| William MORSE [1614-1683] was a key figure in
the only recorded case of supposed witchcraft in Newbury that was ever subjected to a full
legal investigation. The principal sufferer in what Joshua Coffin (in his SKETCH OF THE
HISTORY OF NEWBURY - 1845) calls "this tragi-comedy" was William's wife
Elizabeth who resided with him in a house at the head of Market St. [later actually in
Newburyport] across from St. Paul's Church for which William had received in the lot in
1645. |
| William was then 65 years of age, a very
worthy, but credulous and unsuspecting man who consequently was very easy prey to the
taunting antics of a very roguish grandson who lived with them. Not suspecting any
deception, the good man readily attributed all his troubles and strange afflictions to the
supernatural instead of carefully analyzing the actions of those around him. With a belief
in witchcraft almost universal at the time, it afforded a ready solution to anything
strange and mysterious. The only person to have suspected the boy as the author of the
mischief was a seaman Caleb POWELL who visited the house frequently enough to suspect that
the Morse's troubles had human, rather than supernatural, origins. Caleb informed Goodman
MORSE that he believed he could readily find and the source of the trouble and solve it.
To add credibility to his claims, he hinted that in his many travels he had gained an
extensive knowledge of astrology and astronomy. That claim, however innocently intended,
led to Caleb being accused of dealing in the black arts himself--he was tried and narrowly
escaped with his own life! |
| Anthony MORSE, brother of William,
gave the following testimony about the strange goings-on at his brother's house on Dec 8,
1679 [retaining the original spelling for its quaintness...]: "I Anthony Mors
ocationlly being att my brother Morse's hous, my brother showed me a pece of a brick which
had several tims come down the chimne. I sitting in the cornar towck the pece of brik in
my hand. Within a littel spas of tiem the pece of brik was gon from me I know not by what
meanes. Quickly aftar, the pece of brik came down the chimne. Also in the chimny corar I
saw a hamar on the ground. Their being no person near the hamar it was soddenly gone; by
what means I know not, but within a littel spas after, the hamar came down the chimny and
within a littell spas of tiem aftar that, came a pece of woud, about a fute loung, and
within a littell after that came down a fiar brand, the fiar being out." |
| William MORSE was also asked to give
testimony on the same day and reported instances of being in bed and hearing stones and
sticks being thrown against the roof or house with great violence, finding a large hog in
the house after midnight, and many strange objects being dropped down the chimney. Items
in the barn were mysteriously overturned or out-of-place, shoes unexpectedly seemed to fly
through the air as if thrown, and doors unexpectedly would open or close. |
| The handwritten testimony concludes with the
telling statement: "A mate of of a ship coming often to me [ie: Caleb POWELL]
said he much grefed for me and said the boye [William's grandson] was the cause of all my
truble and my wife was much Ronged, and was no wich, and if I would let him have the boye
but one day, he would warrant me no more truble. I being persuaded to it, he Com the nex
day at the brek of day, and the boy was with him untel night and I had not any truble
since." |
| When Caleb was finally acquitted, the judges
looked for some other person guilty "of being instigated by the devil"
for accomplishing such pranks, and for some reason selected Elizabeth MORSE, William's
wife, as the culprit. [Elizabeth often served as a town midwife, and perhaps had incurred
some male or professional' jealousies?] |
| At a Court of Assistants held at Boston on
May 20, 1680, Elizabeth MORSE was indicted as "having familiarity with the Divil
contrary to the peace of our sovereign lord the King" and the laws of God. In
spite of her protesting her complete innocense, she was found guilty and sentenced by the
governor on May 27th as follows: "Elizabeth MORSE, you are to goe from hence to
the place from when you came and thence to the place of execution and there to be hanged
by the neck, till you be dead, and the Lord have mercy on your soul." |
| Then, for some unexplained reason, Elizabeth
was granted a reprieve on June 1, 1680 by Governor BRADSTREET. The deputies of the local
court did not agree with the decision, however, and complained in Nov 1680 to have the
case reopened. Testimony was again heard in the general court through May 1681. William
sent several petitions pleading his wife's innocence and attempting to answer the
hysterical allegations of 17 Newbury residents who submitted testimony in writing offering
their reasons why they had concluded that Goody MORSE must be a witch and should be hung
according to old Mosaic law. |
Reading the list of "reasons" today
quickly strikes the 20th century mind as a dredging up of every petty annoyance, every
grudge or neighborhood misunderstanding the townspeople could think of from sick cows to
being snubbed in public. It was owing to the firmness of Gov. BRADSTREET in his initial
decision that the life of Elizabeth MORSE was saved and the town of Newbury prevented from
offering the first victim in Essex County to the witchcraft hysteria. Later town records
and other contemporary sources fail to record what happened to the "vile and
roguish" grandson whose attempts to torment his elderly grandparents nearly resulted
in his grandmother's untimely death.
Submitted by: Carolyn G. Depp - cdepp@classic.msn.com |
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