Jenny Greenteeth

Summary

Jenny Greenteeth a.k.a. Wicked Jenny, Ginny Greenteeth and Grinteeth is a figure in English folklore. A river-hag, similar to Peg Powler and derived from the grindylow, she would pull children or the elderly into the water and drown them. The name is also used to describe pondweed or duckweed, which can form a continuous mat over the surface of a small body of water, making it misleading and potentially treacherous, especially to unwary children. With this meaning the name is common around Liverpool and southwest Lancashire.[1]

Description and name edit

Jenny Greenteeth was often described as green-skinned, with long hair, and sharp teeth. She is called Jinny Greenteeth in Lancashire and North Staffordshire but in Cheshire and Shropshire she is called Wicked Jenny, Ginny Greenteeth or Jeannie Greenteeth. She is also described as lurking in the upper branches of trees at night, although this may be a folklorist's confusion with the northern English Jinny-hewlet, a folk name for an owl.[2]

Her name is derived from that of the Grindylow which has the alternate name "Grendith" or "Grinteeth" which eventually developed into the term "Jenny Greenteeth".[3]

Similar folk figures around the world edit

She is likely to have been an invention to frighten children from dangerous waters, similar in nature to the Slavic Rusalka, the Kappa in Japanese mythology, or Australia's Bunyip. Some folklorists believe the tale recalls sacrificial practices.[4] A similar figure in Jamaican folklore is called the River Mumma (River Mother). She is said to live at the fountainhead of large rivers in Jamaica sitting on top of a rock, combing her long black hair with a gold comb. She usually appears at midday and she disappears if she observes anyone approaching. However, if an intruder sees her first and their eyes meet, terrible things will happen to the intruder. A similar figure known as the Storm Hag (uncommonly also known as Jenny Greenteeth) appears in American folklore around Lake Erie, specifically in the urban legends of Erie, Pennsylvania, in which sailors use a paranormal being to explain the dangers and shipwrecks in the Erie Triangle. The Storm Hag is said to be a green skinned woman with teeth like a shark's but green, as well as piercing yellow eyes, who rests on the bottom of the Lake, off the coast of Presque Isle and sings a song whenever a ship approaches.

Come into the water, love,
Dance beneath the waves,
Where dwell the bones of sailor-lads
Inside my saffron cave.

— S. E. Schlosser, Spooky Pennsylvania

When the sailors of the ship hear the song, the Storm Hag attacks the ship and crew with violent storms and waves, sinking and devouring them.

In popular culture edit

Jenny Greenteeth inspired the lake monster Meg Mucklebones in the 1985 Ridley Scott fantasy film Legend.[5]

Jenny Green Teeth is recalled by John Heath-Stubbs in his poem "The Green Man's Last Will and Testament", lamenting the eclipse of "the cruel nymphs/ Of the northern streams, Peg Powler of the Tees/ And Jenny Greenteeth of the Ribble".[6]

In the novelette "Water Babies" by Simon Brown, Jenny Greenteeth is mentioned as being one of many names for a child-snatching water-demon. In the novella, an Australian police officer investigates a series of drownings that turn out to be predatory attacks by a seal-like creature.[7]

She appears in Terry Pratchett's The Wee Free Men, attacking the main character, Tiffany Aching, and her brother, Wentworth, near a shallow stream.

Jenny Greenteeth appears in a number of Dungeons & Dragons (5th Edition) adventure modules, including: DDEX01-08 "Tales Trees Tell" (2014),[8] DDAL04-01 "Suits of the Mist" (2016),[9] DDAL04-06 "The Ghost" (2016),[10] and DDAL04-14 "The Dark Lord" (2016).[11]

Jenny Greenteeth appears in the story "Something Borrowed" and in the novel Summer Knight, and is mentioned in the novel Proven Guilty, all by Jim Butcher; and is also mentioned in Ink Exchange by Melissa Marr.

She also appears in the story "Pretty Jennie Greenteeth" by Leife Shallcross, which won the 2016 Aurealis Award for best young adult short story.

In the sci-fi video game Remember Me, there is a mutated character named Johnny Greenteeth.

She appears in the short comic book story The Corpse by Mike Mignola.

She appears in the Torg Eternity scenario Revenge of the Carredon.

Jenny Greenteeth is the title of a poem by former Birmingham poet laureate Adrian Blackledge.

Manchester-based drag queen Anna Phylactic wore a look inspired by Jenny Greenteeth on episode 1 of The Boulet Brothers' Dragula, Season 5.

The inspiration behind the character Granny Green Teeth, anti-hero of the Y.A. novel, Hubris,The Chronicles of a Tooth Fairy. Mancunian author Georgiea Howarth, portrays her as a cursed toothfairy, whose fate it is to punish the local population, turning the teeth of anyone who doesn't clean them, geeen in the night.

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Vickery (1983), p. 247.
  2. ^ Higson (1870), p. 157.
  3. ^ The Nineteenth Century and After. Twentienth Century. 1910. p. 556.
  4. ^ Silver (2000), pp. 155–156.
  5. ^ Hjortsberg, William. "Legend making". figmentfly.com. Retrieved 1 November 2014.
  6. ^ C A Duffy ed., The Map and the Clock (London 2016) p. 506-7
  7. ^ Brown (2006), p. 213.
  8. ^ Reid, Thomas. "Tales Trees Tell". Retrieved 21 March 2017. Purchase necessary.
  9. ^ Merwin, Shawn. "Suits of the Mist". Retrieved 21 March 2017. Purchase necessary.
  10. ^ Hart, Ken. "The Ghost". Retrieved 16 November 2016. Purchase necessary.
  11. ^ Marks, Greg. "The Dark Lord". Retrieved 16 November 2016. Purchase necessary.

Bibliography edit

  • Katharine Briggs, An Encyclopeidia of Fairies, Hobgoblins, Brownies, Boogies, and Other Supernatural Creatures, "Jenny Greenteeth", p 242. ISBN 0-394-73467-X
  • Brown, Simon (2006), Sparks, Cat (ed.), Agog! Smashing Stories, Wildside Press LLC, ISBN 978-0-8095-5634-2
  • Higson, John (1870), Notes and Queries, vol. 5, Oxford University Press
  • Silver, Carole G. (2000), Strange and Secret Peoples: Fairies and Victorian Consciousness, Oxford University Press[dead link][ISBN missing]
  • Vickery, Roy (1983), "Lemna Minor and Jenny Greenteeth", Folklore, 94 (2): 247–250, doi:10.1080/0015587X.1983.9716284, JSTOR 1260499
  • Young, Simon (2019), "In Search of Jenny Greenteeth", Gramarye, 16 (winter): 25–38
  • Young, Simon (6 September 2019). "Folklore Pamphlet: The Sources for Jenny Greenteeth and Other English Freshwater Fairies, 2nd edn". academia.edu. Retrieved 13 January 2019.


  • Hubris, The Chronicles of a Tooth Fairy. 2022 Georgiea Howarth https://amzn.eu/d/2HGWlyt