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Introduction
The strongest North Carolina cryptid cases are not necessarily the strangest ones. They are the ones with a clear setting, a traceable paper trail, recurring witness language, and plausible natural explanations that do not quite erase the legend.

Why North Carolina grows monster stories so well
North Carolina gives monster lore a rare range of habitats. The Blue Ridge and Great Smoky Mountains support bear stories, shaggy wild-man legends and eerie ridge-top cries. The Piedmont supplies old farming communities, lake shores and wooded corridors where “something crossing the road” becomes a local memory. The Coastal Plain adds swamps, pocosins, alligators, black bears and brackish river mouths where large animals can appear briefly and vanish. That geography matters because most North Carolina cryptids are not free-floating fantasy creatures; they are attached to settings where real wildlife, darkness, sound and partial sightings make ambiguity believable.
Wildlife agencies also explain why some “monster” reports remain plausible as misidentifications without becoming silly. Black bears are the only bear species in North Carolina and now occupy roughly 60% of the state’s land area after a major comeback from low numbers in the mid-20th century. They are abundant in the mountains and coastal regions and increasingly common in the Piedmont, meaning a large, upright, dark shape in poor light is not an impossible starting point for a Bigfoot-style report.[NC Wildlife]ncwildlife.govOpen source on ncwildlife.gov.
The same is true for coastal reptile and water-monster stories. American alligators occur naturally along North Carolina’s coast, especially in bay lakes, rivers, creeks, marshes, swamps and ponds, and the state is the northern edge of their range. They become less common farther north along the coast, but they are not exotic intruders when seen in the right habitat.[NC Wildlife]ncwildlife.govOpen source on ncwildlife.gov. Meanwhile, Atlantic sturgeon and shortnose sturgeon still haunt North Carolina river systems as real prehistoric-looking fish, even though they are protected and endangered. NOAA lists all five US Atlantic sturgeon population segments as threatened or endangered, and North Carolina’s own wildlife agency describes Atlantic sturgeon as federally endangered with no open fishing season.[NOAA Fisheries]fisheries.noaa.govOpen source on noaa.gov.
That does not prove any monster. It does show why North Carolina produces unusually durable “almost animal” legends. A witness may be wrong about size, distance or species while still having seen something real.
The Beast of Bladenboro: the state’s classic newspaper monster
The Beast of Bladenboro is North Carolina’s strongest old-fashioned cryptid case because it has the classic ingredients: a short, frightening flap; animal deaths; local panic; newspaper amplification; armed searches; conflicting identifications; and a later civic afterlife. The legend began in the winter of 1953–54, when Bladenboro and nearby areas in Bladen County were said to be troubled by a mysterious cat-like creature blamed for killing dogs and farm animals. A William G. Pomeroy Foundation Legends & Lore marker summarises the tradition as a series of bizarre attacks by an unknown creature, with animals reportedly found with crushed skulls and drained bodies, and sightings describing a cat-like beast with a terrible scream.[William G. Pomeroy Foundation]wgpfoundation.orgWilliam G. Pomeroy Foundation VAMPIRE BEAST | William G. PomeroyWilliam G. Pomeroy Foundation VAMPIRE BEAST | William G. Pomeroy
The basic story grew out of real local alarm, but the details quickly became unstable. Newspaper-era accounts described a creature variously as black, sleek, bushy, brownish, tabby, panther-like, bear-like or “vampire”-like. Some reports focused on crushed skulls and missing blood; others on screams, tracks or fleeting road sightings. Later summaries preserve a sequence in which dog deaths around late December 1953 and early January 1954 led to hunts, speculation and claims that a bobcat or similar wild animal had been killed.[Wikipedia]WikipediaBeast of BladenboroBeast of Bladenboro
The sceptical reading is not that nothing happened. It is that several things may have happened at once: genuine animal attacks, exaggerated wounds, misread tracks, rumour, anxious pet owners, reporters hungry for a monster story, and local leaders who understood that publicity could put a small town on the map. The most likely suspects usually discussed are bobcat, feral dog, misidentified wildcat, or some combination of scavenging and panic. A cougar explanation remains popular in folk memory, but it runs into a major problem: North Carolina wildlife officials state that cougars were extirpated from the state in the late 1800s and that there has been no substantiated evidence of wild cougars living in North Carolina since then.[NC Wildlife]ncwildlife.goveastern cougareastern cougar
Bladenboro’s later embrace of the legend is just as important as the original flap. Beast Fest, an annual community festival in Bladenboro, explicitly celebrates the local legend of the Beast of Bladenboro, with family activities, music and vendors. The town’s own events information also lists BeastFest as an annual event held on the last Saturday in October.[beastofbladenboro.com]beastofbladenboro.combeast festbeast fest The creature has moved from possible predator to civic mascot: less a proven monster than a shared local story with claws.
Bigfoot in the Piedmont and mountains
North Carolina’s Bigfoot tradition has two main centres of gravity: the named local figure “Knobby” in Cleveland County, and the broader concentration of Sasquatch-style claims in the Uwharrie National Forest and mountain regions. These stories are part of the wider American Bigfoot pattern, but they have a distinctly North Carolina texture: old farm roads, wooded ridges, hunting land, remote campsites and small communities where the same nickname can survive for decades.
Knobby is the most recognisable local Bigfoot figure. In Cleveland County, especially around Casar and the northern part of the county, “Knobby” is remembered as a Sasquatch-like creature associated with 1970s sightings. A 2010 WBTV report revived the story after Tim Peeler called 911 claiming that a large Bigfoot-like creature came into his yard around 3 a.m.; the station noted that Knobby had been a local legend since the 1970s and that the new call brought the story back into public view.[https://www.wistv.com]wistv.com911 calls released from sasquatch sighting in nc911 calls released from sasquatch sighting in nc WRAL later described Casar as a community that had developed an affection for Knobby, a Bigfoot-like creature supposedly lurking in the Cleveland County woods.[WRAL News]wral.comNews NC's own 'Big Foot' reported in western townNews NC's own 'Big Foot' reported in western town
Uwharrie has become the state’s other Bigfoot magnet. The Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization lists 106 North Carolina reports in its database and gives Montgomery County, home to much of the Uwharrie area, its own cluster of reports, including road-crossing claims, camp encounters, knocks and vocalisations.[BFRO]bfro.netOpen source on bfro.net. Local and regional writing has treated the Uwharries as a kind of “Bigfoot Central”, with the Eldorado Outpost near Troy serving as a meeting point for believers, investigators and curious tourists.[Our State]ourstate.comOur State Is Bigfoot's Backyard in the Uwharrie National Forest?Our State Is Bigfoot's Backyard in the Uwharrie National Forest?
The evidence remains anecdotal. BFRO reports are useful as a map of claims, not as proof of an unknown primate. Recent public-radio coverage still frames the question as a matter of sightings rather than confirmation: WFDD’s Carolina Curious asked whether Bigfoot has been spotted in North Carolina and quoted a BFRO investigator pointing to Uwharrie, King’s Mountain and Pisgah National Forest as notable areas.[88.5 WFDD]wfdd.orgOpen source on wfdd.org. The more grounded explanation is that North Carolina’s Bigfoot map follows places where forests, outdoor recreation, night sounds and bear habitat overlap. Bears, humans, shadows, hoaxes and honest mistakes can all create Bigfoot stories. What keeps the tradition alive is the repetition of similar claims in recognisable places.
Normie and the mystery beneath Lake Norman
Lake Norman’s monster, usually called Normie, is a newer kind of North Carolina legend: a lake monster attached to a modern reservoir rather than an ancient lake. That matters. Lake Norman was created after work began on Cowan’s Ford Dam in 1959, and the lake took shape in Catawba, Iredell, Lincoln and Mecklenburg counties as Duke Energy’s predecessor dammed the Catawba River.[NC DNCR]dncr.nc.govDNCRCreation of Lake Norman Altered the LandscapeDNCRCreation of Lake Norman Altered the Landscape The result was North Carolina’s largest lake, with more than 32,000 acres of water and hundreds of miles of shoreline.[visitlakenorman.org]visitlakenorman.orgHistory Beneath Lake Norman, NC | Sunken Towns &History Beneath Lake Norman, NC | Sunken Towns &
Normie’s legend feeds on that artificial-lake history. Visit Lake Norman describes the creature as a local counterpart to Nessie, with stories ranging from giant fish to prehistoric creature, and says the nickname gained popularity after Lake Norman enthusiast Matt Myers launched a dedicated Lake Norman Monster website in the early 2000s.[visitlakenorman.org]visitlakenorman.orgThe Legend of Normie, the Lake Norman MonsterThe Legend of Normie, the Lake Norman Monster The site itself collects alleged sightings, including recent entries from Lake Norman locations such as Mooresville, Troutman and the Lakeshore Trail.[Lake Norman Monster]lakenormanmonster.comOpen source on lakenormanmonster.com.
Descriptions of Normie vary widely, which is usually a warning sign for cryptid investigators. Some accounts suggest a long serpentine animal, others a huge fish, a fin, glowing eyes or a dinosaur-like shape. WBTV reported in 2017 on a “dinosaur-like creature” claim and noted that LakeNormanMonster.com allowed people to post sightings; WCCB’s 2020 feature similarly treated Normie as a recurring local legend tied to the lake’s submerged history.[https://www.wbtv.com]wbtv.comOpen source on wbtv.com.
The most plausible explanations are ordinary but still interesting: large catfish, longnose gar, sturgeon-like misidentifications, floating logs, boat wakes, swimming deer, or the way a reservoir full of submerged structures changes what people expect to see. Lake Norman is young in geological terms, so a hidden prehistoric breeding population is not a strong claim. But as a folk story, Normie works because the lake itself feels uncanny: a made landscape with drowned roads, former farms and deep water beside fast-growing suburbs.
Wampus Cats, phantom panthers and the memory of real cougars
North Carolina’s cat-like monsters sit between ecology and folklore. The Wampus Cat is a shape-shifting regional tradition rather than one fixed creature. In Appalachian and Cherokee-influenced tellings, it may be a supernatural cat, a transformed person, a night screamer, a livestock killer or a comic tall-tale animal. The details change because “wampus” has often functioned as a name for an undefined frightening creature rather than a species with stable anatomy.
That flexibility helps explain why Wampus Cat stories overlap with phantom panther reports. North Carolina once had large wild cats. NCpedia notes that the Carolina panther, associated with the eastern puma or cougar, was once present in the state but is now considered extinct in the wild by most zoologists, despite persistent rumours of sightings.[Ncpedia]ncpedia.orgOpen source on ncpedia.org. The North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission is more direct: cougars were extirpated from North Carolina in the late 1800s, and modern reports investigated by biologists are nearly always misidentifications of domestic or wild animals.[NC Wildlife]ncwildlife.goveastern cougareastern cougar
This is one of the most useful sceptical keys to North Carolina monster lore. When people report a “black panther” in the woods, they may be drawing on a real ecological memory of cougars, local language such as catamount and panther, or family stories passed down from a time when big cats were less remote in cultural memory. But the modern evidence does not support a breeding population of wild cougars in the state. The legend survives because the absence of confirmed cougars does not erase the emotional force of a large cat scream in the dark, a long-tailed silhouette on a road, or livestock found dead in a pasture.
The Beast of Bladenboro fits this same pattern. So do many smaller “mystery cat” reports. North Carolina’s phantom cats are often less about one animal than about a gap between what people think they saw and what official wildlife records can confirm.
Boojum: the mountain wild man with a love story
The Boojum is one of North Carolina’s most charming monster figures because it softens the Bigfoot template. Instead of a purely terrifying ape-man, the Boojum belongs to Haywood County and the Balsam Mountains as a shaggy, elusive mountain creature associated with gems, hollers and the romantic figure of Hootin’ Annie. Visit Haywood presents the Boojum as a mysterious piece of Haywood County folklore, tied to stories from Canton and Camp Hope and to older mountain ghost-story collections that call him “North Carolina’s Bigfoot” or the “Bigfoot of the Balsams”.[Visit Haywood Western NC Mountains]visithaywood.comVisit Haywood Western NC Mountains The Legend of the Balsam Mountains BoojumVisit Haywood Western NC Mountains The Legend of the Balsam Mountains Boojum
The legend’s most memorable feature is not its evidence but its personality. Boojum is often described as tall, hairy and shy, roaming the Balsam Mountains and sometimes watching from cliffs or forest edges. Local retellings make him less a predator than a lonely figure who falls in love with Annie, whose distinctive call explains, in playful folk etymology, the word “hootenanny”. That language history is doubtful, but the story’s emotional logic is clear: mountain isolation becomes romance rather than horror.
As a cryptid, Boojum has little hard evidence. As folklore, he is important because he shows that North Carolina’s creature tradition is not all panic and pursuit. Some monsters become mascots of place, mood and mountain identity. Boojum belongs beside Knobby as a regional wild-man figure, but his tone is more ballad than emergency call.
River mermaids, sea serpents and the Cape Fear imagination
North Carolina’s water folklore is not limited to Normie. Mermaid Point, where the Haw and Deep rivers meet to form the Cape Fear River, is one of the state’s gentler creature legends. WRAL describes the Chatham County site as a place whose name is rooted in an 18th-century legend: Revolutionary War-era travellers supposedly saw beautiful mermaids sitting along a sandbar, combing their hair in the moonlight.[WRAL News]wral.comNews Mermaid Point: Legend of mermaids in the Cape FearNews Mermaid Point: Legend of mermaids in the Cape Fear Local retellings connect the story to Ramsey’s Tavern, river travel and the long white sandbar near the confluence.[northcarolinaghosts.com]northcarolinaghosts.comOpen source on northcarolinaghosts.com.
Unlike Bladenboro or Knobby, Mermaid Point is not really an eyewitness-investigation cryptid. It is a place-name legend, the kind that turns a real river junction into a story people can remember. Its likely roots are social and scenic: tavern talk, moonlit water, travellers, alcohol, distance, and the old habit of giving dangerous or beautiful places a supernatural explanation.
Sea-serpent traditions around the North Carolina coast are harder to pin down in strong local sources, but they fit a wider Atlantic pattern. The Library of Congress notes that sea-serpent reports in American and European tradition were shaped by older beliefs about monsters, difficult viewing conditions at sea, and the way one report influenced the next through drawings and newspaper accounts.[The Library of Congress]blogs.loc.govgreat american sea serpentgreat american sea serpent That context is useful for any claimed Cape Fear or Wilmington sea-serpent story: brief glimpses in moving water are exactly where logs, fish, dolphins, rays, sturgeon, wakes and imagination can merge.
What the evidence can and cannot support
North Carolina’s monster traditions are best read in layers. Some are claim clusters: Bigfoot reports in Uwharrie, Knobby sightings in Cleveland County, or Normie sightings on Lake Norman. Some are historical flaps: the Beast of Bladenboro. Some are older folklore: Wampus Cats, Boojum and Mermaid Point. Some are ecological misunderstandings: phantom panthers, oversized fish, bears walking briefly upright, or alligators seen where visitors do not expect them.
A useful credibility test is to ask what kind of evidence the story actually has.
Stronger as history than biology: The Beast of Bladenboro is well worth studying as a documented panic and media event, but the evidence does not establish an unknown species.
Stronger as recurring witness tradition: Uwharrie Bigfoot and Knobby have repeated claims and local identity, but no publicly accepted physical proof.
Stronger as tourism folklore: Normie and Beast Fest show how a mystery can become a friendly public brand without needing scientific confirmation.
Stronger as cultural memory: Wampus Cats and phantom panthers preserve older language and fears around large predators, even though modern cougar evidence in North Carolina is lacking.
Stronger as place legend: Mermaid Point and Boojum explain why certain landscapes feel storied, not why zoology textbooks need a new animal.
The sceptical explanations do not make the stories worthless. They make them more interesting. North Carolina’s cryptids reveal how people interpret animals at the edge of sight, how newspapers and websites keep a scare alive, and how towns turn uncertainty into identity. The monsters endure because they are not only questions of “real or fake”. They are also stories about forests returning, lakes covering old roads, predators remembered after extinction, and the thrill of wondering what moved just beyond the porch light.
Amazon book picks
Further Reading
Books and field guides related to What Haunts North Carolina's Wild Places?. Use these as the next step if you want deeper reading beyond the article.
The World of Lore: Monstrous Creatures
Explains the folklore mechanisms behind monster tales.
Endnotes
1.
Source: fisheries.noaa.gov
Link:https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/species/atlantic-sturgeon
2.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Beast of Bladenboro
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beast_of_Bladenboro
3.
Source: beastofbladenboro.com
Title: beast fest
Link:https://beastofbladenboro.com/beast-fest/
4.
Source: wistv.com
Title: 911 calls released from sasquatch sighting in nc
Link:https://www.wistv.com/story/12658386/911-calls-released-from-sasquatch-sighting-in-nc/
5.
Source: wbtv.com
Title: emergency responders on sasquatch sighting 911 calls released
Link:https://www.wbtv.com/story/12654805/emergency-responders-on-sasquatch-sighting-911-calls-released/
6.
Source: wral.com
Title: News NC’s own ‘Big Foot’ reported in western town
Link:https://www.wral.com/video/lifestyles/travel/video/13004761/
7.
Source: bfro.net
Link:https://www.bfro.net/GDB/state_listing.asp?state=nc
8.
Source: bfro.net
Title: show county reports.asp
Link:https://www.bfro.net/GDB/show_county_reports.asp?county=Montgomery&state=NC
9.
Source: wfdd.org
Link:https://www.wfdd.org/culture/2026-06-01/carolina-curious-have-there-been-bigfoot-sightings-in-north-carolina
10.
Source: dncr.nc.gov
Title: DNCRCreation of Lake Norman Altered the Landscape
Link:https://www.dncr.nc.gov/blog/2016/09/28/creation-lake-norman-altered-landscape
11.
Source: visitlakenorman.org
Title: History Beneath Lake Norman, NC | Sunken Towns &
Link:https://www.visitlakenorman.org/blog/stories/post/diving-in-history-of-lake-norman/
12.
Source: visitlakenorman.org
Title: The Legend of Normie, the Lake Norman Monster
Link:https://www.visitlakenorman.org/blog/stories/post/the-legend-of-normie-the-lake-norman-monster/
13.
Source: lakenormanmonster.com
Link:https://lakenormanmonster.com/
14.
Source: wbtv.com
Link:https://www.wbtv.com/story/35876030/a-dinosaur-like-creature-reported-on-lake-norman-over-weekend/
15.
Source: ncpedia.org
Link:https://www.ncpedia.org/carolina-panther
16.
Source: wral.com
Title: News Mermaid Point: Legend of mermaids in the Cape Fear
Link:https://www.wral.com/archive/20175311/
17.
Source: northcarolinaghosts.com
Link:https://northcarolinaghosts.com/piedmont/mermaid-point/
18.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Lake Norman
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Norman
19.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Wampus cat
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wampus_cat
20.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Cape Fear (North Carolina)
Link:https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cape_Fear_%28North_Carolina%29
21.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: List of lake monsters
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_lake_monsters
22.
Source: bfro.net
Title: show report.asp
Link:https://www.bfro.net/GDB/show_report.asp?id=41040
23.
Source: bfro.net
Link:https://www.bfro.net/gdb/
24.
Source: bfro.net
Title: show report.asp
Link:https://www.bfro.net/gdb/show_report.asp?id=27906
25.
Source: bfro.net
Link:https://www.bfro.net/
26.
Source: bfro.net
Title: show report.asp
Link:https://www.bfro.net/gdb/show_report.asp?id=50074
27.
Source: lakenormanmonster.com
Link:https://lakenormanmonster.com/media/children-spot-friendly-lake-norman-monster/
28.
Source: lakenormanmonster.com
Link:https://lakenormanmonster.com/media/nessie-has-some-local-competition/
29.
Source: northcarolinaghosts.com
Link:https://northcarolinaghosts.com/
30.
Source: northcarolinaghosts.com
Title: the beast of bladenboro
Link:https://northcarolinaghosts.com/piedmont/the-beast-of-bladenboro/
31.
Source: northcarolinaghosts.com
Link:https://northcarolinaghosts.com/mountains/the-story-of-boojum-and-hootin-annie/
32.
Source: northcarolinaghosts.com
Link:https://northcarolinaghosts.com/mountains/the-wampus-cat/
33.
Source: wral.com
Link:https://www.wral.com/story/abandoned-town-monster-beneath-nc-lake-6-eerie-legends-with-real-historic-roots-in-nc/19351942/
34.
Source: wral.com
Link:https://www.wral.com/archive/18455321/
35.
Source: wral.com
Link:https://www.wral.com/archive/19351942/
36.
Source: newspapers.com
Link:https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-robesonian-beast-of-bladenboro-pt1/1844480/?locale=en-GB
37.
Source: youtube.com
Title: The Boojum Legend Is Stranger Than You Think | Monster Quest: Origins
Link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FEnDokzGViQ
Source snippet
Carolina Cryptids | First in Fright...
38.
Source: youtube.com
Title: Carolina Cryptids | First in Fright
Link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fFzlKRnVofw
39.
Source: ncwildlife.gov
Link:https://www.ncwildlife.gov/species/black-bear
40.
Source: ncwildlife.gov
Link:https://www.ncwildlife.gov/media/1403/open
41.
Source: ncwildlife.gov
Link:https://www.ncwildlife.gov/species/alligator-american
42.
Source: ncwildlife.gov
Link:https://www.ncwildlife.gov/media/2252/download?attachment=
43.
Source: ncwildlife.gov
Link:https://www.ncwildlife.gov/species/atlantic-sturgeon
44.
Source: wgpfoundation.org
Title: William G. Pomeroy Foundation VAMPIRE BEAST | William G. Pomeroy
Link:https://www.wgpfoundation.org/historic-markers/vampire-beast/
45.
Source: ncwildlife.gov
Title: eastern cougar
Link:https://www.ncwildlife.gov/species/eastern-cougar
46.
Source: ourstate.com
Title: Our State Is Bigfoot’s Backyard in the Uwharrie National Forest?
Link:https://www.ourstate.com/bigfoots-backyard/
47.
Source: visithaywood.com
Title: Visit Haywood Western NC Mountains The Legend of the Balsam Mountains Boojum
Link:https://visithaywood.com/blog/the-legend-of-the-boojum/
48.
Source: blogs.loc.gov
Title: great american sea serpent
Link:https://blogs.loc.gov/folklife/2016/08/great-american-sea-serpent/
49.
Source: ncwildlife.gov
Link:https://www.ncwildlife.gov/media/1977/download?attachment=
50.
Source: ncwildlife.gov
Link:https://www.ncwildlife.gov/media/1361/download?attachment=
51.
Source: ashevilleterrors.com
Title: The Beast of Bladenboro
Link:https://ashevilleterrors.com/the-beast-of-bladenboro/
52.
Source: cryptidz.fandom.com
Title: Lake Norman Monster
Link:https://cryptidz.fandom.com/wiki/Lake_Norman_Monster
53.
Source: cryptidz.fandom.com
Title: Wampus Cat
Link:https://cryptidz.fandom.com/wiki/Wampus_Cat
54.
Source: carolinacountry.com
Title: Beast Fest | Carolina Country Beast Fest Downtown Oct 25
Link:https://www.carolinacountry.com/events/beast-fest
55.
Source: cryptidempire.com
Link:https://cryptidempire.com/cryptids/beast-of-bladenboro
56.
Source: ourstate.com
Title: our state great eight big feat
Link:https://www.ourstate.com/our-state-great-eight-big-feat/
57.
Source: dncr.nc.gov
Title: 8 folktales legends and mysteries north carolina history
Link:https://www.dncr.nc.gov/blog/2017/10/25/8-folktales-legends-and-mysteries-north-carolina-history
58.
Source: appalachiancryptid.com
Link:https://appalachiancryptid.com/cryptid/lake-norman-monster
59.
Source: niftybuckles.wordpress.com
Title: wampus cat
Link:https://niftybuckles.wordpress.com/2018/02/07/wampus-cat/
60.
Source: live5news.com
Title: 911 calls released from sasquatch sighting in nc
Link:https://www.live5news.com/story/12659469/911-calls-released-from-sasquatch-sighting-in-nc/
61.
Source: ncwf.org
Title: coastal plain
Link:https://ncwf.org/blog/coastal-plain/
62.
Source: museumofthenewsouth.org
Title: lake norman
Link:https://www.museumofthenewsouth.org/digital/lake-norman/
Additional References
63.
Source: youtube.com
Title: Normie: The Killer Lake Monster of North Carolina | Boogeymen | S1 EP11
Link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3lHF29l9JYM
Source snippet
Take a look back at when a man claims to have seen Bigfoot in North Carolina...
64.
Source: youtube.com
Title: Take a look back at when a man claims to have seen Bigfoot in North Carolina
Link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DWG2Hj6F9BI
Source snippet
The Boojum Legend Is Stranger Than You Think | MonsterQuest: Origins...
65.
Source: youtube.com
Title: The Vampiric Attacks of The Beast of Bladenboro • Mystery Files
Link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=32BI12TSask
Source snippet
Normie: The Killer Lake Monster of North Carolina | Boogeymen | S1 EP11...
66.
Source: wilmingtonnc.gov
Link:https://www.wilmingtonnc.gov/files/assets/city/v/1/services/stormwater/publications/brochures/brochure_stormwater-bookmark.pdf
67.
Source: instagram.com
Link:https://www.instagram.com/reel/DSAWO34jfyW/
68.
Source: townofblackmountain.org
Link:https://www.townofblackmountain.org/269/Black-Bear-Ecology
69.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/wavytv10/posts/american-alligators-are-on-the-north-carolinas-threatened-species-list-but-very-/1464816992358837/
70.
Source: boosttheboro.org
Link:https://www.boosttheboro.org/
71.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/events/2733998596808128/
72.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/wwaytv3/posts/bladenboro-unveils-a-legends-lore-marker-of-the-beast-of-bladenboro/1085913550204393/
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