Coffee House Writers

Main Menu

  • Home
  • Article Categories
    • Fiction
      • Action & Adventure
      • Fantasy
      • Historical Fiction
      • Horror
      • Mystery
      • Romance
      • Science Fiction
      • Speculative Fiction
      • Suspense & Thrillers
      • Westerns
      • Women’s Fiction
      • Women Sleuths
    • Nonfiction
      • Astrology & Tarot
      • Biographies
      • Business
      • Creativity
      • Creative Nonfiction
      • Cooking, Food & Drink
      • Culture
      • Current Affairs & Politics
      • Design, Fashion & Style
      • Entertainment
      • Environment
      • Health & Wellness
      • History
      • Home & Garden
      • Lifestyle
      • Media
      • Memoir & Autobiographies
      • Paranormal
      • Parenting & Family
      • Reviews
      • Science & Technology
      • Self-Help & Relationships
      • Spiritual & Religious
      • Sports
      • Travel
      • True Crime
    • Poetry
      • Acrostic
  • About Us
    • Our Story
    • Our Founder
  • Meet Our Admin
    • Chief Editors
    • Editors
  • Testimonials
  • Apply
  • Login

logo

Coffee House Writers

  • Home
  • Article Categories
    • Fiction
      • Action & Adventure
      • Fantasy
      • Historical Fiction
      • Horror
      • Mystery
      • Romance
      • Science Fiction
      • Speculative Fiction
      • Suspense & Thrillers
      • Westerns
      • Women’s Fiction
      • Women Sleuths
    • Nonfiction
      • Astrology & Tarot
      • Biographies
      • Business
      • Creativity
      • Creative Nonfiction
      • Cooking, Food & Drink
      • Culture
      • Current Affairs & Politics
      • Design, Fashion & Style
      • Entertainment
      • Environment
      • Health & Wellness
      • History
      • Home & Garden
      • Lifestyle
      • Media
      • Memoir & Autobiographies
      • Paranormal
      • Parenting & Family
      • Reviews
      • Science & Technology
      • Self-Help & Relationships
      • Spiritual & Religious
      • Sports
      • Travel
      • True Crime
    • Poetry
      • Acrostic
  • About Us
    • Our Story
    • Our Founder
  • Meet Our Admin
    • Chief Editors
    • Editors
  • Testimonials
  • Apply
  • Login
  • Boredom is Necessary

  • Dissection

  • The Three Rabbits of Oestravale

  • Spring Nights

  • Lover of the Queen: Wish

  • Arise With My Light

  • The World We Leave Them

  • Jealousy

  • Aging Adventures

  • Growing Up In The Digital Age

  • Neptune’s Fortune: Part 1

  • A Thousand Shades of Love

  • Of Lockets and Pomegranates: Chapter 17

  • Kill Switch

  • Daggy Shog

  • “Water, Water”

  • What I Never Said

  • The Codfish Carbuncle Case: Chapter 4

  • Reflections on Being Human

  • Lover of the Queen: Gift

EntertainmentLifestyleNonfictionCulture
Home›Nonfiction›Entertainment›The Algonquian Pukwudgie

The Algonquian Pukwudgie

By VL Jones
October 10, 2020
4057
0
Share:
goblin-4747149_1280
https://pixabay.com/illustrations/goblin-ogre-troll-monster-orc-4747149/
0
(0)

There is a wide variety of cryptids existing in the United States.  Mermaids, BigFoot, Melon Heads, and even cat-like creatures. I came across the legend of Delaware’s Pukwudgie, except it isn’t just in Delaware. This myth is all across the Eastern United States and Canada. It is also too good of a story to pass up, so now in the Eastern United States and Canada, we have Pukwudgie.

The Pukwudgie is a long-time myth of the Algonquian tribes in the Eastern United States and Canada. Sightings range from Delaware to Massachusetts and include Texas to Indiana. They are magical people that live in the dense forests. These troll-like creatures grow no bigger than your knees. The description of these diminutive creatures is like that of a house-troll. Do you remember the house-troll character from the Harry Potter movies? That is how the small creature looks.

When you think of trolls, you think of medieval England or Germany. Tales of trolls abound in Europe, but Pukwudgies are ancient Native American legends. Popular stories were told by the Ojibwe, Algonquin, Abenaki, Wampanoag, and Mohican tribes. The information about Pukwudgie’s behavior varies depending on the tribe’s folklore.

The Pukwudgie is a wide-spread legend traveling with the nomad Algonquin tribes across the United States. It’s personality differing depending on the tribe. It is known as bagwajinini, in Ojibwe and other Great Lakes tribes folklore, and is a good-natured creature. They are mischievous and like to play pranks and tricks on people, but not dangerous.

Pukwudgies in the Wampanoag and other tribes of southern New England, act differently. One never knew which side of their personality they would see. They could help a neighbor turn around and steal their children or play harmless tricks before committing acts of crime. The Wampanoag nation has reasons for their nasty Pukwudgie, as you will see further in this story.

Pukwudgies (Bokwjimen), of the Abenaki and other northeast Algonquian tribes, are not dangerous. Well, except for the people that mistreated them or didn’t respect them. Some tribal stories state the Pukwudgie are enemies of a tribal cultural hero, and I will give you a hint. It is a Wampanoag cultural hero that angered the little people.

The Pukwudgie name is equivalent to “wilderness people” and are forest spirits. Myths tell of smelling flowers before a Pukwudgie appeared. They are also known to have magical powers. Those powers depend on the tribe retelling the story. Their abilities include turning invisible, animal shapeshifting, and making people forget things.

What is interesting is that paranormal energy attracts Pukwudgie’s, including sites surrounding locations charged with power. The Mounds State Park in Indiana is one of those hotspots. The park officials even host Pukwudgie hunts, but no Pukwudgie was found or hurt. It would have been interesting if one had been discovered or seen on the search. The police, with tongue-in-cheek humor, even put up a Pukwudgie crossing sign.

Fall River, Massachusetts, reports seeing Pukwudgies close to Lizzie Borden’s house. The infamous location of the ax murders of her parents. Borden, acquitted of the murders, still haunts her home. The Moundsville state penitentiary in West Virginia is known as one of the state’s most haunted locations. There have been reported sightings of them there and at Round Rock, Texas. If you don’t recognize the name, that’s alright. You wouldn’t unless you are a Bigfoot fan. Round Rock is allegedly Bigfoot’s home.

Pukwudgies got around and not always in tribal myths and stories.

Legend has it that the Pukwudgie used to get along with humans. That it is the Wampanoag tribe’s fault that the forest people hate humans. The Wampanoags loved a local hero named Maushop, the giant. To them, the Pukwudgie’s were nuisances, even though the little people were only trying to help.

The tribe asked Maushop to get rid of the Pukwudgie. He did too, slaughtering quite a few of them in the process. Needless to say, the wilderness people had a problem with that. They declared war on the human race. Well, they declared war on the Wampanoag anyways. The Wampanoag still feel the same way about them, based on their stories about Pukwudgies. In Wampanoag stories, they tell their people to avoid them altogether.

That is the one thing all the tribes have in common. All the stories agree that you should never anger a Pukwudgie. They might be little, but they can be dangerous if provoked. You didn’t want to have one on your wrong side. Their personality is like the Leprechaun’s in that they can be cranky. Unlike the Leprechaun, Pukwudgies don’t lead you to a pot of gold. If one annoys the small creatures, they exact revenge. Pukwudgies have kidnapped people and push them off cliffs. They use knives and spears to attack their enemies. Sometimes even using sound to blind their victims.

The description of a Pukwudgie matches the definition of the European troll. Short, stout humanoid creatures with big ears, nose, and fingers. Grayish colored skin that glows sometimes. Is there a connection between the European troll and Algonquin Pukwudgies? Even their personalities are very similar.

This elusive creature is so prevalent in Algonquin myths and legends that Henry Wadsworth Longfellow mentions the Pukwudgie in his Song of Hiawatha published in 1855. That was over one-hundred-seventy-years ago, and still today, there have been sightings. While walking her dog in the woods, a woman claims she saw one. She didn’t bother the elusive creature and didn’t antagonize it either. Yet, it showed up to her window every morning to wake her up. The poor woman finally had to move away to get creepy visits to stop.

One night a man ran into a Pukwudgie with fur and red glowing eyes. A nose shaped like a wolf, and when the creature ran away from the man, it released a disturbing moan. His description doesn’t fit earlier sightings of the Pukwudgie by other witnesses. It makes you wonder if the man saw a Pukwudgie or he saw something else. There are other cryptids on the loose in America. Too many with similar physical descriptions and red glowing eyes.

The stories and legends about the Pukwudgie are fascinating. Whatever you think about the tales, they are interesting to read. If you are ever on the East Coast and meet a Pukwudgie, be sure not to annoy it.

 

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this post.

As you enjoyed this post...

Follow us on social media!

Oh no!

Let us improve this post!

Tell us how we can improve this post?

TagsUrban LegendsArticleshort storyArticles
Previous Article

What Did You Miss?

Next Article

From Cursive To Curses- Part IX

0
Shares
  • 0
  • +
  • 0
  • 0

VL Jones

V. L. Jones is a paranormal enthusiast and a horror writer. When she isn't writing stories to scare you under the covers? She is planning her next ghostly trip.V.L. Jones has a short story, Devil's Highway, published in Elements of Horror: Fire by Red Cape Publishing. She blends the horror genre with elements of urban legends and cryptids.She is also a proud member of the Horror Writer's Association (HWA) and the Horror Authors Guild (HAG).

Related articles More from author

  • woman
    FictionFantasy

    The Necklace: Part Three

    April 26, 2021
    By Brooke_Smith93
  • CultureCreativityFictionEntertainment

    Shadow Field Chronicles, Part I: Declaration

    January 13, 2020
    By Scarlet Noble
  • Alien chocking human
    CultureNonfictionHistory

    Mississippi’s Pascagoula UFO

    February 22, 2021
    By VL Jones
  • space, astronomy, stars
    Parenting & FamilySelf-Help & RelationshipsEnvironmentFictionHome & GardenTravelScience & TechnologyCreativity

    At Journey’s End – A Short Fiction

    April 20, 2020
    By Xander S. Lee
  • Health & WellnessScience & TechnologyMediaParenting & FamilySelf-Help & RelationshipsFictionHome & Garden

    An Imagined Future Part 3: The Overview Effect

    September 2, 2019
    By Scarlet Noble
  • dog
    CreativityParenting & FamilySelf-Help & RelationshipsFictionMemoir & Autobiographies

    What You Mean To Me

    February 3, 2020
    By Brooke_Smith93

Leave a reply Cancel reply

You may be interested

  • Christmas tree reflected in ornament
    PoetryLifestyle

    O Christmas Tree

  • gnome
    TravelCultureCreativityFictionHistoryHorror

    Tennessee TommyKnockers

  • Fiction

    I’ve Been To This Party Before

Timeline

  • April 13, 2026

    Boredom is Necessary

  • April 13, 2026

    Dissection

  • April 13, 2026

    The Three Rabbits of Oestravale

  • April 13, 2026

    Spring Nights

  • April 13, 2026

    Lover of the Queen: Wish

Latest Comments

  • LC Ahl (Lucy)
    on
    April 6, 2026
    What a beautiful piece. I love your description: "That’s the beauty of love, its layers like ...

    A Thousand Shades of Love

  • LC Ahl (Lucy)
    on
    April 6, 2026
    I love your story Amanda! Can't wait to read and find out what happens next. The ...

    Neptune’s Fortune: Part 1

  • Leah
    on
    March 10, 2026
    Andrew's work is always my favorite, I love how he explores different emotions and life ...

    Streetlights and Stars

  • Ivor Steven
    on
    March 4, 2026
    Thank you so much for your lovely words, and forreading my poem here on CHW, Eugi ...

    Dawn’s Symphony of Light

  • Eugi
    on
    March 3, 2026
    Lovely poem, Ivor. You beautifully expressed morning bliss. 💕

    Dawn’s Symphony of Light

About us

  • coffeehousewriters3@gmail.com

Donate to Coffee House Writers

Coindrop.to me

Follow us

© Copyright 2018-2026 Coffee House Writers. All Rights Reserved. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s administrator and owner is strictly prohibited. Privacy Policy · Disclaimer