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THE PUBLIC LEDGER — JANUARY 20, 1877
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ATTACK OF THE 50 FT. SALAMANDER.
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A REAL SEA SERPENT AT LASTHe is Clearly Seen—Fifty Feet Long and Barred in Black and Yellow.
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[London Spectator, December 30.]
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    In the Straits of Malacca, the sea monster so repeatedly seen, and so repeatedly declared to be mythical, appears at last to have been carefully observed by competent witnesses. The creature was seen by the passengers and crew of the ship Nestor, on her voyage to Shanghai, and on her arrival at Shanghai the master of the ship (Mr. John Keiller Webster) and the surgeon (Mr. James Anderson) made a statutory declaration of what they had seen before a magistrate, as a mode, we suppose, of formally attesting that they spoke in good faith.
    The creature (which resembled a huge salamander, only that instead of being about six or eight inches long, these dimensions must be multiplied by at least 73 or 100, the body being from 45 feet to 50 feet in length, the head 12 feet, and the tail, it is said, no less than 150 feet), was first seen at 10:30 on the 11th of September, fifteen miles northwest of the North Sand Light-house, in the Straits of Malacca. The weather was fine, the sea smooth and the air perfectly clear. The Chinese on deck were terribly alarmed, and set up a howl. The whole watch and three saloon passengers saw the creature clearly, and observed its movements.
    It traveled for a lung time about us fast as the steamer, appearing to paddle itself by the help of “an undulatory motion of its tail in a vertical plane,” The body and tail wore marked as those of the salamander are marked—with alternate bands, black and pale yellow in color. “The head was immediately connected with the body, without tiny indication of a neck.” Both witnesses state positively that the only resemblance was to some creature of the frog or newt kind, while one of them (the surgeon) says that the longer he observed it the more he was struck with its resemblance to a gigantic salamander. Its back was oval in form. No eyes or fins were seen, and it did not blow or spout water in the manner of a whale. The great part of its head its never seen, being beneath the surface. Probably the creature is of a race which survives from that very different world in which creatures of gigantic size seem to have been so much commoner than now. There appears to no manner of reason for doubting the very express evidence so succinctly and soberly given.
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From— Public Ledger. (Memphis, Tenn.), 20 Jan. 1877. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress.
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