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The Jersey Devil, the supposed mythical creature of the New Jersey Pinelands, has haunted New Jersey and the surrounding areas for the past 260 years. This entity has been seen by over 2,000 witnesses over this period. It has terrorized towns and caused factories and schools to close down, yet many people believe that the Jersey Devil is a legend, a mythical beast, that originated from the folklore of the New Jersey Pine Barrens. Others disagree with this point of view. The following text will show there is evidence to support the existence of an animal or supernatural being known as the Jersey Devil. The evidence consists of the stories of the Jersey Devil's origin, the sightings of it, and finally, the theories on it.
There are many different versions of the birth of the Jersey Devil. One of the most popular legends says a Mrs. Shrouds of Leeds Point, N.J. made a wish that if she ever had another child, she wanted it to be a devil. Her next child was born misshapen and deformed. She sheltered it in the house, so the curious couldn't see him. One stormy night, the child flapped it's arms, which turned into wings, and escaped out the chimney and was never seen by the family again. A Mrs. Bowen of Leeds Point said, "The Jersey Devil was born in the Shrouds house at Leeds Point." Another story that also placed the birth at Leeds Point said that a young girl fell in love with a British soldier during the Revolutionary War. The people of Leeds Point cursed her. When she gave birth, she had a devil. Some people believe the birth of the devil was punishment for the mistreatment of a minister by the Leeds folk.
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Another story placed the birth in Estelville, N.J. Mrs. Leeds, of Estelville,
finding out she was pregnant with her 13th child, shouted,"I hope it's a
devil". She got her wish. The child wad born with horns, a tail, wings, and
a horse-like head. The creature revisited Mrs. Leeds everyday. She stood
at her door and told it to leave. After awhile, the creature got the hint
and never returned.
Burlington, N.J, also claims to be the birthplace of the Jersey Devil.
In 1735, Mother Leeds was in labor on a stormy night. Gathered around her
were her friends. Mother Leeds was supposedly a witch and the child's father
was the devil himself. The child was born normal, but then changed form.
It changed from a normal baby to a creature with hooves, a horses head, bat
wings and a forked tail. It beat everyone present and flew up the chimney.
It circled the villages and headed toward the pines. In 1740 a clergy exercised
the devil for 100 years and it wasn't seen again until 1890.
There are many other versions of the legend. The legends say it was the
6th, 8th, 10th, 12th, or 13th child. It was born normal or deformed, and
the mother confined it to the cellar or the attic. Although there are many
discrepancies in all of these stories, there are 3 pieces of evidence that
tie all of the legends of the Jersey Devil's origin together.
The first thing that ties the legends together is the name "Leeds". Whether
the mother's name was Leeds or the birth place was Leeds Point, all of the
stories include the name Leeds. Alfred Heston, the Atlantic County Historian,
believes that the devil could be a Leeds or a Shrouds baby. He discovered
that a Daniel Leeds opened land in Great Egg Harbor, N.J., in 1699. His family
lived in Leeds Point. He also discovered a Samuel Shrouds, Sr. came to Little
Egg Harbor, N.J., in 1735 and lived right across the river from the house of
Mother Leeds. The 3rd fact ties in the Burlington story with the others stories.
Professor Fred MacFadden of Coppin State College, Baltimore, found that a
"devil" was mentioned in writings from Burlington as early as 1735. He also
indicated that the word Burlington was the word used to name
the area from the city of Burlington to the Atlantic Ocean. This means that
the name that is now used for the birthplace such as Leeds point or Estelville,
could be the same place referred to in the Burlington Legend.
The origins provide some validity to the existence of the Jersey Devil,
but the sightings are the most substantial pieces of evidence. The sightings
have been divided up into 3 time periods, pre 1909, January 16-23, 1909,
and post 1909.
From the pre 1909 era, few documented records of sightings still exist.
The ones that do confirm the existence of the devil.
In the early 19th century, Commodore Stephen Decatur, a naval hero, was
testing cannon balls on the firing range when he saw a strange creature flying
across the sky. He fired and hit the creature but it kept right on flying
across the field. Joseph Bonaparte, former king of Spain and brother of Napoleon,
saw the Kersey Devil in Bordentown, N.J., between 1816 and 1839 while he was
hunting. In 1840-41 many sheep and chickens were killed by a creature with
a piercing scream and strange tracks. In 1859-94, the Jersey Devil was seen numerous times and reportedly carried off anything that moved in Haddonfield,
Bridgeton, Smithville, Long Branch, Brigantine, and Leeds Point. W.F. Mayer
of New York noticed while visiting the Pine Barrens, most of the locals would
not venture out after dark. The devil was sighted by George Saarosy, A prominent
business man, at the NJ/NY border. This was the last reported sighting before
the turn of the century.
In 1903, Charles Skinner, author of American Myths and Legends, claimed
that the legend of the devil had run it's course and that in the new century,
N.J. would hear no more of the devil. New Jersey rested easy with that thought
for 6 years, until the week of January 16-23, 1909. During this week, the
devil would leave his tracks all over South Jersey and Philadelphia. He was
seen by over 1,000 people. This was his largest appearance ever.
It all started early Sunday morning, January 16, 1909. Thack Cozzens of
Woodbury, NJ, saw a flying creature with glowing eyes flying down the street.
In Bristol, N.J., John Mcowen heard and saw the strange creature on the banks
of the canal. Patrolman James Sackville fired at the creature as it flew away
screaming. E.W. Minister, Postmaster of Bristol, N.J., also saw a bird-like
creature with a horses head that had a piercing scream. When daylight came,
the residents of Bristol found hoof prints in the snow. Two local trappers
said they had never seen tracks like those before.
On Monday, the Lowdens of Burlington, N.J., found hoof prints in their yard
and around their trash, which was half eaten. Almost every yard in Burlington
had these strange hoof prints in them. The prints went up trees, went from
roof to roof, disappeared in the middle of the road, and stopped in the middle
of open fields. The same tracks were also found in Columbus, Hedding, Kinhora
and Rancocas. A hunt was organized to follow the tracks but the dogs wouldn't
follow the trail.
On the 19th, the Jersey Devil made his longest appearance of the week.
At 2:30 am, Mr. & Mrs. Nelson Evans of Gloucester were awakened by a strange
noise. They watched the devil from their window for 10 minutes. Mr. Evans
described the creature they saw:
"It was about three feet and half high, with a head like a collie dog and
a face like a horse. It had a long neck, wings about two feet long, and
its back legs were like those of a crane, and it had horse's hooves.
It walked on its back legs and held up two short front legs with paws
on them. It didn't use the front legs at all while we were watching.
My wife and I were scared, I tell you, but I managed to open the
window and say, "Shoo". It turned around, barked at me, and flew away".
Tuesday afternoon 2 professional hunters tracked the devil for 20 miles
in Gloucester. The trail jumped 5 foot fences and went under 8 inch spaces.
The hoof prints were found in more parts of South Jersey. A group of observers
in Camden, N.J., saw the devil. It barked at them and then took off into the
air.
The next day, a Burlington police officer and the Reverend John Pursell
of Pemberton saw the Jersey Devil. Rev. Pursell said, "Never saw anything
like it before". Posses in Haddonfield found tracks that ended abruptly.
In Collingswood, NJ, a posse watched the devil fly off toward Moorestown.
Near Moorestown, John Smith of Maple Shade saw the devil at the Mount Carmel
Cemetery. George Snyder saw the devil right after Mr. Smith and their
descriptions were identical. In Riverside, NJ, hoof prints were found on
roof tops and also around a dead puppy.
On Thursday, the Jersey Devil was seen by the Black Hawk Social Club.
He was also seen by a trolley full of people in Clementon as it circled above
them. The witnesse's descriptions matched others from the days before. In
Trenton, Councilman E.P. Weeden heard the flapping of wings and then found
hoof prints outside his door. The prints were also found at the arsenal in
Trenton. As the day wore on the Trolleys in Trenton and New Brunswick had
armed drivers to ward off attacks. The people in Pitman filled churches.
Chickens had been missing all week throughout the Delaware Valley, but when
the farmers checked their yards that day, they found their chickens dead,
with no marks on them. The West Collingswood Fire Department fired their
hose at the devil. The devil retreated at first, but then charged and flew
away at the last second.
Later that night, Mrs. Sorbinski of Camden heard a commotion in her yard.
She opened the door to see the Jersey Devil standing there with her dog in
it's grip. She hit the devil with a broom until it let go of her dog and
flew away. She started screaming until her neighbors came over. Two police
officers arrived at her house where over 100 people had gathered. The crowd
heard a scream coming from Kaigan Hill. The mob ran toward the creature on
the hill. The Police shot at it and the devil flew off into the night. The
streets of Camden were empty after this.
On Friday, Camden police officer Louis Strehr saw the Jersey Devil drinking from a horses trough. The school in Mt. Ephraim was closed
because no students came in. Mills and factories in Gloucester and Hainesport
had to close because none of the employees came to work. Many New Jersey
residents wouldn't leave their houses, even in daylight. Officer Merchant
of Blackwood drew a sketch of the creature he saw. His sketch coincided with
the descriptions from earlier in the week. Jacob Henderson saw the devil
in Salem and described it as having "wings and a tail". The devil was only
seen once more in 1909 in February.
Since 1909, the Jersey Devil has continued to be sighted by people all
over New Jersey. The number of sightings that have been reported to the
authorities has dwindled over the years. This could be attributed to the
fact that people don't want to be branded as crazy. Even though the number
of reported sightings has dropped, there's still a considerable amount of
sightings in the post 1909 era.
IN 1927, a cab driver on his way to Salem got a flat tire. He stopped
to fix the tire. As he was doing this, creature that stood upright and was
covered with hair, landed on the roof of his cab. The creature shook his
car violently. He fled the scene, leaving the tire and jack behind. Phillip
Smith, who was known as a sober and honest man, saw the devil walking down
the street in 1953. The characteristic screams of the Jersey Devil were heard
in the woods near Woodstown, N.J., in 1936.
Around 1961, 2 couples were parked in a car in the Pine Barrens. They
heard a loud screeching noise outside. Suddenly the roof of the car was smashed
in. They fled the scene, but returned later. Again they heard the loud screech.
They saw a creature flying along the trees, taking out huge chunks of bark
as it went along.
There have been other sightings since 1909, such as the Invasion of Gibbsboro
in 1951. The people there saw the devil over a 2 day period. In 1966, a farm
was raided and 31 ducks, 3 geese, 4 cats, and 2 dogs were killed. One of
the dogs was a large German Shepard which had it's throat ripped out. In
1981, a young couple spotted the devil at Atsion Lake in Atlantic County.
In 1987, in Vineland an aggressive german Shepard was found torn apart
and the body gnawed upon. The body was located 25 feet from the chain which
had been hooked to him. Around the body were strange tracks that no one could
identify.
The sightings and prints are the most substantial evidence that exists.
Many of the theories on the Jersey Devil are based upon that evidence. Some
theories can be proven invalid, while others seem to provide support for
the Jersey Devil's existence.
One theory is that the Jersey Devil is a bird. Mrs. Cassidy of Clayton
thought it was an invasion of scrowfoot ducks. The scrowfoot duck is much
too small to be mistaken for the devil. Others believe the devil is really
a sand hill crane. The crane used to live in South Jersey until it was pushed
out by man. The sand hill crane weighs about 12 lbs., is 4 foot high, and
a wingspan of 80 inches. It avoids man but if confronted it will fight. It
has a loud scream whooping voice that can be heard at a distance. This could
account for the screams heard by witnesses. The crane also eats potatoes
and corn. This could account for the raids on crops. This theory doesn't
explain , however, the killing of live stock. It also doesn't explain why
people described the devil as having a horses head, bat wings and tail, all
of which the crane doesn't have.
Proffesor Bralhopf said that" the tracks were made by some prehistoric
animal form the Jurassic period". He believes the creature survived underground
in a cavern. An expert from the Smithsonian Institute had a theory about
ancient creatures surviving underground. He said the Jersey Devil was a
Pterodactyl. The Academy of Natural Sciences could find no record of any
creature, living or extinct, that resembles the Jersey Devil.
Jack E. Boucher, author of Absagami Yesteryear, has a theory in which
he believes the devil was a deformed child. He thinks Mrs. Leeds had a disfigured
child and kept it locked away in the house. She grew sick and couldn't feed
the child anymore. It escaped out of hunger and raided local farms for food.
This doesn't take into account the incredible life span of the devil. The
child would have been 174 years old in 1909. It also doesn't account for
the sightings of ther devil flying.
Only a small amount of the sightings and footprints could be hoaxes. The
Jersey Devil has been seen by reliable people such as police, government
officials, postmasters, businessman, and other people whose "integrity is
beyond question". As for the hoof prints, even if some were hoaxes, There
is still no way to explain most of the tracks, especially the ones on roof
tops and tracks that ended abruptly as if the creature took wing.
The last theory is the most controversial one. Many people believe that
the Jersey Devil could be the very essence of evil, embodied. It is said
that the devil is an "uncanny harbinger of war" and appears before any
great conflict. The Jersey Devil was sighted before the start of the Civil
War. It was also seen right before the Spanish American War and WW I. In
1939, before the start of WW II, Mount Holly citizens were awakened by the
noise of hooves on their roof tops. The Devil was seen on December 7, 1941,
right before Pearl Harbor was bombed. He was also seen right before the Vietnam
War.
The Jersey Devil's habit of being a forerunner to wars could be because
of his possible demonic origins. In 1730, Ben Franklin reported a story about
a witchcraft trial near Mt Holly, N.J. One of the original legends say that
Mother Leeds was a witch. The devil's birth could have been a result of a
witches curse.
Other facts support the supernatural theory are the reports of the death
of the devil. When Commodore Decatur fired a cannon ball at the devil, it
went through him and he was unaffected.
In 1909, a track walker on the electric railroad saw the devil fly into
the wires above the tracks. There was a violent explosion which melted the
track 20 feet in both directions. No body was found and the devil was seen
later in perfect health. In 1957, the Department of Conservation found a
strange corpse in a burned out area of the pines. It was a partial skeleton,
feathers, and hind legs of an unidentifiable creature. The devil was thought
to be dead, but reappeared when the people of New Jersey thought that this
time his death was real. Each time he is reported dead, he returns. It seems the devil is
immortal, which a supernatural being would be. Another thing that supports
this theory is the incredible distances the devil could fly in a short period
of time. No animal could travel as fast as the devil did in 1909 when he
was sighted in South Jersey, Philadelphia, and New York through out the week.
None of these theories can give a definitive answer to what the Jersey
Devil was or is, but the sightings prove there is something out there. Whether
the Jersey devil is a bird or a demon, is still left to specualtion. The
people of New Jersey have definitely seen something out there lurking in the
Pine Barrens.
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Source: By [email protected]
Feel free to copy this file but please leave it intact so I get credit for my hard work. Thanks ([email protected])
Footnotes:
1 Henry Charlton Beck, Jersey Genesis (New Brunswick,NJ:Rutgers Univ.
Press, 1963), p.242
2 James F Mcgloy and Ray Miller, The Jersey Devil (wallingford, PA:The
Middle Atlantic Press,1976), p.45
3 Ibid.,p.50
4 Ibid.,p.69.
5 Ibid.,p.73.
6 Ibid.,p.102.
7 "Jersey Devil",The[camdem] Courier Post(Oct.30, 1975),p.2a.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Beck, Henry Charlton. Jersey Genesis. New Brunswick, NJ:
Rutgers University Press, 1963.
Boucher, Jack E. Absegami Yesteryear. Somerspoint, NJ:
Atlantic County Historical Society, 1963.
Cilik, Yvonne, "Search is on for Hoax or Hoofprint", The[Camden}Courier
Post
June 7, 1981, pp. 18-28.
"Jersey Devil", The [Camdem]Courier Post, October 30, 1975,p.2A.
McGloy, James F. And Ray Miller. The Jersey Devil.
Wallingford, PA: The Middle Atlantic Press, 1976.
McMahon, William. South Jersey Twons, New Brunswick, NJ:
Rutgers University Press, 1973.
Skinner, Charles. American Myths and Legends. Philadelphia, PA:
J.B. Lippincott, 1963.