Sewer alligator
Sewer alligator stories date back to the late 1920s and early 1930s; in most instances they are part of contemporary legend. They are based upon reports of alligator sightings in rather unorthodox locations, in particular New York City.
Legend
Following the reports of sewer alligators in the 1930s, the story has built up over the decades and become more of a contemporary legend. Many have even questioned the extent of truth in the original stories, some even suggesting it to be fiction and that Teddy May's creative mind may have contributed to the tales. However, the story of the 'Sewer Gator' in New York City is well known and various versions have been told.
Louisiana or Florida to New York City
As late as the middle of the 20th century, souvenir shops in Florida sold live baby alligators (in small fish tanks) as novelty souvenirs. Tourists from New York City would buy a baby alligator and try to raise it as a pet. When the alligator grew too large for comfort, the family would proceed to flush the reptile down the toilet.[1][2]
What happens next varies. The most common story is that the alligators survive and reside within the sewer and reproduce, feeding on rats and rubbish, growing to huge sizes and striking fear into sewer workers. In Robert Daley's book, The World Beneath the City (1959), he comments that one night a sewer worker in New York City was shocked to find a large albino alligator swimming toward him. Weeks of hunting followed.
The Journal of American Folklore has this to say on the subject, The World Beneath the City and "Alligators in the Sewers":[3]
In 1959 a book entitled The World Beneath the City was published by Lippincott. Written by Robert Daley, it is a history of the problems involved in the development of the network of utilities Manhattan Island. And in the midst of the stories of engineering problems and political deals is a chapter entitled "Alligators in the Sewers" (see pp. 187-189). It is based on the author's interviews with Teddy May, who had been Commissioner of Sewers in New York for some thirty years.
According to May, sewer inspectors first reported seeing alligators in 1935, but neither May nor anyone else believed them. "Instead, he set men to watch the sewer walkers to find out how they were obtaining whisky down in the pipes." Persistent reports, however, perhaps including the newspaper item discovered by Coleman, caused May to go down to find out for himself. He found that the reports were true. "The beam of his own flashlight had spotlighted alligators whose length, on the average, was about two feet."
May started an extermination campaign, using poisoned bait followed by flooding of the side tunnels to flush the beasts out into the major arteries where hunters with .22 rifles were waiting. He announced in 1937 that the 'gators were gone. Reported sightings in 1948 and 1966 were not confirmed.
However, there is no mention of "blind, albino" alligators, and May suggests that the baby alligators were dumped down storm drains rather than "flushed down the toilet".
An additional reference to the sewer alligator exists in Thomas Pynchon's first novel, V..[4] It fictionalizes the account, stating Macy's was selling them for a time for 50 cents. Eventually the children became bored with the pets, setting them loose in the streets as well as flushing them into the sewers. Rather than poison, shotguns were used as the remedy. Benny Profane, one of the main characters in the book, continues to hunt them as a full-time job until the population is reduced.
Versions including albinos and mutants
Some versions go further to suggest that, after the alligator was disposed of at such a young age, it would live the majority of its life in an environment not exposed to sunlight, and thus it would apparently in time lose its eyesight and the pigment in its hide and that the reptile would grow to be completely albino, pure white in color with red or pink eyes. Another reason why an albino alligator would retreat to an underground sewer is because of its vulnerability to the sun in the wild, as there is no dark pigment in the creature's skin, it has no protection from the sun, which makes it very hard for it to survive in the wild.[5]
Some people even spoke of mutant alligators living in the sewers which have been exposed to many different types of toxic, chemical waste which altered them, making them deformed and sometimes even larger and with strange colouring.
Contemporary accounts
There are numerous recent media accounts of alligators occupying storm drains and sewer pipes, all from states in the south of the US.[6][7][8][9]
In popular culture
Video games
- In the Playstation video game Resident Evil 2, a gigantic alligator mutated by a human-engineered virus appears as a boss battle when the player traverses the Raccoon City sewers.
- The Playstation video game Parasite Eve also featured sewer alligators.
- The alligators in Where's My Water?, including Swampy, live in the sewers.
- Leatherhead, who is an alligator, appears in sewers level in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III: The Manhattan Project.
- In the Playstation video game Ty the Tasmanian Tiger 2 alligators are roaming in the sewers.
Music
- The song "Fog" by Radiohead contains the lyric "baby alligators in the sewers, grow up fast, grow up fast". Before its release as a b-side on their 2001 single "Knives Out", the song was referred to as "Alligators in New York Sewers" on the band's website and set-lists.
Film, television & animation
- The 1980 film Alligator, the tale in which a family flushes an alligator down the toilet is the basis for the plot.
- In 1993, a sewer alligator appeared in The Simpsons episode "Marge in Chains".[10]
- In the Futurama episode "I Second That Emotion", Fry mentions to Bender that he has heard stories about alligators flushed into sewers and survive. This is later revealed to be no more than an urban legend as crocodiles actually live in the sewers.[11]
- In the Disney animated film, The Wild, Samson while looking for his son, Ryan, in New York City meets two alligators named Stan and Carmine that live in a sewer.
- In the Pound Puppies episode "The Really Weird Dog" featured Rover who was flushed down the sewer by Cap Wilder's father by accident and grew to full size in the sewers and encountered a group of stray dogs near St. Paul, Minnesota and taught him how to dig and met Lucky and his friends.
- The Aaahh!!! Real Monsters episode "Mayberry UFO" featured an albino alligator in the sewer.
- In the Ben 10: Alien Force episode "Vengeance of Vilgax: Part 2" Ben makes an urban legend state about sewer alligators when they go to a sewer to look for Goop.
- In the Tom and Jerry Tales episode "Joy Riding Jokers", during the ride occurred from pushing the red button, Tom and Jerry come across a white-tinted alligator for a short time before losing him.
- One episode of Ned's Newt involves Ned and Newton going to New York City to prove that the urban legend that alligators live in the sewers is false. However, they end up finding the sewer alligators, who are actually supposed to perform a musical.[12]
- In one episode of the Teletoon TV show Total Drama World Tour while the contestants are in the sewer in New York, they find a few alligators.
- Leatherhead from the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles franchise is a mutant sewer gator.
- Roger the alligator from The Penguins of Madagascar was a sewer gator first appearing in the episode "Haunted Habitat" and later moved into the Central Park Zoo in "Gator Watch".
- One sewer alligator was seen in an episode of The Fairly Oddparents.
- One recurring villain of Batman in all media is Killer Croc, who is a human with crocodile-like features, who often resides in the sewers.
- In Primeval series there was an episode featured A baby Kaprosuchus, having apparently come through an Anomaly, was found in a house late at night by a resident there, who flushed it down the toilet. The Kaprosuchus then fed off rats in the sewers. Within the following five years, the Kaprosuchus grew into an adult and lived in a construction site near a dock, where it established a nest and fed on homeless people and occasionally builders.
References
- Notes
- ↑ Comments regarding the theory of alligators being brought up from Florida
- ↑ site=http://www.delorenzosdugout.com/urbanlegends.htm Revenge of the poopy Sewer Gators
- ↑ Fergus, George (1989). "More on Alligators in the Sewers". The Journal of American Folklore 55 (988): 8. doi:10.2307/541011. JSTOR 541011.
- ↑ pp. 43
- ↑ Suggestions that the alligators may have been albino
- ↑ "Tampabay: Man falls in with alligator". Sptimes.com. 2000-06-16. Retrieved 2014-01-10.
- ↑ Josh Harkinson (2006-05-25). "Gator Aid - Page 1 - News - Houston". Houston Press. Retrieved 2014-01-10.
- ↑ Richard Connelly (2005-01-27). "Love It, Fear It - Page 1 - News - Houston". Houston Press. Retrieved 2014-01-10.
- ↑ "Alligator Pulled From Ormond Beach Sewer Pipe". www.wftv.com. 2005-10-07. Retrieved 2014-01-10.
- ↑ "The Simpsons -- Episode 80 -- Marge in Chains May 6, 1993". sewergator.com. 1993-05-06. Retrieved 2014-04-05.
- ↑ "I Second That Emotion". Futurama. Fox.
- ↑ "YouTube video of Ned's Newt episode "Newt York, Newt York"". youtube.com. 2010-05-06.
- Sources
- Tales From the Urban Crypt: Legendary whoppers about Gotham run the ghastly and ghostly gamut Urbanlegends.com. Retrieved April 26, 2010
External links
- Gatorhole.com
- Urbanlegends.About.com
- SewerGator.com
- tvtropes - Sewer Gator
- IMDB page for 'Alligator'
- News. Alligator found in sewer in Florida. Oct. 2005
- Man Falls in with Alligator - St. Petersburg Times, June 16, 2000
- Gator Aid - Houston Press, May 25, 2006
- Alligator Stomp - Houston Press, January 27, 2005
- See Ya Later, Alligator - Bluffton Today, May 8, 2006
- No. 3: Reggie - DailyBreeze.com, December 28, 2005
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