Salem Witchcraft, Volumes I and II eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,075 pages of information about Salem Witchcraft, Volumes I and II.

Salem Witchcraft, Volumes I and II eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,075 pages of information about Salem Witchcraft, Volumes I and II.

On the 14th of May, warrants were issued against Daniel Andrew; George Jacobs, Jr.; his wife, Rebecca Jacobs; Sarah Buckley, wife of William Buckley; and Mary Whittredge, daughter of said Buckley,—­all of Salem Village; Elizabeth Hart, wife of Isaac Hart, of Lynn; Thomas Farrar, Sr., also of Lynn; Elizabeth Colson, of Reading; and Bethiah Carter, of Woburn.  There is nothing of special interest among the few papers that are on file relating to Hart, Colson, or Carter.  The constable made return that he had searched the houses of Daniel Andrew and George Jacobs, Jr., but could not find them.  He brought in forthwith the bodies of Sarah Buckley, Mary Whittredge, and Rebecca Jacobs.  Farrar and the rest were brought in shortly afterwards.

Daniel Andrew was one of the leading men of the village, and the warrant against him was proof that soon none would be too high to be reached by the prosecutors.  He felt that it was in vain to attempt to resist their destructive power; and, getting notice in some way of the approach of the constable, with his near neighbor, friend, and connection, George Jacobs, Jr., effected his escape, and found refuge in a foreign country.

Rebecca, the wife of George Jacobs, Jr., was the victim of a partial derangement.  Her daughter Margaret was already in jail.  Her husband had escaped by a hurried flight, and his father was in prison awaiting his trial.  She was left in a lonely and unprotected condition, in a country but thinly settled, in the midst of woods.  The constable came with his warrant for her.  She was driven to desperation, and was inclined to resist; but he persuaded her to go with him by holding out the inducement that she would soon be permitted to return.  Four young children, one of them an infant, were left in the house; but those who were old enough to walk followed after, crying, endeavoring to overtake her.  Some of the neighbors took them into their houses.  The imprisonment of a woman in her situation and mental condition was an outrage; but she was kept in irons, as they all were, for eight months.  Her mother addressed an humble but earnest and touching petition to the chief-justice of the court at Salem, setting forth her daughter’s condition; but it was of no avail.  Afterwards, she addressed a similar memorial to “His Excellency Sir William Phips, Knight, Governor, and the Honorable Council sitting at Boston,” in the following terms:—­

The Humble Petition of Rebecca Fox, of Cambridge, showeth, that, whereas Rebecca Jacobs (daughter of your humble petitioner) has, a long time,—­even many months,—­now lain in prison for witchcraft, and is well known to be a person crazed, distracted, and broken in mind, your humble petitioner does most humbly and earnestly seek unto Your Excellency and to Your Honors for relief in this case.
“Your petitioner,—­who knows well the condition of her poor daughter,—­together with several others of good repute and credit,
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Salem Witchcraft, Volumes I and II from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.