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My Grandmother the Witch (youngsters:non fiction, 1042 words) | |||
Author: Lou Hill | Added: Apr 27 2002 | Views/Reads: 5039/2667 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
A "be-witching" true story. | |||
MY GRANDMOTHER THE WITCH Vermont writer Joseph Citro, author of "Green Mountain Ghosts, Ghouls and Unsolved Mysteries" and "Passing Strange," often bemoans the fact that he has never experienced any paranormal events similar to those which play such an important part in his writing, both fiction and non-fiction. Joe has never seen a ghost, nor has he ever encountered one of the strange creatures that are said to inhabit the forests and lakes of the Green Mountain State about which he has so often reported. He has never been abducted by aliens or much less spotted a UFO. However, if you are ever able to attend one of his speaking engagements, you might be fortunate enough to hear the story about the time he "thought" he had seen a UFO. In that respect Joe and I are kindred spirits. I have never experienced anything that could even vaguely be considered as worthy of mention in the "X Files" or "Unsolved Mysteries." However I have just discovered something that puts me one up on Joe. I have a great grandmother who was a witch! Yes a bonafide, tried and convicted witch of the 17th century. Those of you who may have read a story I wrote few years back titled "Shaking the Family Tree" know that I am a dyed-in-the-wool genealogy nut. Recently I made an excursion to the Vermont Historical Society's Library located in the old Pavilion Building in Montpelier. This outstanding collection of material includes a large number of volumes of various family histories. While browsing through the shelves I discovered a fairly large volume on the Foster family, one of the "limbs" of my tree. I located the pages that referred to one my grandfathers, Andrew Foster, and found quite a bit written about him. However, it was the information on his wife Ann that caught my eye. According to the author she had been tried and convicted of witchcraft and sentenced to death by hanging. Her crimes: bewitching a hog belonging to John Lovejoy, causing the death of one of Andrew Allen's children, making another child sick and "hurting" one Timothy Swan. Crimes to which she readily confessed! According the book her manner of "hurting" was to make images of person with rags called "poppets." She would then stick pins in them or "tye knots in the rags" or burn them in the fire. The persons who these images were supposed to represent would suffer whenever she pinched or burned or pricked the "poppet." In addition to the aforementioned "crimes," she described extraordinary apparitions, which she had seen. "Birds with great eyes which first were white and became black when they flew away by which she knew they were devils." She claimed to have attended "witch meetings" and seen over 300 witches. All of this took place not in Salem as one might expect, but rather in nearby Andover, Massachusetts. The year was 1692 during the peak of the witchcraft frenzy. Ann Foster was an aged woman, recently widowed and, by all accounts, extremely pious. So pious, in fact, that there was little doubt that she was led to charge herself with the sin of witchcraft in all sincerity and contrition. She was evidently weak in mind and body, although several years earlier she had acted with efficiency as the executrix of her husband Andrew's estate. Still she was ready at the trial to confess almost anything which was suggested against her. Imagine this poor doddering, feeble creature, dragged from her home, thrown into jail and then "examined" at length on four different days, July 15, 16, 18 and 21. Time and time again she repeated her confession of these crimes, but on one point she was obstinate. She would accuse herself to any extent, but she would not accuse her daughter even though this same child would later admit that she was a witch and blamed on her mother's influence. "Your daughter (Mary Foster Lacey) was with you and Goody Carrier when you did ride upon the (broom) stick?" Click here to read the rest of this story (66 more lines)
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