Witchcraft
in Connecticut
By
Bruce P. Stark
Belief
in witchcraft, or the power of evil, was common in seventeenth-century
New England, as elsewhere in the western world. The infamous Salem
witchcraft trials are well known. What is generally unrecognized,
however, is that if one excludes the events in Salem from consideration,
Connecticut was the witchcraft center of New England.
Witchcraft
was a capital crime defined as "giving entertainment to Satan." Not
counting the Salem trials, ninety-three complaints for witchcraft
were made in New England between 1638 and 1697, forty-three
in
Connecticut and fifty in much more heavily-populated Massachusetts.
About two-thirds of those brought to trial were acquitted,
but
eleven of the sixteen persons executed for the crime of witchcraft
in New England prior to 1692 lived in Connecticut.
The
first known witchcraft trial on the North American Continent
and
the first execution took place in Connecticut in 1647. The victim
was Alice Young of Windsor. Ten other Connecticut residents,
eight
females and two husbands of condemned female witches, lost their
lives between 1648 and 1663. The first great witchcraft panic
in New England took place in Connecticut in 1662-63. Seven
women
and four men, eight of whom lived in Hartford, had complaints
brought against them. Eight were brought to trial, and three
were
condemned to death—Rebecca Goldsmith and her husband John Goldsmith
of Hartford and Mary Barnes of Farmington.
Connecticut
has traditionally been known as the "Land of Steady Habits," but
witchcraft is associated with times of extreme anxiety and
extraordinary trouble. Early Connecticut did experience substantial
turmoil and trouble, as the colony was plagued by Indian problems,
natural disasters, epidemics, chronic religious factionalism,
and uncertainty about the legal foundations of the Connecticut
government.
Seven
women from Fairfield, Stamford, Wallingford, and Stratford were
accused of witchcraft in 1692, probably copycat reactions to the
Salem hysteria, and two final cases were tried in 1697. The 1697
cases involved Winifred Benham and Winifred Benham, Jr. of Wallingford.
Both were acquitted of the charges brought against them. The Benham
cases were, by the way, the last known witchcraft trials in New
England. As witchcraft accusations thrived in times of anxiety,
they disappeared in times of stability. The phenomenon itself
expired due to the revulsion that followed the Salem witchcraft
epidemic.
For
Further Reading
Demos,
John Putnam. Entertaining Satan: Witchcraft and the Culture
of Early New England. New York, 1982. See chapter 11.
*
Entry under revision.
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