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The Witchcraft Delusion in Colonial Connecticut (1647-1697)

Chapter 18: Index
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About This Book

The study reconstructs the witchcraft phenomenon in colonial Connecticut by mining court records, indictments, depositions, and contemporary writings to show how theological belief and popular fear became legal prosecution and communal panic. It outlines doctrinal definitions and statutory responses, describes courtroom procedures and tests of guilt, and recounts notable accusations, trials, and executions. The narrative examines investigative practices such as searches for marks and the use of spectral testimony, evaluates the roles of ministers, magistrates, jurors, and witnesses, and places Connecticut episodes within broader New England and European patterns of accusation and persecution.

Hereafter will be counted as a martyr."

The New England Tragedies.


HISTORICAL NOTE

ROGER LUDLOW


The Connecticut historians to a very recent date, in ignorance of the facts, and despite his notable services of twenty-four years to the colonies, left Ludlow to die in obscurity in Virginia or elsewhere, and some of the traditions, based on no record or other evidence, have been recently repeated. It is therefore proper to state here in few words who Ludlow was, what he did both in Massachusetts and Connecticut, and after his "return into England" in 1654.

Ludlow came of an ancient English family, which gave to history in his own time and generation such illustrious kinsmen as Sir Henry Ludlow, a member of the Long Parliament and one of the Puritan leaders, and Sir Edmund Ludlow, member of Parliament, Lieutenant-General under Cromwell, member of the court at King Charles' trial, and whom Macaulay named "the most illustrious saviour of a mighty race of men, the judges of a king, the founders of a republic."

In May, 1630, Ludlow came to Massachusetts, as one of the Assistants under the charter of "The Governor and company of Massachusetts Bay in New England."

His services in the Bay Colony from 1630-35 ranged from the duties of a magistrate in the Great Charter Court to those of the high office of Deputy Governor. The quality of that service is written in a bare statement of his various offices—surveyor, negotiator of the Pequot treaty, colonel ex officio, auditor of Governor Winthrop's accounts, superintendent of fortifications, military commissioner, member of the General Court, Deputy Governor when Thomas Dudley was Governor; and he was always one of the foremost men in civil, political, and social affairs, to the day of his departure to "the valley of the long river,"—a day of good fortune for Connecticut.

When Massachusetts established church membership as the condition of suffrage,—and radical differences of opinion on other matters arose,—it marked the culmination of a set purpose of some of her ablest men to remove from her jurisdiction, among whom Hooker, Ludlow, and Haynes were the most notable. The General Court created a commission to govern Connecticut for a year, and made Ludlow its chief. He came to the new land of promise with the Dorchester men, and settled in Windsor in 1635-36.

What he did in the nineteen years of his residence at Windsor and Fairfield is epitomized in a brief summary of the duties and honors to which he was called by his fellowmen:

Chief of the Massachusetts commission and the first Governor, de facto; organizer and chief magistrate of the first court; writer of the earliest laws; president of the court which declared war against the Pequots; framer of the Fundamental Orders—the Constitution of 1639—which embodied the great principles of government by the people propounded and elucidated by the illustrious Thomas Hooker, in his letter to Governor Winthrop, and in his famous sermon; compiler, at the request of the General Court, of the Body of Lawes, the Code of 1650; commissioner on important state matters; commissioner for the United Colonies; founder and defender of Fairfield; patriot, jurist, statesman.

Ludlow left Connecticut in 1654, not to die in obscurity as the earlier writers imagined, but to serve abroad for several years in positions of honor and distinction.

Cromwell invited him to return, as he did many of the leading Puritans in New England, and appointed him a commissioner for the administration of justice in Dublin; also to serve with the chief justice of the upper bench and other distinguished lawyers, to determine all the claims to the forfeited Irish lands, and at last as a Master in Chancery.

Ten years Ludlow served in these important stations; and at his death, probably in 1664, he was buried in St. Michael's churchyard in Dublin, with his wife—a sister of Governor John Endicott—and other members of his family.[K]

[K] Roger Ludlow—The Colonial Lawmaker—TAYLOR.


BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE


Some of the authorities and records in witchcraft literature consulted in the writing of this essay are here cited for reference and information:

Connecticut Archives: Wyllys Papers, Original Witchcraft Depositions; Records: General Court, Particular Court, Court of Assistants, County Court, Colonial Boundaries, Crimes and Misdemeanors, Connecticut Colonial, New Haven Colonial, Hartford Probate, New Haven Town; Magnolia Christi Americana (MATHER); MATTHEW GRANT'S Diary (TRUMBULL'S Observations) Courant Literary Section, 12-3-1904; HOADLEY'S Witchcraft Trials and Notes (Manuscript); WINTHROP'S History of New England; STILES' History of Windsor; Blue Laws, True and False (TRUMBULL); PERKINS' Discourse; The Literature of Witchcraft (BURR); Hammurabi's Code; Cent. Mag., June, 1903; BLACKSTONE'S Commentaries; A Tale of the Witches (STONE); LECKY'S Rationalism in Europe; The Witch Persecutions (BURR); Encyc. Articles ("Witchcraft"): Britannica, Americana, International, Chambers', Johnson's; Connecticut: Origin of her Courts and Laws (HAMERSLEY); BARBER'S Connecticut Historical Collections; SCHENCK'S Fairfield; Connecticut as a Colony and State (MORGAN et al.); The House of the Seven Gables (HAWTHORNE); LATIMER'S Salem; JOHNSTON'S Nathan Hale; Connecticut History (TRUMBULL); UPHAM'S Salem Witchcraft; Conn. Mag., Nov., 1899; Dalton's Justice; Mem. Hist, of Boston; Mem. Hist, of Hartford County; Palfrey's New England; Historic Towns of New England (Latimer); Giles Corey of the Salem Farms (Longfellow); New France and New England (Fiske); Scott's Demonology and Witchcraft; Lowell's "Witchcraft" (Among My Books); Whitmore's Colonial Laws; Drake's Witchcraft Delusion in New England; Fowler's Salem Witchcraft; Hutchinson's Hist, of Massachusetts Bay; Larned's Hist, of Ready Reference (Mass.); Howe's Puritan Republic; Goodwin's Pilgrim Republic; Merejkowski's Romance of Leonardo da Vinci; Bulwer's Last Days of Pompeii; Weyman's The Long Night; Crockett's The Black Douglas; Lea's Hist, of the Inquisition; Scarlet Letter (Hawthorne); A Case of Witchcraft in Connecticut (Hoadley); Witches in Connecticut (Bliss); Historical Discourses (Bacon); History of Wethersfield (Stiles); History of Long Island (Thompson), Witchcraft in Boston (Poole); Literature of Witchcraft in New England (Winsor); Witchcraft and Second Sight in the Scottish Highlands (Campbell); Witch-hunter in the Bookshops (Burr); Epidemic Delusions (Carpenter); History of New England (Neal); History of Colonization of U.S. (Bancroft); Salem Witchcraft (Fowler); Bouvier's Law Dic.; Witchcraft in Connecticut (Livermore); Witchcraft in Salem Village, 1692 (Nevins); History of Stratford and Bridgeport (Orcutt); Bench and Bar (Adams); Conway's Demonology and Devil-lore; Domestic and Social Life in Colonial Times (Warner); Nat. Mag. Nov. 15, 1891.


Index


A

Allyn, John
Allyn, Thomas
Ashley, Jonathan
Austen, Thomas
Ayres, Goody
Ayres, William

44, 51-56, 65-67, 71, 84, 106, 109, 117
148
117
103
152, 157
152


B

Baldwin, Goodwife
Ball, Allen
Bankes, John
Barlow, Goodwife
Barlow, John
Barnard, Bartholomew
Barnes, Mary
Bassett, Goody
Bates, Sarah
Bayley, Goodwife
Bayley, Nicholas
Belden, Samuel
Bell, Jonathan
Benham, Winifred, Jr. and Sr.
Benit, Elizabeth
Benit, Thomas
Benit, Thomas, Jr.
Birdsall, Goody
Bishop, Bridgett
Bishop, Ebenezer
Bishop, Edward
Bowman, Nathanael
Bracy, Thomas
Branch, Catherine
Brewster, Elizabeth
Brewster, Mary
Brundish, Bethia
Bryan, Ensign
Bulkeley, Rev. Gershom
Bull, Joseph
Burr, Abigail
Burr, John
Burr, Sarah
Buxstum, Clement

133, 137
94
126
135
65
117
152, 157
130, 148, 156
104
149, 156
149, 156
51
44, 105-107, 110, 113
155, 157
67, 70
67, 71
70
120
ix
108
ix
117
49
65, 103-104, 108-116
131
132
134
126, 129
57
117
43
110, 119
43
113


C

Carrington, Joan
Carrington, John
Carter, Dr. Samuel T.
Chester, Stephen
Clarke, Mr.
Clarke, Henry
Clarke, William
Clawson, Elizabeth
Clawson, Stephen
Cole, Ann
Collins, Samuel
Comstock, Christopher
Corey, Giles
Corwin, George
Corwin, Jonathan
Cross, Abigail
Cross, Nathanael
Crotia, Hugh
Cullick, Mr.

38, 145, 147, 156
viii, 38, 145, 147, 156
159
117
38, 148
50, 52, 53
51
44, 63, 101-116, 154, 157
101
97
117
133
15, 27
ix
27
104
104
viii, 117-119, 155, 157
38, 56, 148


D

Davenport, Rev. John
Davis, Goody
Desborough, Nicholas
Dickinson, Joseph
Disborough, Mercy
Disborough, Thomas
Duning, Benjamin

85, 122, 125-128
120
153, 157
50
15, 44, 62-78, 154, 157
63, 65
65


E

Eaton, Theophilus
Edwards, Goody
Edwards, Jonathan
Eliot, Joseph

85, 125
120
158
76, 78


F

Finch, Abraham
Fowler, William
Francis, Joane
Fyler, Walt.

107
125, 138
53
85


G

Gardiner, Lion
Garlick, Elizabeth
Garlick, Joshua
Garney, Joseph
Garrett, Daniel
Garrett, Margaret
Gedney, Bartholomew
Gibbons, William
Gilbert, Lydia
Gillett, Cornelius
Godfree, Ann
Godman, Elizabeth
Gold, Nathan
Goodyear, Stephen
Gould, Goodwife
Grant, Matthew
Graves, John
Greensmith, Nathaniel
Greensmith, Rebecca
Grey, Henry
Griswold, Edward
Griswold, Michael
Grummon, John

119
119-121, 150, 156
119
101
80
80
27
117
148, 156
117
70
85-96, 149, 156
110, 119
85-89, 92, 93
139
146-147
52
96-100, 151, 156
96-100, 151, 156
68, 69, 70
38
59
70


H

Hale, Mary
Halliberch, Thomas
Hand, Goody
Harrison, Katherine
Hart, Stephen
Harvey, Hannah
Harvey, Mary
Hathorne, John
Haynes, John
Heyden, Daniel
Hollister, Mr.
Holly, Samuel
Hooker, Thomas
Hopkins, Edward
Hopkins, Matthew
Howard, Abigail
Howell, Goodwife
Hubbard, Elizabeth
Hull, Rebecca
Hull, Cornelius

54
66
121
47-61, 153, 157
38, 81
115, 154, 157
154, 157
27
38, 97, 98, 147
117
38
109
162
38, 147
21
43
119
ix
133
133


J

Jennings, Margaret
Jennings, Nicholas
Jesop, Edward
Joanes, William
Johnson, Jacob
Johnson, Mary
Jones, Martha
Jones, William
Judd, Theo.

150, 156
150, 156
63
117
53
35, 143, 144, 156
35
40
38


K

Kecham, Sarah
Kelsey, Stephen
Knapp, Goodwife

103
117
109, 122-141, 156, 176


L

Lamberton, Desire
Lamberton, Elizabeth
Lamberton, Hannah
Langton, Joseph
Leawis, Will.
Leete, William
Lewis, Mercy
Lockwood, Deborah
Lockwood, Robert
Lockwood, Susan
Loomis, Jonathan
Loomis, Nathanael
Ludlow, Roger
Lyon, Thomas

93
86, 90
86, 90
117
38
47, 125
ix
133
132
124, 131, 132, 136, 138
117
117
123, 125-129, 161-163
136, 138


M

Mansfield, Moses
Marsh, John
Mason, John
Mather, Cotton
Meaker, William
Migat, Mrs.
Miller, Goody
Milton, Daniel
More, John
Montague, Richard
Mullener, Thomas
Mygatt, Joseph

117
117
47
28-34, 153
149, 156
82
154, 157
38
38
51
149
117


N

Newell, Samuel
Newton, Thomas
North, Joseph
Norton

117
27
117
155, 157


O

Odell, Goodwife

124, 131, 135


P

Palmer, Katherine
Pantry, John
Pell, Luce
Penoir, Lydia
Phelps, Abraham
Phelps, Mr.
Pitkin, William
Pratt, Daniel
Pratt, John
Purdy, Goodwife
Putnam, Ann

157
117
124, 130, 135, 138
112
117
38
78, 117
81
38
124, 135
ix, 30


R

Renels, John
Richards, John
Russel, William

141
27
120


S

Saltonstall, Nathl.
Sanford, Andrew
Sanford, Mary
Seager, Elizabeth
Selleck, David
Selleck, Jonathan
Sergeant, Peter
Sewall, Samuel
Shervington, Thomas
Sherwood, Isaac
Sherwood, Mistress Thomas
Slawson, Elezer
Smith, Elizabeth
Smith, Philip
Smith, Samuel
Spencer, Sarah
Stanly, Caleb
Stanly, Nath.
Staplies, Mary
Staplies, Thomas
Steele, James
Sterne, Robert
Stiles, Henry
Stirg, Joseph
Stoughton, John
Stoughton, William

27
151, 157
151, 156
80-85, 152, 157
108, 114
106, 107, 110, 116
27
27
133, 138
64
124, 128, 135, 139
113
56
51
38, 50, 52, 53, 66
155, 157
117
78, 117
125-141, 154, 157
125, 126
117
81, 84
148
66
117
27, ix


T

Tailecote, Mr.
Tash, John
Tompson, J.
Treat, Robert
Trumbull, J. Hammond

38
140, 141
129, 135
48, 62, 117
v


V

Varlett, Judith

151, 157


W

Wadsworth, Joseph
Wakely, James
Wakeman, Sarah
Walcott, Mary
Walkley, James
Ward, Andrew
Ward, Hester
Ward, Thomas
Webster, Mr.
Wells, Mr.
Wells, Hugh
Wescot, Abigail
Wescot, Daniel
White, John
Whiting, Rev. John
Whitlock, Goodwife
Wiat, Nath.
Willard, Josiah
Williams, Abigail
Williams, William
Willis, Samuel
Wilson, Hannah
Wilton, David
Winthrop, John
Winthrop, Wait
Woodbridge, Rev. Timothy
Woolcott, Mr.

117
50
43
ix
153, 157
134
129, 136
117
38
38, 129
49
106, 112
101-116
38
96, 97
134
102
81
ix
117
78, 117
43
51
35, 47, 143
27
76, 78
38


Y

Young, Alse

35, 145-147, 156