What Haunts Arkansas' Rivers and Woods?
Arkansas has one of the stronger state-level cryptid traditions in the American South because its monster stories are tied to very specific places: Fouke and the Sulphur River bottoms for a Bigfoot-like creature, Newport and the White River for a river monster, the Ozark hills for howling night-beasts, and Searcy County cave country for an older tall-tale...
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Introduction
The three names most readers are likely to meet first are the Fouke Monster, the White River Monster, and the Ozark Howler. The Fouke Monster became nationally famous after a 1971 report near Fouke and the 1972 film The Legend of Boggy Creek. The White River Monster, nicknamed “Whitey”, has been associated with the White River near Newport since at least 1915 and even received a legislative “refuge” in 1973. The Ozark Howler is looser and more regional, blending big-cat, bear, black-dog and eerie-scream traditions across the Ozarks, including northern Arkansas.[encyclopediaofarkansas.net]encyclopediaofarkansas.netEncyclopedia of Arkansas Fouke MonsterEncyclopedia of Arkansas Fouke Monster

Why Arkansas breeds monster stories so well
Arkansas cryptid lore is rooted in landscape before it is rooted in evidence. The state has bottomland swamps, bayous, cave systems, wooded ridges, long river corridors and rural roads where a glimpse of a real animal can become ambiguous very quickly. The Fouke Monster belongs to the swampy southwest, near Fouke in Miller County. The White River Monster belongs to a broad, muddy river system near Newport in Jackson County. The gowrow belongs to Ozark cave-and-hill folklore, especially stories around Searcy County, Boone County and Polk County.[Encyclopedia of Arkansas]encyclopediaofarkansas.netEncyclopedia of Arkansas Fouke MonsterEncyclopedia of Arkansas Fouke Monster
The second ingredient is Arkansas’s real wildlife. Black bears are not imaginary in Arkansas: the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission says the state is home to the American black bear and now has more than 5,000 bears after a major restoration programme from 1958 to 1968. Bears can stand upright, vary in colour, leave distorted tracks in mud, and look startlingly human-shaped when seen briefly. In rivers, Arkansas also has alligator gar, described by the same agency as the state’s largest fish species and the largest freshwater fish in the south-eastern United States, with the biggest individuals weighing more than 300 pounds.[Arkansas Game & Fish Commission]agfc.comArkansas Game & Fish Commission Bear • Arkansas Game & Fish CommissionArkansas Game & Fish Commission Bear • Arkansas Game & Fish Commission
That does not “solve” every report, but it gives a sensible baseline. Arkansas monster stories often begin where ordinary recognition breaks down: twilight, flooded woods, river eddies, screams in the hills, tracks in soft ground, or animals glimpsed from roads. A good Arkansas cryptid page should therefore ask two questions at once: what did witnesses claim, and what local conditions could have made that claim feel plausible?
The Fouke Monster: Arkansas’s swamp Sasquatch
The Fouke Monster is Arkansas’s most famous cryptid. It is usually described as a large, hairy, Bigfoot-like creature associated with Fouke, Miller County, in the far south-west of the state. The Encyclopedia of Arkansas notes that reported sightings go back at least to 1946, but the case that made the legend famous happened in 1971, when the Ford family claimed that a creature came to their house and frightened them badly enough that reporters found the family preparing to leave a home they had owned for less than a week.[Encyclopedia of Arkansas]encyclopediaofarkansas.netEncyclopedia of Arkansas Fouke MonsterEncyclopedia of Arkansas Fouke Monster
The press mattered. Reporter Jim Powell of the Texarkana Gazette and Texarkana Daily News helped bring the story to a wider audience, and a follow-up article used the name “Fouke Monster”. Wire services then carried the story nationally. In other words, the creature’s modern identity was not just born in the woods; it was also born in newspapers.[Encyclopedia of Arkansas]encyclopediaofarkansas.netEncyclopedia of Arkansas Fouke MonsterEncyclopedia of Arkansas Fouke Monster
What witnesses claimed
The core Fouke pattern is familiar from Bigfoot traditions but has a strongly local flavour. Reports describe a tall, hairy, bipedal creature moving through swampy land, sometimes linked with a foul smell and unusual footprints. Some accounts refer to three-toed tracks, which became one of the monster’s signature details. The 1971 Ford episode also involved alleged damage around the house and claims that shots were fired, though no body or confirmed biological evidence emerged.[Wikipedia]WikipediaFouke MonsterFouke Monster
The monster’s geography matters. Fouke sits in a region of creeks, timber, lowland cover and rural properties, the kind of setting where a story of something crossing a road, raiding near a house or moving through wet ground can gain traction. In later Bigfoot databases, Arkansas reports are scattered across many counties, but Miller County remains one of the symbolic centres because Fouke gave the state its most durable named creature. The Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization lists 112 Arkansas entries and includes Miller County among counties with multiple reports, though such databases record claims rather than verified animals.[bfro.net]bfro.netReports for ArkansasReports for Arkansas
Why The Legend of Boggy Creek changed everything
The Fouke Monster might have remained a regional newspaper oddity if not for The Legend of Boggy Creek. The 1972 film, directed by Texarkana filmmaker Charles B. Pierce and written by Earl E. Smith, presented the Fouke story in a faux-documentary style using local people, interviews and dramatic re-creations. The Encyclopedia of Arkansas describes it as the first in a series of Boggy Creek films loosely based on the southwest Arkansas legend, and notes that Pierce financed it independently, used locals as actors, and turned it into a drive-in hit grossing more than $20 million.[Encyclopedia of Arkansas]encyclopediaofarkansas.netOpen source on encyclopediaofarkansas.net.
That film is crucial because it blurred categories in a way cryptid culture often does. It looked like a documentary, behaved like a horror film, and preserved local testimony in a form that reached audiences far beyond Miller County. For many viewers, the Fouke Monster is not just a creature report; it is a mood: swamp water, night noises, dogs barking, shotguns, screen doors and a sense that something might be watching from the tree line.
Sceptical readings of the Fouke case
The main sceptical explanations are hoax, misidentified bear, exaggerated local story and media amplification. The three-toed track detail is especially awkward for a Bigfoot-style primate claim, because primates do not normally have three-toed feet. Contemporary sceptical accounts have pointed to track oddities and the possibility of hoaxing, while bear misidentification remains plausible for some hairy, upright, reddish-brown or dark animal sightings in wooded Arkansas.[Wikipedia]WikipediaFouke MonsterFouke Monster
None of that makes the Fouke Monster culturally unimportant. It simply shifts the question. The strongest evidence is not evidence for an unknown ape; it is evidence that a local story became attached to a real place, travelled through newspapers, was transformed by film, and then fed back into tourism and further reports. Fouke’s monster is Arkansas’s best example of how a cryptid can become a regional identity even when the biological case remains weak.
The White River Monster: “Whitey” of Newport
The White River Monster is Arkansas’s great water-beast legend. Its home territory is the White River near Newport in Jackson County, where reports are said to have begun in 1915 and then returned in notable waves. The Encyclopedia of Arkansas calls it one of the state’s premier mysteries and says sightings were sporadic until a major 1937 episode involving plantation owner Bramlett Bateman, who described a grey creature as being “as wide as a car and three cars long”.[Encyclopedia of Arkansas]encyclopediaofarkansas.netEncyclopedia of Arkansas White River MonsterEncyclopedia of Arkansas White River Monster
The story has several memorable features: an eddy where the monster was supposedly seen, a plan to build a huge rope net, a diver brought in to search, later claims of a grey creature with a horn, descriptions of a spiny back, and three-toed tracks found in the area in 1971. As with Fouke, the alleged footprints are part of the legend’s texture but not proof of a new species.[Encyclopedia of Arkansas]encyclopediaofarkansas.netEncyclopedia of Arkansas White River MonsterEncyclopedia of Arkansas White River Monster
The monster that got a refuge
The White River Monster has one of the strangest official afterlives in American cryptid lore. In 1973, the Arkansas General Assembly passed Senate Resolution 23, sponsored by Senator Bob Harvey, creating the White River Monster Refuge along part of the White River between Old Grand Glaize and Rosie. The resolution made it illegal to harm the monster inside the refuge.[Encyclopedia of Arkansas]encyclopediaofarkansas.netEncyclopedia of Arkansas White River MonsterEncyclopedia of Arkansas White River Monster
That did not prove the monster existed. It did something more folklorically interesting: it turned a local legend into a civic joke, tourist hook and protective gesture all at once. The creature became “real” in the social sense even while remaining unverified in the zoological sense. Later local coverage has treated Newport’s White River Monster as a heritage item, with clippings and documents preserved by the Newport Chamber of Commerce.[https://www.kait8.com]kait8.comlegend white river monsterlegend white river monster
What could Whitey have been?
The White River Monster’s proposed explanations usually fall into three categories: a very large fish, an out-of-place marine mammal, or a folklore/media construction built from several unrelated sightings. The Encyclopedia of Arkansas mentions theories ranging from a huge fish to an elephant seal, while noting that no explanation fully accounts for the whole legend.[Encyclopedia of Arkansas]encyclopediaofarkansas.netEncyclopedia of Arkansas White River MonsterEncyclopedia of Arkansas White River Monster
A giant fish is the most grounded possibility for at least some reports. The Jackson County Historical Society notes that an eight-foot, 230-pound gar and other large gar may have helped inspire the legend. That is not a casual guess: alligator gar are genuinely impressive animals in Arkansas waters, and the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission describes the species as capable of exceeding 300 pounds. A huge gar rolling, surfacing or thrashing in muddy water could look monstrous, especially to a startled observer.[jacksonhistory.net]jacksonhistory.netwhite river monsterwhite river monster
The elephant-seal idea is more exotic. It tries to explain descriptions of a bulky, grey, flippered or bellowing animal, but it requires an animal from a very different normal habitat to travel far inland via connected waterways. That is not impossible in the abstract for some wandering marine mammals, but the White River case lacks the kind of clear carcass, photograph or biological trace that would make it convincing.
The Ozark Howler: a scream in the hills
The Ozark Howler is less tidy than the Fouke Monster or White River Monster because it is not anchored to one town or one famous incident. It belongs to a wider Ozarks tradition stretching across southern Missouri and northern Arkansas, with occasional claims farther west or south. Modern descriptions often picture it as a dark, shaggy, bear-sized or cat-like creature with a terrifying howl, sometimes with red eyes and sometimes with horns.[unlocktheozarks.org]unlocktheozarks.orgUnlock The OzarksUnlock The Ozarks
That shifting description is a clue. The Howler is less like a single case file and more like a container for frightening night sounds, big-cat rumours, black-dog folklore and mountain-country storytelling. In one Arkansas-linked account summarised by Unlock the Ozarks, people around Fort Smith in 2004 reportedly discussed an “Arkansas Howler” in the Boston Mountains, with some witnesses suspecting not a monster but a loose mountain lion or cougar.[unlocktheozarks.org]unlocktheozarks.orgUnlock The OzarksUnlock The Ozarks
Cougar rumours and the “phantom cat” problem
Large black cats and mysterious screams are common ingredients in American rural folklore. Arkansas adds a practical complication: mountain lions do appear in the state from time to time, but that does not mean there is a large established breeding population in every area where people report screams or eyeshine. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission maintains a mountain-lion archive that includes confirmed modern incidents, including a confirmed sighting near Amity in 2023, a carcass found on Sylamore Wildlife Management Area in 2024, and a road-killed mountain lion in Hot Spring County in 2025.[Arkansas Game & Fish Commission]agfc.comOpen source on agfc.com.
That official record gives the Howler a more interesting sceptical frame than “people made it up”. Some reports may be misheard foxes, coyotes, bobcats, owls, dogs, livestock or ordinary echoing night sounds. Some “big cat” reports may involve actual transient mountain lions or escaped captive animals. Other Howler stories may be folklore with no animal behind them at all. The creature survives because it sits in the gap between real wildlife possibility and the exaggerated power of a scream in dark woods.
The gowrow: Arkansas’s tall-tale dragon
The gowrow is one of Arkansas’s best older monster stories, and it is refreshingly different from the Bigfoot pattern. According to the Encyclopedia of Arkansas, the gowrow may owe more to journalism than to traditional folk belief. The main documentation is an Arkansas Gazette story from 31 January 1897, apparently written by Elbert Smithee, with an illustration by Elmer Burrus allegedly based on a photograph.[Encyclopedia of Arkansas]encyclopediaofarkansas.netEncyclopedia of Arkansas GowrowEncyclopedia of Arkansas Gowrow
The story claimed that a creature near Blanco in Searcy County had been slaughtering livestock and pets. A posse supposedly tracked it to a cave, where animal skeletons and human remains were found. The monster emerged from a nearby lake, made the earth tremble, ripped up trees, tore off a man’s leg, and was finally killed by volleys of gunfire. Its alleged remains were described as a twenty-foot creature with tusks, webbed clawed feet, short horns along its back and a bladed tail. The body was supposedly sent to the Smithsonian Institution, but never arrived.[Encyclopedia of Arkansas]encyclopediaofarkansas.netEncyclopedia of Arkansas GowrowEncyclopedia of Arkansas Gowrow
The punchline is almost as important as the monster. Fred W. Allsopp, editor of the Gazette, later dismissed the account as “a great fake”. Folklorist Vance Randolph nevertheless collected further gowrow material, including tales of egg-laying creatures, a Devil’s Hole cave encounter in Boone County, and a Mena man who supposedly charged spectators to see a captured gowrow before pretending it had escaped. The Encyclopedia of Arkansas places the gowrow in a frontier tradition of exaggeration, tall tales and deliberate “lies” told for entertainment.[Encyclopedia of Arkansas]encyclopediaofarkansas.netEncyclopedia of Arkansas GowrowEncyclopedia of Arkansas Gowrow
That makes the gowrow valuable, not worthless. It shows that Arkansas monster lore is older and broader than modern Bigfoot culture. Before “cryptid” became the usual label, Arkansas already had fabulous beasts built from newspaper pranks, cave-country yarns, travelling showmanship and Ozark humour.
What the evidence really supports
Arkansas cryptid evidence is strongest as folklore, local history and media history; it is weak as proof of unknown animals. The Fouke Monster has named witnesses, newspaper coverage, alleged tracks and a powerful film afterlife, but no confirmed body, DNA, clear photograph or accepted biological specimen. The White River Monster has a long place-based tradition, multiple sighting waves and even a legislative refuge, but its most plausible natural explanations point towards large known animals, especially huge fish, rather than a new river species. The Ozark Howler is even more fluid, with reports shaped by sound, fear, big-cat rumours and regional storytelling.[encyclopediaofarkansas.net]encyclopediaofarkansas.netEncyclopedia of Arkansas Fouke MonsterEncyclopedia of Arkansas Fouke Monster
A fair reading keeps several possibilities open without treating them as equally likely:
- Misidentified wildlife: Black bears, large fish, bobcats, coyotes, owls, feral dogs, escaped captives and occasional mountain lions can all generate strange reports under poor viewing conditions. Arkansas has real black bears and real giant gar, so some “monster” material has plausible animal roots.[Arkansas Game & Fish Commission]agfc.comArkansas Game & Fish Commission Bear • Arkansas Game & Fish CommissionArkansas Game & Fish Commission Bear • Arkansas Game & Fish Commission
- Hoaxes and tall tales: The gowrow is the clearest case, with its principal account later dismissed as fake and folded into a tradition of frontier exaggeration. Some Fouke-style footprint claims also invite scepticism because of odd anatomy and the long history of track hoaxes in Bigfoot culture.[Encyclopedia of Arkansas]encyclopediaofarkansas.netEncyclopedia of Arkansas GowrowEncyclopedia of Arkansas Gowrow
- Media amplification: The Fouke Monster became much larger after newspapers and The Legend of Boggy Creek carried it beyond southwest Arkansas. The White River Monster likewise grew through clippings, civic preservation and the unusual refuge story.[Encyclopedia of Arkansas]encyclopediaofarkansas.netEncyclopedia of Arkansas Fouke MonsterEncyclopedia of Arkansas Fouke Monster
- Local identity: Even when evidence is thin, monsters give places memorable stories. Fouke has its swamp creature; Newport has Whitey; the Ozarks have howls and cave beasts. These legends help communities turn landscape into narrative.
How Arkansas’s monster map fits together
The state’s cryptid geography falls into three broad zones. Southwest Arkansas gives us the Fouke Monster: swampy, hairy, Bigfoot-like, and deeply tied to 1970s regional cinema. North-east Arkansas gives us the White River Monster: aquatic, civic, river-based, and unusually connected to official legislative folklore. The Ozarks give us the Howler and the gowrow: one a shifting scream-beast of mountain woods, the other a tall-tale cave monster with newspaper roots.[Encyclopedia of Arkansas]encyclopediaofarkansas.netEncyclopedia of Arkansas Fouke MonsterEncyclopedia of Arkansas Fouke Monster
These stories should not be flattened into one generic “Arkansas cryptids” list. They work differently. The Fouke Monster is a modern sighting flap turned film legend. The White River Monster is a river mystery turned civic mascot. The Ozark Howler is a regional sound-and-shadow tradition. The gowrow is a comic frontier monster that exposes how newspapers and storytellers could manufacture a beast for fun.
That variety is the real Arkansas pattern. The state’s monster lore is not a single hidden zoo. It is a set of local traditions shaped by terrain, wildlife, fear, humour, reporting and pride of place. The more carefully the stories are separated, the more enjoyable they become.
Why the legends still matter
Arkansas’s creatures endure because they give ordinary landscapes a second life. A muddy river becomes the possible home of Whitey. A drive near Fouke becomes a route through Boggy Creek country. A scream in the Ozarks becomes a Howler story. A cave yarn becomes a gowrow. The evidence does not justify treating these beings as confirmed animals, but the stories themselves are real cultural artefacts: told, retold, filmed, archived, joked about, marketed and folded into local memory.[Encyclopedia of Arkansas]encyclopediaofarkansas.netEncyclopedia of Arkansas White River MonsterEncyclopedia of Arkansas White River Monster
For readers, the best approach is neither blind belief nor flat dismissal. Arkansas cryptids are most rewarding when read as layered mysteries: a possible animal report here, a hoax there, a misidentification elsewhere, and behind all of it a state whose woods, rivers and small towns have proved unusually good at making monsters feel at home.
Amazon book picks
Further Reading
Books and field guides related to What Haunts Arkansas' Rivers and Woods?. Use these as the next step if you want deeper reading beyond the article.
The United States of Cryptids
Includes Arkansas legends alongside other regional cryptids.
Abominable Science!
Explains how stories like the Fouke Monster and White River Monster persist.
Endnotes
1.
Source: unlocktheozarks.org
Title: Unlock The Ozarks
Link:https://www.unlocktheozarks.org/stories/folklore-legends-and-myths/ozark-howler/
2.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Fouke Monster
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fouke_Monster
3.
Source: bfro.net
Title: Reports for Arkansas
Link:https://www.bfro.net/GDB/state_listing.asp?state=ar
4.
Source: kait8.com
Title: legend white river monster
Link:https://www.kait8.com/2024/10/11/legend-white-river-monster/
5.
Source: jacksonhistory.net
Title: white river monster
Link:https://jacksonhistory.net/white-river-monster/
6.
Source: bfro.net
Link:https://www.bfro.net/gdb/
7.
Source: bfro.net
Title: show report.asp
Link:https://www.bfro.net/GDB/show_report.asp?id=78325
8.
Source: bfro.net
Title: show report.asp
Link:https://www.bfro.net/GDB/show_report.asp?id=62678
9.
Source: bfro.net
Title: show report.asp
Link:https://www.bfro.net/GDB/show_report.asp?id=7045
10.
Source: bfro.net
Title: show county reports.asp
Link:https://www.bfro.net/GDB/show_county_reports.asp?county=Hot+Spring&state=ar
11.
Source: bfro.net
Title: show report.asp
Link:https://www.bfro.net/GDB/show_report.asp?id=57471
12.
Source: bfro.net
Title: show county reports.asp
Link:https://www.bfro.net/GDB/show_county_reports.asp?county=Marion&state=ar
13.
Source: bfro.net
Title: show county reports.asp
Link:https://www.bfro.net/GDB/show_county_reports.asp?county=Miller&state=ar
14.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: White River Monster
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_River_Monster
15.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Ozark Howler
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozark_Howler
16.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: The Legend of Boggy Creek
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Legend_of_Boggy_Creek
17.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: The Legend of Boggy Creek
Link:https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Legend_of_Boggy_Creek
18.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Alligator gar
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alligator_gar
19.
Source: portal.arkansas.gov
Title: state game and fish commission
Link:https://portal.arkansas.gov/state_agencies/arkansas-state-game-and-fish-commission/
20.
Source: youtube.com
Link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nhL5uOu70kQ
Source snippet
The Gowrow...
21.
Source: youtube.com
Title: The Gowrow
Link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-UCW4_9ko7I
Source snippet
Monsters Dissected: Fillyloo or Gowrow - Definitely Probably a Myth Maybe...
22.
Source: encyclopediaofarkansas.net
Title: Encyclopedia of Arkansas Fouke Monster
Link:https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/fouke-monster-2212/
23.
Source: encyclopediaofarkansas.net
Title: Encyclopedia of Arkansas White River Monster
Link:https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/white-river-monster-2790/
24.
Source: encyclopediaofarkansas.net
Title: Encyclopedia of Arkansas Gowrow
Link:https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/gowrow-5669/
25.
Source: agfc.com
Title: Arkansas Game & Fish Commission Bear • Arkansas Game & Fish Commission
Link:https://www.agfc.com/hunting/more-game/bear/
26.
Source: agfc.com
Link:https://www.agfc.com/education/history-of-the-alligator-gar-in-arkansas/
27.
Source: encyclopediaofarkansas.net
Link:https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/the-legend-of-boggy-creek-movie-2192/
28.
Source: agfc.com
Link:https://www.agfc.com/category/mountain-lion/
29.
Source: encyclopediaofarkansas.net
Title: black bears 5424
Link:https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/black-bears-5424/
30.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/arkansasheritage/photos/have-you-heard-of-the-gowrow-a-monster-of-arkansas-folklore-the-gowrow-was-said-/2070761946279696/
31.
Source: agfc.com
Link:https://www.agfc.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/factsheet_largecarnivores.pdf
32.
Source: agfc.com
Title: bear harvest reports
Link:https://www.agfc.com/hunting/more-game/bear/bear-harvest-reports/
33.
Source: agfc.com
Link:https://www.agfc.com/fishing/more-species/alligator-gar/
34.
Source: agfc.com
Title: 2020 Black Bear Harvest Report
Link:https://www.agfc.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/2020-Black-Bear-Harvest-Report.pdf
35.
Source: reddit.com
Link:https://www.reddit.com/r/Cryptozoology/comments/vk9pt4/gowrow/
36.
Source: cryptidz.fandom.com
Title: Ozark Howler
Link:https://cryptidz.fandom.com/wiki/Ozark_Howler
37.
Source: cryptidz.fandom.com
Title: White River Monster
Link:https://cryptidz.fandom.com/wiki/White_River_Monster
38.
Source: ualrpublicradio.org
Title: encyclopedia of arkansas minute gowrow
Link:https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/2019-10-14/encyclopedia-of-arkansas-minute-gowrow
39.
Source: beastsoflegend.com
Title: fouke monster
Link:https://beastsoflegend.com/bestiary/cryptids/fouke-monster/
40.
Source: legendofboggycreek.com
Title: The Legend of Boggy Creek
Link:https://www.legendofboggycreek.com/
41.
Source: arkansasroadstories.com
Title: The White River Monster
Link:https://arkansasroadstories.com/monsters/ms3.html
42.
Source: onlyinark.com
Title: ozark howler
Link:https://onlyinark.com/culture/ozark-howler/
43.
Source: legendsofwindemere.com
Title: the ozark howler
Link:https://legendsofwindemere.com/2024/10/04/the-ozark-howler/
Additional References
44.
Source: youtube.com
Title: The White River Monster of Arkansas | The Legend of Whitey
Link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Nu6BQTIHow
Source snippet
Strange Creatures in Ozark Mysteries | Expedition X S3 E6 | Discovery Channel India...
45.
Source: youtube.com
Title: This Town Has Been Terrorized by a Monster for Over 50 Years
Link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2j4V7V4u6h0
Source snippet
The White River Monster of Arkansas | The Legend of Whitey...
46.
Source: vocal.media
Link:https://vocal.media/horror/a-quick-history-of-the-gowrow
47.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/bigfootcrossroads/posts/a-strange-skeleton-measuring-nearly-8-ft-in-length-is-found-in-the-swamps-of-eas/1379669280833534/
48.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/AGFCFisheriesDivision/posts/hey-arkansas-guess-what-its-gar-week-these-prehistoric-fish-are-some-of-the-olde/910123331338243/
49.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/robert.a.walker.54/posts/another-local-monster-the-gowrow-apparently-most-recently-cited-near-snowball-ar/10158915277561268/
50.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/therattlecatlady/posts/another-post-same-story/27640625295626929/
51.
Source: folkbestiary.com
Link:https://folkbestiary.com/arkansas/
52.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/ArkansasSenate/photos/1433250908838167/
53.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/arkansasonline/posts/arkansas-has-been-a-one-sasquatch-state-since-at-least-the-1970sbut-the-fouke-mo/1392804056212941/
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