Biology:The Battle of the Frogs
Battle of the Frogs | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Bullfrogs | Bullfrogs | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Unknown | Unknown | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
Unknown Amount of Bullfrogs | Unknown Amount of Bullfrogs | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
Unknown Amount of Bullfrogs | A Higher Amount of Bullfrogs |
The Battle of the Frogs is a local legend in Windham, Connecticut that took place in 1754.
Legend
The so-called battle was actually a large-scale death of frogs in a millpond known as Frog Pond. In 1754, sometimes misrepresented as 1758, there was a severe drought happening in Windham. An attack from French and native forces was also expected from Canada. One night, in July, the frogs began to attack each other over the last remaining water. The resulting noise was so great that the townspeople thought that it was the attack already happening. Many took to arms. This led to mass hysteria of sorts. Numerous people became convinced that Armageddon was upon them. Some sources claim that the names "Dyer" and "Elderkin" were heard, the names of two influential lawyers and colonels. Other sources say that the people thought they were Native Americans saying "gin" and "rum." Townsfolk ran into the streets, some with guns and knives. Those who were armed mounted a hill to see the landscape around them. In the morning, the colonists found the cause of the noise. Hundreds of dead and dying bullfrogs lay in the last remaining parts of the pond.
Aftermath
People throughout the colonies heard the story and many were amused. Apperantly, one could not go very far from home and hear something about bullfrogs.[1] Warner Barber wrote in the 1836 book Connecticut Historic Collections "Long and obstinately fought was the contest, and many thousands of combatants were found dead on both sides of the ditch the next morning."
The people of Windham were ridiculed in the colonies, and the town seal was made to be a bullfrog. Willimantic, Connecticut has a bridge commemorating the event. In the 1850s, the Windham Bank issued private bank notes prominently featuring a vignette of a frog standing over the body of another frog to remind everyone of Windham's famous battle of the frogs. The event has become memorialized as a part of the town's folklore.[2]
The event is celebrated in many ways including as a song, bullfrogs as symbols on their heraldic devices and coat of arms, and even getting a bridge based off of the event along with statues of frogs.[3][4]
References
- ↑ Payne, Brigham, et al. "The Story of Bacchus, and Centennial Souvenir". Hartford, Conn., A. E. Brooks, 1876
- ↑ “Symbols on American Money.” page 10. Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, www.philadelphiafed.org/-/media/education/teachers/resources/symbols-on-american-money.pdf?la=en.
- ↑ Weaver, William L. The Battle of the Frogs, at Windham, 1758: With Various Accounts and Three of the Most Popular Ballads on the Subject. Willimantic, CT: James Walden, 1857.
- ↑ Hoberman, Michael. “Bridge Ornaments Help Tell the Legend of the Windham Frog Fight.” Connecticut History