From Peabody-Lynnfield Weekly News, October 26, 1995, p.
1 by S.M. Smoller
Map From Peabody Historical Society & Museum
PEABODY - Was it witchcraft that stopped the steady rhythm
of the waterwheel at Pope's saw mill on Norris Brook in West Peabody? That's
what the miller told the court during the witch hunt of 1692, when the
area around Crystal Lake was owned by two families intimately involved
in the witch hysteria - one, an accuser, and the other, the accused.
"The miller here in 1692 was afflicted by the prevailing
witchcraft," wrote John Wells in The Peabody Story. The millter
testified that his mill wheel was "unaccountably stopped and would not
go, and no reason could be assigned except the demonical malice and power
of some witch."
The haunted mill may have been owned by the family of
one of the persons who claimed to have been afflicted by witchcraft, 42-year
old Bathshua Pope. She married Joseph Pope, Jr. in 1649 and was living
with her widowed mother-in-law, Gertrude Pope, within the immediate vicinity
of the farm of victims and martyrs, Martha and Giles Corey.
Bathshua Pope, a member of the Folger family from Nantucket,
was the aunt of American patriot Benjamin Franklin. She and Joseph had
eight children. According to the New England Historical and Genealogical
Register, when Joseph died in1712, he named all his children in his
will, except for the first two, "and notes that the eldest daughter was inferior mind, as probably had been her mother; at least, she was much
afflicted in the witchcraft days."
The localized witchcraft outbreak took on hysterical proportions
by the fall of 1692, with more than 150 people examined and sent to prison.
Nearly 50 people falsely confessed to being witches who had made a covenant
with the devil to assist in assaulting people in the area. Nineteen persons
who maintained their innocence, including the three accused by Bathshua
Pope, were tried, found guilty and hanged.
"Mrs. Pope" accused Martha Corey, as well as Rebecca Nurse
and John Proctor, of inflicting pain upon her body through witchcraft.
At the trial of Martha Corey in March 2693, she joined with other afflicted
women in calling Martha "a gospel witch".
Marion Starkey, author of The Devil in Massachusetts,
wrote, "Even while Martha proclaimed her innocence her devils had not been
able to resist devising new tortures for the girls. What Martha did, now
they all did. If she bit her lips, they yelled that she had bitten theirs,
and came running up to the magistrates to show how they bled."
The following month Rebecca Nurse was arrested and tried.
During the examination, several afflicted persons reported seeing "a black
man" whispering in Nurse's ear. The judge stated, "What a sad thing it
is that a church member here and now…should be thus accused and charged."
At which point, "Mrs. Pope fell into a grievous fit and cryed out a sad
thing sure enough; And then many more fell into lamentable fits."
Also in April, Elizabeth Proctor, the pregnant wife of
John was accused. At her trial, John Proctor's specter attacking Mrs. Pope.
Chadwick Hansen in Witchcraft in Salem reported that "immediately
Goodwife Pope fell into a fit."
Earlier in this century, two postcards depciting the "haunted
mill" were published. A color postcard prepared by D.F. Bresnahan of Peabody
shows two wood-frame structures, 2 1/2 stories each, located on either
side of a 10- to 12-foot-wide stream with a catwalk bridge connecting the
two buildings.
One card also includes the following statement,
"Site of Giles Coveys [sic] Mill who was pressed to death for refusing
to plead in his trial for Witchcraft in1692." Today at Crystal Lake, a
conservation area, there are two stones which were placed in remembrance
of Martha and Giles Corey during the witchcraft hysteria tercentenary in1992.
City planner Judy Otto researched the history of Crystal
Lake. She does not think the Pope sawmill was the haunted mill. She wrote,
"At the head of Crystal Lake, at Goodale Street, on the west side, lived
Captain Thomas Flint. The house was contained on the farm of Giles Corey,
according to boundaries shown on the map. Giles himself lived further away
on the other side of the property, on what is now Johnson Street, near
Oak Grove cemetery. These two (Flint and Pope) were the only dwellings
shown in the vicinity of Crystal Lake.
Flint's mill was built after the Pope mill by Thomas Flint
on the opposite side of Lowell Street and closer to the pond. This mill,
which existed until the 20th century, is the mill Otto believes
is the haunted mill pictured in the black-and-white post card that was
printed by the Peabody Historical Society in 1905. It is titled "Haunted
Mill near Phelps Station, Lowell Street, West Peabody, Mass." Interestingly,
Joseph Pope Jr.'s sister Gertrude married Eben Flint, a son of Thomas Flint.
Phelps Station Peabody MA & Sidney Perley History of Salem MA Volume 3
Emerson Baker A Storm of Witchcraft
“If history were taught in the form of stories, it would never be forgotten.” Rudyard Kipling.. From the Vault: Genealogy, Historical Photos, Newspaper Archives
Wednesday, November 19, 2014
History of Witchcraft Haunts Old Saw Mill
Labels:
Bathshua Pope,
Elizabeth Proctor,
Emerson Baker A Storm of Wtchcraft,
Folger,
Gertrude Pope,
Giles Corey,
John Proctor,
Martha Corey,
Nicholas Phelps,
Peabody MA,
Rebecca Nurse,
S M Smoller,
Thomas Flint
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