Peg Powler

{{Short description|Hag and water spirit in English folklore}}

Peg Powler is a hag and water spirit in English folklore who inhabits the River Tees. Similar to the Grindylow, Jenny Greenteeth, and Nelly Longarms, she drags children into the water if they get too close to the edge. She is regarded as a bogeyman figure who is invoked by parents to frighten children into proper behavior.Briggs, Katharine (1976). An Encyclopedia of Fairies. Pantheon Books. pp. 323–324. {{ISBN|0394409183}}.Denham, Michael and Hardy, James (1895). Denham Tracts (Vol. 2). David Nutt for The Folklore Society. p. 42. The 19th century folklorist William Henderson describes Peg Powler as having green hair and "an insatiable desire for human life" and she is said to lure people into the river to drown or be devoured. The foam or froth which is often seen floating on certain parts of the Tees is called "Peg Powler's suds" or "Peg Powler's cream".Henderson, William (1879). Folklore of the Northern Counties of England and the Borders (2nd ed.) W. Satchell, Peyton & Co. p. 265.{{cite book |last1=Ramsden |first1=Douglas M. |title=Teesdale |date=1947 |publisher=Museum Press Limited |location=11 Grove Street, London |page=128}}

A similar creature named Nanny Powler is said to haunt the River Skerne, a tributary of the Tees. Michael Denham regards her as either the sister or daughter of Peg Powler.Denham and Hardy (1895). p. 78.

Elliott O'Donnell paints a somewhat different picture of Peg Powler in his 1924 book Ghosts, Helpful and Harmful. He describes her as a spirit who lures men and boys to their doom in the River Tees by appearing as a beautiful young woman with green hair and pretending to drown so that her victim will enter the water in an attempt to save her. She may even appear on land on foggy nights and lead men astray until they stumble into the river.O'Donnell, Elliott (1924). Ghosts, Helpful and Harmful. Richard Clay & Sons. pp. 199–202.

Adaptions

In 1952, an uncredited writer, penciler Alex Toth, and inker Mike Peppe produced a 1-page comic for issue #6 of the Standard Comics horror anthology The Unseen based on the Peg Powler legend.[https://www.comics.org/issue/306541/ The Unseen #6 (Standard Comics, 1952 Series)] at the Grand Comics Database The Peg Powler myth is also at the heart of the 2018 novel Ironopolis by Glen James Brown.{{Cite book|last=Brown, Glen James, 1982-|title=Ironopolis|year=2018|isbn=978-1-912109-14-2|location=Cardigan|oclc=1015813513}}

References