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A Halloween story

Meet Mindy. She’s part of the venerable Fitch family that traces back to the early days of Burlington.

Mindy Stimpson

 

Her relatives lived at this house at 148 Wilmington Road, on the corner of Lisa Street. The house is gone now, replaced by 0 Lisa Street.

148 Wilmington Road, Burlington MA (Fitch home)

Meet Henry. He met Mindy through family connections in 1992 and married her a year later.

Henry Simard

Henry’s grandfather was big on family history and urged Henry’s father to do ancestral research. This pressure was passed down to Henry, of course. He started his homework in the 1990s.

Some 13 years later, he discovered a very interesting nugget. He’s a descendant of Susannah Martin of Amesbury, one of 20 people executed in Salem for the crime of witchcraft. From the Boston Sunday Globe, 1895:

Susannah Martin school proposal Boston Sunday Globe Dec. 15, 1895

 

 

This genealogy stuff was pretty interesting after all. Henry just had to do the same for Mindy. That project took another few years. And then — the shocker. Mindy turned out to be a descendant of Samuel Sewall.

Judge Samuel Sewall

Also known as Judge Samuel Sewall, the man who presided over the witchcraft trials and ordered the executions, the infamous “Hanging Judge.” Yes, Mindy’s ninth great grandfather executed Henry’s ninth great grandmother!

Here’s Henry’s family tree (two pages):

Henry Simard part one

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And here’s Mindys family tree (two pages):

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To Henry and Mindy, all of this is mere abstraction. I hasn’t affected the way they see each other, thank goodness. “Even though an ancestor of my wife had my ninth great grandmother hanged,” says Henry, “I think every generation has the opportunity to heal the wounds of the past and move forward in life.”

Henry Simard and Mindy Stimpson

Henry Simard and Mindy Stimpson

The judge did have a conscience. He wasn’t very happy with himself after the events in Salem. Here’s an excerpt from “The Hanging Judge Repents” in Yankee Magazine, January 1988:

September 1692, Samuel Sewall with six colleagues presided over the Salem witch trials. “Judge Sewall” was no lawyer as we know lawyers. Pious theocrats interpreted the law, and Sewall was among the most pious and thoroughly convinced of religious personages in Massachusetts. His convictions and their consequences in Salem — 20 persons put to death — earned him a bleak reputation as “the Hanging Judge.”

But the events that spawned that reputation became for Samuel Sewall what John Greenleaf Whittier called “the haunting sorrow that never slept.” Throughout Sewall’s remarkable and detailed diary we catch glimpses of a brooding guilty conscience. Sewall constantly prayed for vindication; he fasted at length; he believed that 11 of his 14 children might have died as a sign of divine retribution for the witchcraft trials.

Finally, in January 1697 on a fast day called especially to remember the Salem trials, Sewall attended church at the Old South Meeting House in Boston and slipped a document into the hand of his pastor, Samuel Willard. In what must have been one of the most touching and startling moments in the congregation’s history, Samuel Sewall stood penitent and silent as Willard read, in part, as follows:

“Samuel Sewall, sensible of the reiterated strokes of God upon himself and family; and being sensible, that as to guilt contracted upon the opening of the last Commission…at Salem (to which this fast day relates) he is, upon many accounts, more concerned than any that he knows of, desires to take the blame and shame of it, asking pardon of men, and especially desiring prayers that God, who has an unlimited authority, would pardon that sin and his other sins, personal and relative; and according to His infinite Benignity, and Sovereignty, not visit upon himself or any of his or upon the land: But that God would powerfully defend him against all temptations for Sin, for the future: and vouchsafe him for the efficacious saving conduct of word and spirit.”

Sewall’s confession serves as the basis of Whittier’s marvelous poem, “The Prophecy of Samuel Sewall,” in which the agonized cleric pleads with Providence to have:

His faith confirmed and his trust renewed
That the sin of his ignorance, sorely rued
Might be washed away in the mingled flood
Of his human sorrow and Christ’s dear blood.

 

10 thoughts on “A Halloween story Leave a comment

  1. I can comment on the property on Wilmington Rd – it belonged many years ago to the Carroll Family – Mr. Carroll was my Great Grandfather – who ran a farm – tt was sold probably in the thirtys or fortys to the Wilkish Family who ran a piggery farm. there was a wonderful pond on the property where we used to skate. just up the street on what was originally farm land my cousin and two of his children all have homes/ my brother lives on Lisa St. So the family still remains in the area,

  2. I’m also a descendant of Susannah North Martin on my maternal grandmother’s side. Several of her accusers are my ancestors of my maternal grandfather’s side.

    • That explains your uncanny ability to spot errors on my website that go undetected by normal humans.

      • “That explains your uncanny ability to spot errors on my website that go undetected by normal humans.”
        LMAO
        Fahey, you can be one funny bastid. LOL

  3. Great Article! Your comment, RWF, to Dorothy Green – literally had me laughing out loud! Great sense of humor!

  4. In doing research on my family tree (using Ancestry) I stumbled across something Mindy and Henry may be interested in. I have a 4th cousin that is unknown to me and in trying to figure out our relationiship I noticed she had two relatives of hers (ours? I dunno) that were brought up on witchcraft charges multiple times and in the end was hanged as a witch. Then came across the following. It mentions Susannah Martin. So, Susannah was eventually pardoned among the other ‘witches’.

    ‘Finally, on Halloween in 2001, the Massachusetts legislature passed a resolution officially exonerating five of the victims not mentioned in the previous resolutions: Susannah Martin, Bridget Bishop, Alice Parker, Wilmot Redd and Margaret Scott’.

  5. Hi Henry. The two witches that are mentioned on this person from Ancestry that shows as a DNA match (just 27cM’s) to me – are Susannah Goody North (I am guessing she later married and became Susannah Martin) and Mary Perkins. There is a pic of Susannah Martin tombstone in her photo gallery. Yet that was not your question…I do not know her full name…she uses initials knmcconnell802 Not certain how this will help you…but good luck! Looks like your ‘witch’ and her ‘witch’ are same person. I am not saying I am related to these witches (although my siblings may disagree – HA!) I’m simply saying that knmcconnell802 and I share DNA and her tree has the witches. By the way, I know a Ron Simard from Woburn…are you related?

    • Not sure who Ron Simard is but coming from a large family he could be a possible relative

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