored. My own firm belief is based both upon what my eyes have seen and upon unimpeachable testimony of many men, whose word upon any other subject would be taken without question.” Granville Putnam Witness - Rockport, Massachusetts 1886 |
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| SIGHTINGS |
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| Sea serpent seen from the yacht Princess at Swampscott in 1875 |
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| Hoaxes & Humbugs |
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| The Usual Suspects |
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| On Record Pro & Con |
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| Sea Serpents in Art & Literature |
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| Links |
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| “Science is an empirical study and must not be confused with credulity …we must not jump to conclusions. Science has given us sound reasons for postponing judgment on matters beyond our experience… If science teaches us anything, it teaches us to contemplate the possibility of everything and the certainty of nothing.” Tom Gilling - The Sooterkin |
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| Creature seen by Virginia Henderson at Rockport, Massachusetts July 27,1886 |