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Jason McLean - Metroplex Monsters: Dallas Demons, Fort Worth Goatmen & Other Terrors of the Trinity River

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Metroplex Monsters: Dallas Demons, Fort Worth Goatmen & Other Terrors of the Trinity River: summary, description and annotation

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In the metropolitan mosaic that joins Dallas and Fort Worth together into a brightly lit metroplex, some mysterious figures still manage to keep to the shadows and slip through the cracks. Even after the Lake Worth Monster inspired a rash of phone calls to the Fort Worth Police Department, the Goatman of Greer Island faded back into the haze of myth. Is Lake Granburys Ol One Eye an impossibly large catfish or a sidetracked sea serpent? Could pterosaurs really coexist with the regions congested skies? From the Lady of White Rock Lake to the Creature of Copper Canyon and the Chupacabras of Cedar Hill, Jason McLean methodically follows inexplicable events to their source and bizarre beasts to their lairs.

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Published by The History Press Charleston SC wwwhistorypresscom Copyright - photo 1
Published by The History Press Charleston SC wwwhistorypresscom Copyright - photo 2
Published by The History Press Charleston SC wwwhistorypresscom Copyright - photo 3
Published by The History Press
Charleston, SC
www.historypress.com
Copyright 2020 by Jason McLean
All rights reserved
First published 2020
e-book edition 2020
ISBN 978.1.43967.140.5
Library of Congress Control Number: 2020940194
print edition ISBN 978.1.46714.543.5
Notice: The information in this book is true and complete to the best of our knowledge. It is offered without guarantee on the part of the author or The History Press. The author and The History Press disclaim all liability in connection with the use of this book.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form whatsoever without prior written permission from the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
Contents
Introduction
When people think of monsters like Bigfoot or the Loch Ness Monster, creatures that seemingly belong to another time or world, the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex certainly doesnt come to mind as a popular stomping ground for these particularly peculiar abnormalities. I know its easy to assume that cryptozoological creatures (animals undiscovered by modern science but known in folklore and mythology) could only exist in far-off locales like the bottom of the ocean or impenetrable forestsif they exist at all. Like most people, I assumed that nothing (certainly nothing as large as Sasquatch) could escape detection in a modern metropolis, but I have learned that this assumption is wrong.
Now, to be fair, the idea of these anomalous and undiscovered creatures lurking among the shadows of the seventh largest metroplex region in the country does seem preposterous at first (or even second) glance. After all, the Dallas/Fort Worth conurbation is home to 7.8 million residents, the F-22 Raptor is assembled in Fort Worth, Dallas is home to numerous Fortune 500 companies and D/FW Airport (officially Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport) services almost 33 million passengers annually, making it the fourth busiest airport in the United States. It seems impossible to hide giant bipedal apes and prehistoric creatures next to a Six Flags theme park or a GM assembly plant, but despite the omnipresent concrete of urban sprawl, stories of strange and undiscovered beings do haunt the metroplex. Some are urban legends, evidence of a culture evolving from an agricultural base into an industrialized powerhouse, while others appear to be living relics of an ancient world that go about their lives happily ignoring us, only being seen because the regions constant growth forces us to continue to encroach on their habitat. But there are some creatures that seem to be somewhere in betweenpredatory phantoms brought with us from disparate cultures throughout history that reach out to specific victims, inflicting terror and confusion.
1 Wise County 2 Denton County 3 Collin County 4 Hunt County 5 Rockwall - photo 4
1) Wise County 2) Denton County 3) Collin County 4) Hunt County 5) Rockwall County 6) Parker County 7) Tarrant County 8) Dallas County 9) Kaufman County 10) Johnson County 11) Ellis County.
1 Denton 2 Dallas 3 Fort Worth 4 Mountain Creek Area Grand Prairie - photo 5
1) Denton 2) Dallas 3) Fort Worth 4) Mountain Creek Area (Grand Prairie, Duncanville, Cedar Hill Border) 5) Cleburne 6) Waxahachie 7) Ennis 8) Italy.
Davy Crocketts Creature
A Brief History of Bigfoot in Texas
If youre like me, youd expect that if something like Bigfoot existed in Texas, then it must have lived here for a very long time, which would mean we should have long histories of contacts and ancient mythologies surrounding these beingsnot just a few newspaper clippings about a bunch of scared teens from the late 1960s. But the truth is that Bigfoot is and has always been the eight-hundred-pound gorilla of Texas mythology (yes, I stand by that pun); in fact, the most famous (if not controversial) historical Texas Sasquatch sighting occurred in 1836 with famed hero of the Alamo Congressman David Crockett himself. The account comes from a letter Mr. Crockett wrote to his brother-in-law Abner Burgin while the King of the Wild Frontier was exploring the woods around Nacogdoches, Texas (about 180 miles southeast of Dallas):
William and I were pushing through some thicket, clearing the way, when I sat down to mop my brow. I sat for a spell, watching as William made his good and fine progress. I removed my boots and sat with my rations, thinking the afternoon a fine time to lunch. As the birds whistled and chirped and I ate my small and meager ration, I tapped my axe upon the opposite end of the felled tree, I rested upon.
Whether it was the axes disturbance or possibly the heat of the high sun which caused an apparition to slowly form in front of my eyes, I know not. As a Christian man, I swear to you, Abe, that what spirit came upon me was the shape and shade of a large ape man, the likes we might expect among the more bellicose and hostile Indian tribes of the Territories. The shade formed into the most deformed and ugly countenance. Covered in wild hair, with small and needling eyes, large broken rows of teeth, and the height of three foundlings [just over eight feet tall], I spit upon the ground the bread I was eating.
The Monster then addressed a warning to me. Abner, it told me to return from Texas, to flee this Fort and to abandon this lost cause. When I began to question this, the Creature spread upon the wind like the morning steam swirls off a frog pond. I swear to you, Abner, that whatever meat or sausage disagreed with me that afternoon, I forswore all beef and hog for a day or so afterward.
Depiction of the monster encountered by Davy Crockett Illustration by the - photo 6
Depiction of the monster encountered by Davy Crockett. Illustration by the author.
The congressmans encounter is extremely controversial in the world of Bigfoot research because of Crocketts description of the things phantom-like qualities and ability to speak, but Mr. Crockett was known for his flamboyance and hyperbole in speech and writing. So, its not necessary for us to take his account of it appearing and disappearing as literal but instead as a well-crafted story of this creature coming into his view and then quickly blending into the foliagean attribute many people describe to this day as disappearing. As for this tall terror speaking, many people who stumble into a Bigfoots territory (often thought to be where the family group has nested for the day) have an extreme feeling of fear and that they need to leave the area immediately. It may be that Crocketts interpretation of the encounter and these same emotions were taken as a message that we see as prophetic in retrospect.
Whatever the answer for this strange encounter might be, Id like to point out that the famed frontiersman was in the perfect location for a Bigfoot sighting. Even to this day, the region of the Piney Woods (a coniferous forest region of East Texas that continues into southeastern Oklahoma, Louisiana and Arkansas) that Crockett was exploring has the highest number of Bigfoot sightings in Texas. It is also important to note that this area was home to the Caddo, a American Indian tribe that was indigenous to the Louisiana/East Texas region and had established successful satellite villages as far west as the Grand Prairie/Arlington area strewn along the Trinity River and its tributaries. In fact, one of the largest of these expansionist locations was in the Mountain Creek area of Dallas County, where Joe Pool Lake is now. The Caddo often warned visitors of a strange and standoffish tribe of giants, called the Stick Indians, who were one with nature. Many researchers believe that the Stick Indians were actually Bigfoot family groups and that they were given their name because of how Sasquatch marked their territory. Though somewhat controversial, many researchers believe that Bigfoot will denote areas they inhabit by bending young saplings together in
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