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12 Justice, Peace And A Memorial – The Connecticut Witch Trials

“Laws pertaining to witchcraft came out of the Bible…Do not allow a sorceress to live. Then it was later changed to “Do not allow a witch to live”. And that’s where the Connecticut law for witches came from” Tony Griego

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Tony Griego, Beth Caruso and Brenda Sullivan taping our interview. Picture Paul F. Sullivan (click here to view picture)

This is a different kind of show; it's about getting justice for a group of people who were murdered 300 years ago. 

It is surprising to learn that even today, many people don't know about a horrific period when Connecticut was a fledgling colony and innocent people, mostly women who were accused of being a witch. 

Witchcraft isn't what you think of it today. It wasn't a religion or belief. The definition of a witch in colonial New England was open-ended.  It could be a person targeted by any of her neighbors for any reason or no reason or none for that matter. There was a lot of corruption by church and state, extortion, jealously, assaults, and murders. 

The pilgrims who traveled to the new colonies were Puritan Christians. These people agreed to live under a rigorous religious government that didn't allow for a lot of forgiveness. If someone was perceived to violate church law, the punishment was swift and harsh—death, often the penalty. There was no place to escape other than the wilderness or to the colony of Rhode Island. 

So how did all this start? It all began in the 1400s Medieval Europe when 2 Catholic priests wrote a treatise called the Malleus Maleficarum. The purpose of the document was to control the masses who the priests felt to have deviant behavior against the church and its authority. They concluded the people must be bewitched! 

It became a how-to manual giving the church and courts the legal authority to investigate, prosecute, and execute anyone of witchcraft and the book was widely distributed. 

Sadly, millions of women, men, and children over the centuries were executed. According to one historical reference, 85% who were viciously tortured and executed were women. 

This manual was in use for over 500 years, and the Catholic church finally discontinued using it in 1939 and during its publication, it had 16 revisions, most during the 1500 and 1600s. 

Even though the church discontinued its use, the damage was done. As you'll hear in the interview, many protestant ministers made similar versions to suit their own needs. 

I want to share an excerpt that I found by Fia Forsström, a Swedish author who posted a comment on Facebook about the witch trials in Europe and beyond. 

I thought it sums up the injustice, pain, and suffering that the church and state inflicted on its citizens. 

It was not witches who burned.
It was women.
Women who were seen as;
Too beautiful,
Too outspoken,
Had too much water in the well (yes, seriously),
Who had a birthmark,
Women who were too skilled with herbal medicine,
Too loud,
Too quiet,
Too much red in their hair,
Women who had a strong nature connection,
Women who danced,
Women who sang,
or anything else, really.

Any woman was at risk of burning in the 1600s.

Sisters testified and turned on each other when their babies were held under ice.

Children were tortured to confess their experiences with “witches” by being fake executed in ovens.

Women were held underwater, and if they could float, they were guilty and executed. If they sank and drowned, they were innocent.

Women were thrown off cliffs.

Women were put in deep holes in the ground.

Why do I write this?

Because knowing our history is important when we are building a new world.

When we are doing the healing work of our lineages and as women.

To give the women who were slaughtered a voice, to give them redress and a chance of peace.

It was not witches who burned.

It was women.


XXX

This is Connecticut's story – it's a 30-year reign of terror, pain, and suffering, and injustice. 

During those 30 years, 11 people were falsely accused of the crime of witchcraft and executed. In some cases, the reason for how the court came to its conclusion is crazy, and it boggles the mind. 

One can only conclude the accusers, the church, and the court was corrupt. It was nothing more than men dressed in clergy cloaks and robes acting as an organized crime syndicate. 

Approximately 35 more victims – that we know of – were accused of witchcraft. In one case, a woman was accused several times. 

In that day and age, this was a serious business. Any accusation destroyed a person's life and family. Many were forced to flee into the wilderness, often leaving children behind to deal with the fallout. 

And for what? Someone owning a prime piece of land? An outspoken spouse? A farmer's crop grew better than his neighbors? A woman had freckles or a mole on her body or, sadly, had a child with a disability – therefore, she must be a witch? 

Tony Griego and Beth Caruso, founders of the Connecticut Witch Memorial, present a compelling argument as to why they believe acknowledgment from the State of Connecticut and an official memorial is long overdue. These victims and their descendants deserve to be recognized. They deserve peace, justice, and an official place to mourn their ancestors.  

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Connecticut Colonial Lawmaking witchcraft a crime, punishable by death. Picture Brenda J. Sullivan (click here to view picture)
Hartford Courant December 3, 1904, Annie Eliot Trumbull receives the personal diary of Matthew Grant of Windsor CT from 1635 – 1681. She discovers the name Alice Young and the date she was hanged and realizes this is the unnamed woman referred to at “One Blank of Windsor.” (click here to view picture)
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Connecticut Witch Trial Timeline – Witchcraft Trials of Connecticut, R.G. Tomlinson page 1, Google Scholar (click here to view picture)
Delayed Justice: Windsor Atones for its Witch Trial History – July 6, 2017
Windsor Town Council, Windsor, Connecticut (click here to view video)
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Congregational Church where Alice Young was a member and was accused of witchcraft in 1647. (Website) Picture Brenda J. Sullivan (click here to view picture)
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The field in Windsor, Connecticut Alice would have walked through to get the boat to be taken to Hartford for her trial and execution. Picture Brenda J. Sullivan (click here to view picture)
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Beth Caruso on Windsor Town Green in front of the statue of General John Mason who is responsible for starting the witch trials and the extermination of the Pequot Indians. Picture Brenda J. Sullivan (click here to view picture)
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General John Mason Statue. Picture Brenda J. Sullivan (click here to view picture)
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Kathryn Gibbs grave in the church cemetery. She was Alice Young's neighbor on Backer Row. Picture Brenda J. Sullivan (click here to view picture)
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Church cemetery, Windsor Connecticut. Picture Brenda J. Sullivan (click here to view picture)
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Congregational Church, Hartford Connecticut. This is where Beth and Tony are hoping to place the Connecticut Witch Memorial pending state and city approval since they own the land around the church. Picture Wikipedia (Website) (click here to view picture)
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Back of the Congregational Church, Hartford Connecticut. Ancient burial grounds. This is the place they would like to place the witch memorial since all the clergy members who executed the 11 people are buried. Picture Wikipedia (click here to view picture)
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Entrance gates to the ancient burial grounds in Hartford. All 11 victims memorial bricks lay at the feet of the statute of Reverend Stone who presided over the witch trials. Picture Wikipedia (click here to view picture)
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Connecticut Old State House – This is where the witch trials took place and the second possible site for the CT Witch Memorial. Website Picture Wikipedia (click here to view picture)
Back of the Old State House. Picture Wikipedia (click here to view picture)
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Brick next to the flagpole honoring Alice Young. Not pictured is Lydia Gilbert brick. Windsor, Connecticut. Picture used with permission. (click here to view picture)
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Memorial in Fairfield, Black Rock, Connecticut. Picture used with permission (click here to view picture)
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Resolution regarding Alice Young, Windsor, Connecticut. Picture used with permission. (click here to view picture)

Books

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Click here to read book Google Scholar
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Witches, Midwives, and Nurses: A History of Women Healers is a great book! (affiliate link) Picture Brenda J. Sullivan (click here to view picture)
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The Malleus Maleficarum – The book that started it all. (affiliate link) (click here to view picture)

Thank you Tony Griego and Beth Caruso for coming on the show and sharing this incredible story.

Reference Links

CT Witch Memorial Facebook Page

https://www.facebook.com/ctwitchmemorial

Beth Caruso Website

https://www.oneofwindsor.com/

Email: oneofwindsor@yahoo.com

Old State House website

https://cga.ct.gov/osh/

Center Congregational Church, Hartford

https://centerchurchhartford.org

Windsor Congregational Church

http://www.fcwucc.org/

State of Connecticut State Library Witchcraft Materials:

https://libguides.ctstatelibrary.org/hg/colonialresearch/witchcraft

https://libguides.ctstatelibrary.org/ld.php?content_id=8928764

Samuel Wyllys Papers

https://cslib.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p15019coll10/search/searchterm/witchcraft/field/subjec/mode/exact/conn/and/order/nosort/ad/asc

Samuel Wyllys Papers at Brown University

https://www.riamco.org/render?eadid=US-RPB-mswyllys&view=inventory

The Witchcraft Delusion In Colonial Connecticut 1647-1697 by John Taylor

https://archive.org/details/witchcraftdelusi00tayluoft

Mathew Grants Diary – regarding Alice Young’s hanging for being a witch

https://libguides.ctstatelibrary.org/hg/colonialresearch/grantdiary

Digital View:

https://cslib.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p15019coll14/id/414

Transcript:

https://cslib.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p15019coll14/id/1425

The Malleus Maleficarum Website:

http://www.malleusmaleficarum.org

Malleus Maleficarum Wikipedia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malleus_Maleficarum

Adultery or Witchcraft? A New Note on an Old Case in Connecticut, William K. Holdsworth

https://www.jstor.org/stable/364866?seq=1

New England's Other Witch-hunt: The Hartford Witch-hunt of the 1660s and Changing Patterns in Witchcraft Prosecution

https://academic.oup.com/maghis/article-abstract/17/4/16/970318

Show's Sponsor

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Music

A special thank you to Gene Tullio for writing and producing this music. He has given me special permission to use this song for the show.

Gene's music can be downloaded from Amazon, iTunes, and Spotify.

For more information please contact him at dreamshipmusic@gmail.com

Album: The Dreamship| The Forge Of Life| Copyright 2018

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