The wampus cat is a cat-like creature in American folklore that varies widely in appearance, ranging from frightful to comical, depending on region.

Description

Early references from the American Dialect Society described the wampus cat as "a creature heard whining about camps at night," "a spiritual green-eyed cat, having occult powers," or "an undefined imaginary animal." Writing in 1951, folklorist Vance Randolph described the wampus cat as "a kind of amphibious panther which leaps into the water and swims like a colossal mink."

The wampus cat was mentioned in newspaper accounts of the 1930s in the Piedmont of North Carolina, where the creature was accused of killing livestock.

Henry H. Tryon's humorous 1939 book Fearsome Critters describes the wampus cat as being native to Idaho, and having an "amazing right forearm" that "works like a folding pruning hook on the pantographic principle". He gives it the binomial nomenclature Aquilamappreluendens forcipe.

Use as a school mascot

The wampus cat is the mascot of the following schools:

  • Clark Fork Junior/Senior High School, Clark Fork, Idaho
  • Conway High School, Conway, Arkansas
  • Atoka High School, Atoka, Oklahoma
  • Itasca High School, Itasca, Texas
  • Leesville High School, Leesville, Louisiana

See also

  • Cocollona
  • Underwater panther

References

External links

  • Catawampus on Wiktionary
  • Map of Wampus Cats High School Mascots

Wampus Cat Mythical Encyclopedia

Wampus Cat Metazoo Wilderness

Legend of Wampus Cat The Enigma of Appalachian Wilderness

Wampus cat Alchetron, The Free Social Encyclopedia

3 Wampus Cat Images, Stock Photos & Vectors Shutterstock