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Mysterious Creatures : A Guide to Cryptozoology

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Wonders 5, no. 3 (September 1998): 67–79;<br />

Karl Shuker, “A Giant Owl and a Giant<br />

Hyrax... ?”Strange Magazine, no. 21 (Fall<br />

2000), on line at http://www.strangemag.com.<br />

Giant Pennsylvania Snake<br />

Large Snake of south-central Pennsylvania and<br />

northern Maryland.<br />

Variant names: Big snake, Boss snake, The<br />

Devil, Devil snake, Heap big snake, Log snake.<br />

Physical description: Length, 15–20 feet. Diameter,<br />

8–10 inches, or as thick as a s<strong>to</strong>vepipe.<br />

Black with some gray, dark gray with yellow<br />

markings, or dirty tan with variegated markings.<br />

Huge mouth.<br />

Behavior: Sometimes blocks rural roads. Coils<br />

its tail around a tree branch and swings its head<br />

<strong>to</strong> and fro. Said <strong>to</strong> be able <strong>to</strong> move with its head<br />

and neck erect. Hisses or groans. Eats roosters<br />

and cats.<br />

Habitat: Forests, mountains, rocky areas.<br />

Distribution: Southern Pennsylvania; northern<br />

Maryland.<br />

Significant sightings: Emanuel Bushman’s<br />

brother and six others saw a Devil snake on Big<br />

Round Top, south of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania,<br />

in April 1833. Other reports place the snake in<br />

Devil’s Den. It was probably gone by the Battle<br />

of Gettysburg in July 1863, but the name<br />

“Devil’s Den” may have originated with this<br />

creature rather than Confederate sniper fire during<br />

the battle.<br />

A black snake 25–35 feet long was seen in the<br />

vicinity of Allen<strong>to</strong>wn, Pennsylvania, in 1870<br />

and 1871, catching and eating roosters and cats.<br />

A 15-foot “anaconda” was reported around<br />

Hall’s Springs, Maryland, in the summer of<br />

1875. Its track was measured at 11.5–15 inches<br />

wide. It swallowed pigs, a turkey, and a chicken<br />

in a trap set for it, but it eluded capture.<br />

Present status: Possibly the same as other Giant<br />

North American S nakes reported elsewhere.<br />

Possible explanations:<br />

(1) The Black rat snake (Elaphe obsoleta<br />

obsoleta) is the largest snake in Pennsylvania,<br />

growing <strong>to</strong> 7 feet in length. It is solid black<br />

with faint traces of a spotted pattern.<br />

(2) The Northern black racer (Coluber<br />

202 GIANT PENNSYLVANIA SNAKE<br />

constric<strong>to</strong>r constric<strong>to</strong>r) is the second-largest<br />

snake in Pennsylvania but does not grow<br />

much longer than 6 feet and is more slender<br />

than the rat snake. It is bluish-gray <strong>to</strong> black<br />

on <strong>to</strong>p, with some white on the chin.<br />

(3) The Bullsnake (Pituophis catenifer sayi),<br />

a yellowish colubrid snake with dark<br />

blotches, grows <strong>to</strong> over 8 feet long but is<br />

only found in isolated pockets in the East.<br />

(4) A large, unknown subspecies of<br />

bullsnake, suggested by Chad Arment.<br />

Sources: Emanuel Bushman, “Big Snake,”<br />

Gettysburg (Pa.) Compiler, August 12, 1875;<br />

Thomas Turner Wysong, The Rocks of Deer<br />

Creek, Harford County, Maryland: Their Legends<br />

and His<strong>to</strong>ry (Baltimore, Md.: Sherwood, 1879),<br />

p. 38; Salome Myers Stewart, “Reminiscences<br />

of Gettysburg,” Chattanooga (Tenn.) News,<br />

Oc<strong>to</strong>ber 30, 1913; Annie Wes<strong>to</strong>n Whitney and<br />

Caroline Caulfield Bullock, “Folk-Lore from<br />

Maryland,” Memoirs of the American Folklore<br />

Society 18 (1925): 193; Jon Baughman and<br />

Ron Morgan, Tales of the Broad Top (Sax<strong>to</strong>n,<br />

Pa.: Jon Baughman and Ron Morgan, 1977);<br />

Jon Baughman, Strange and Amazing S<strong>to</strong>ries of<br />

Rays<strong>to</strong>wn Country (Sax<strong>to</strong>n, Pa.: Broad Top<br />

Bulletin, 1987); Chad Arment, “Giant Snake<br />

S<strong>to</strong>ries in Maryland,” INFO Journal, no. 73<br />

(Summer 1995): 15–16; Garry E. Adelman and<br />

Timothy H. Smith, Devil’s Den: A His<strong>to</strong>ry and<br />

<strong>Guide</strong> (Gettysburg, Pa.: Thomas Publications,<br />

1997), pp. 11, 141; Jeffrey R. Frazier, The<br />

Black Ghost of Scotia and More Pennsylvania<br />

Fireside Tales, vol. 2 (Lancaster, Pa.: Egg Hill,<br />

1997); Patty A. Wilson, Haunted Pennsylvania<br />

(Laceyville, Pa.: Belfry Books, 1998), pp.<br />

37–41; Chad Arment, “Giant Snakes in<br />

Pennsylvania,” North American BioFortean<br />

Review 2, no. 3 (December 2000): 36–43,<br />

http://www.strangeark.com/nabr/NABR5.pdf.<br />

Giant Python<br />

Individual Snake or a separate species of reticulated<br />

python of East Asia that exceeds the accepted<br />

length of 33 feet.<br />

Physical description: Length, 33–70 feet.<br />

Distribution: India; Bangladesh; Thailand;<br />

Indonesia; the Philippines.

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