The Gloucester Ghoul is a cryptid reportedly found in Gloucester, Rhode Island. It is typically described as a pale, emaciated humanoid creature with sunken features, glowing eyes, and long limbs, often said to lurk in wooded areas and abandoned spaces.
The Glastonbury Glawackus is a 1939 Connecticut cryptid legend, described as a fierce, unidentified creature (part-cat, dog, or bear) that terrorized the area with blood-curdling screams and livestock attacks. Coined by The Hartford Courant editors, the name combines "Glastonbury," "wacky," and "us". It is likely a Fisher cat.
The Flying Head comes from the mythology of the Haudenosaunee and Wyandot peoples; particularly the region near the source of the Hudson River and the Adirondack Mountains. The Flying Head is malevolent entity, described as a grotesque manifestation with features like a human head, long hair, and eyes that strike terror to witnesses. Its mouth is filled with razor-sharp fangs, and sometimes, it has bat-like wings protruding from its cheeks or bird-like talons. Legends present it as larger than any man and with an impenetrable hide.
Dublin Lake, located in Cheshire County New Hampshire, is reportedly the home of the Dublin Lake Monster. In the 1980's a freediver went missing after a routine dive and was found days later naked and incoherently babbling about a lake monster.
The Dover Demon is a cryptid reportedly found in Dover Massachusetts. It is typically described as a small humanoid like creature with pale peach colored skin and glowing red eyes. The head is said to be oblong and nearly the same length as the body but with a featureless face besides its eyes.
A small humanoid cryptid reported in Dover, Massachusetts. It has a large head and a small thin body. It can be bipedal, but also travel on all fours or switches back and forth between the two modes of movement. It's eyes glow orange, or sometimes green. It does not wear clothing.
The Devil Monkey is a North American cryptid, often described as a 3-to-8-foot tall, shaggy, dark-haired primate with a baboon-like muzzle, pointed ears, and a long, bushy tail. Famous in Appalachian folklore, these creatures are characterized by their extreme aggression, kangaroo-like hopping, 20-foot leaps, and ability to sprint on two legs, sometimes tearing at car roofs.
The Derry Fairy is a cryptid reportedly found in Massachusetts. It is typically described as a little green man approximately two feet in height. It is said to have a dome shaped head with holes where its eyes should be and short stubby legs and arms.
The "Demon Cat" (or "D.C.") is a famous Washington, D.C. ghost story—a menacing, spectral black cat reportedly seen in the U.S. Capitol basement before national tragedies. Witnesses describe it as starting as a normal-sized cat before expanding to an enormous, monstrous size with glowing yellow eyes, often vanishing or lunging.