Campus Crusade for Cthulhu: IT found ME!
Famous Residents of Arkham


Lo Fat came to us in 1975 as part of a cultural exchange program sponsored by the Agency for International Development. We learned some very exciting chants, and new ways to call the Elder Gods into manifestation.

Lo Fat on the streets of Arkham

Little Lucenith

Standing only 20" tall, little Lucenith Smythe-Jones was the darling of Arkham in the late 1860s.

She gained her Masters in Esoteric Archaeology at MU, and subsequently made some exciting discoveries in Maine.


Mary, Mary and Wahoo Throgmorton ran Throgmorton's Soda Fountain after the unexpected demise of their parents at the hands of a mob.

The Throgmorton Sisters

In 1969, Irving Binghamton brought the Kthulhu Krishna Movement to Arkham.

While some consider it a heresy, it is alive and well here, and their white robes and bouncing up and down on street corners brings a bit of fun to our town.

If you should meet one, give him or her a squid and they will bless you loudly.



Rehearsing their parts in the Spring Calling
at Arkham Elementary School #5

The Temple of Dagon Ladies' Auxiliary in 1899.

The Ladies' Auxiliary

The Gonzalez couple

Bill and Edie Gonzalez on their wedding day.

Two days later, Edie chopped him into hamburger and ate him, with pickle relish.

She then entered a pupoid state, and emerged next spring as a rather large mantis-like creature that flew towards Innsmouth and was never seen again.


Wisteria Jones at age eight. She learned the Symbological Hand at quite an early age, and had a great deal of fun changing the cat into various unexpected shapes.

When she reached puberty, her much-harassed mother changed her to a toad, and that was the end of Wisteria Jones.

She was a bit precocious

The Union Men

The Embalmers Union Loc. #354 poses for the camera.


Cecil Waddle and his son, Franklin.

Cecil Waddle had quite a bad case of anorexia, and tended to avoid dogs and archaeologists.




( Wahoo Throgmorton was named after an American Indian friend of her father's, over the protests of his wife, who wanted her named Mary )