Duluth needs a monster of its own

Earlier today I was reading about the Red Dwarf of Detroit, a harbinger of doom that’s been haunting the Detroit area for hundreds of years. It’s described as “a small child-like creature with red or black fur boots” that has “blazing red eyes and rotten teeth.”

Other communities have monsters that are unique to their location. Point Pleasant, WV has the Mothman. Southern New Jersey has the Jersey Devil. Botetourt County, VA and Mattoon, IL have the Mad Gasser, who was more of a serial killer really but I’m still including it here.

Mayor Ness wants to get the population back up to 90,000. Maybe some good old-fashioned mass hysteria is what we need to put this town back on the map.

If Duluth had a monster of its own, what would it be like? When would would it appear? Where would it appear? What would it be called?

27 thoughts on “Duluth needs a monster of its own”

  1. June 1902

    [img]https://staging.perfectduluthday.com/wp-content/uploads/comments/june1902a.jpg[/img]
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  2. I like where this is headed. Maybe some sort of electrical aquatic moose-monster, connected to a cult of “foreigners” that meets in the building next door to Central Sales.

  3. TimK is right, this has all the signs of a Lovecraft-ian novella. A giant amorphous blob, a shambling mound of gelatinous taconite sludge, the “ancient ones” … Also, I like the idea of a huge 300lb sturgeon with eyes the size of pie-plates

  4. I think the bunnies that used to swarm down around Park Point & Canal Park need to be incorporated into the legend somehow. Maybe we can blame their appearance/disappearance on the monster — plus, a story about a monster eating bunnies is sure to scare the kids.

  5. I too shall vouch that the gnome-like man exists! He of the broad-brimmed hat and mighty thirst. Rivers of beer empty themselves down his gullet, and lesser demons quail before his belching countenance.

  6. [img]https://staging.perfectduluthday.com/wp-content/uploads/comments/Giantsquidcover.jpg[/img]

    I just came across this Ripsaw cover we did way back when. One of my favorites. Rick Allen did the amazing illustration.

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