Tuesday, October 29, 2013

A Gaggle of Witches: Shake the Bush family tree and a surprising number of witches come flying out.


Stumped for a Halloween costume? Take a clue from our family tree; dress like an ancestor. Visit a picture of Mary (Bliss) Parsons, my 8th ggm,

 http://ccbit.cs.umass.edu/parsons/hnmockup/home.html.


 Mary (Bliss) Parsons (1628-1712).


Mary Bliss wed Joseph Parsons in Hartford, MA in 1646. He was a prominent member of the community. Later they moved to Northampton, MA. This was years before the notorious Salem Witch Trials (1692-93). Mary parsons was involved in at least three trials; 1656 for slander, 1674 for witchcraft and again in 1679. She successfully defended herself, although family wealth and connections undoubtedly helped. An educational site for children: http://ccbit.cs.umass.edu/parsons/goodyparsons/.






Pedigree line for Mary (Bliss) Parsons: My 8th great grandmother (through my father’s maternal line):


Mary Bliss (1628 - 1712)
Joseph Parsons (1647 - 1729)  son of Mary Bliss
Daniel Parsons (1685 - 1774) son of Joseph Parsons
Daniel Parsons (1709 - 1760) son of Daniel Parsons
Gideon Parsons (1739 - 1836) son of Daniel Parsons
Gideon Parsons (1779 - 1855) son of Gideon Parsons
Jedidiah Cleveland Parsons (1805 - 1889) son of Gideon Parsons
Mary Parsons (1855 - 1916) daughter of Jedidiah Cleveland Parsons
Jennie Sadie Wheeler (1887 - 1942) daughter of Mary Parsons
Robert William Bush (1920 - 1999) son of Jennie Sadie Wheeler
Jennie Joann Bush (Lambert) daughter of Robert William Bush 



Elizabeth (Periment) Clason (1631-1714)

While searching an ancestral thread for Elizabeth Clason/Clawson, an early finding was an account of a trial in 1692 of a woman from Stamford, Connecticut who was accused of being a witch. The label on a MA site, "Elizabeth Clawson thou art a witch and thou deseruest to dye", caught my attention. See: http://www.ctgenweb.org/county/cofairfield/pages/stamford/witch_trial.htm

What followed was a wealth of information about our ancestor's life and the community of Stamford, and of course her entire trial. After a long ordeal that included dunking and imprisonment, and an extraordinary show of support from the community, charges were dismissed.  She returned home, but suspicion followed her throughout her life. More readings: Escaping Salem: The Other Witch Hunt of 1692. Richard Godbeer. New York: Oxford University Press, 2005.

Subsequently, the whole family became alive through numerous books, blogs and websites.  Circ. 2008 we visited the Stamford, CT Historical Society, just had to get close and personal to events and places. Genealogy can do that to a person.

Pedigree line from Elizabeth Periment: My 8th great grandmother (through my father’s paternal line):

Elizabeth Periment (1631 - 1714) 
Jonathan Clason (1655 - 1685) son of Elizabeth Periment
Stephen Clason (1681 - 1746) son of Jonathan Clason
Susanna Clason (1716 - 1749) daughter of Stephen Clason
James Longwell (1736 - 1814) son of Susanna Clason
Adonijah Longwell (1791 - 1852) son of James Longwell
Eliza Ann Longwell (1824 - 1900) daughter of Adonijah Longwell
Wesley Bush (1845 - 1917) son of Eliza Ann Longwell
Harvey Ray Bush (1886 - 1961) son of Wesley Bush
Robert William Bush (1920 - 1999) son of Harvey Ray Bush
Jennie Joann Bush (Lambert) the daughter of Robert William Bush 

My family also has connections to other "witches"  from the period. Some escaped death; some did not. Perhaps a story for next year.  In any event, by the end of 1693, the religious frenzy and hysteria of the early NE colonies had dissipated and “witch” trials were no longer an accepted way of dealing with one’s fellow colonials. Good thing, too. Otherwise, a lot of us would not be here.



Jennie