jan 1, 1632 - Bridget Bishop, age 60
Description:
Other names Bridget used:
Wasselbe, Wasselby, Waselby, Wasselbee, Wesselbee, Magnus, Magnes, Hayfer; Goody Oliver, Goody Bishop, Bridget Playfer
Born: 1632, Norwich, England
Died: 10 June 1692. Salem
Cause of death: Execution by hanging
Occupation: Housewife
Criminal charge(s):
Witchcraft, overturned
conspiracy with the Devil, rehabilitated
Exonerated: October 31, 2001
Bridget's maiden name was Magnus, but her father John, her mother Rebecca and her sister Mercy used her paternal grandmother's maiden Playfer.
On April 13, 1660, she married her first husband, Captain Samuel Wesselby at St. Mary-in-the-Marsh, in Norwich, Norfolk, England. They had two sons John, Benjamin, and a daughter, Mary. Her first husband died in 1666.
Her second marriage, on 26 July 1666, was to Thomas Oliver, a widower and prominent businessman. She had another daughter from her marriage to Thomas Oliver, Chrestian Oliver (sometimes spelled Christian), born 8 May 1667. She was earlier accused of bewitching Thomas Oliver to death but was acquitted for lack of evidence.
Her third marriage c. 1687 was to Edward Bishop, a prosperous lawyer, whose family lived in Beverly. Her third husband was one of the founders of the First Church of Beverly and he was 44 at the time of the trials.
Bridget and Edward ran two taverns and was always wore exotic clothes and bright colors which were associated with the devil. She was examined due to her accusation of suspicion of "sundry acts of witchcraft" and on April 19, 1692, she was accused of bewitching five young women: Abigail Williams, Ann Putnam, Jr., Mercy Lewis, Mary Walcott, and Elizabeth Hubbard.
Her trial lasted eight days and officially started the Salem Witchcraft Trials. Rev. Cotton Mather wrote about the trial in his book, "Wonders of the Invisible World." In his book, Mather recorded that several people testified against her, stating that the shape of Bishop would pinch, choke or bite them. The shape also threatened to drown one victim if she did not write her name in a certain book. According to Mather, during the trial, any time Bishop would look upon one of her accusers, they would be immediately struck down and only her touch would revive them.
More allegations were made during the trial including that of a woman saying that the apparition of Bishop tore her coat, and upon further examination her coat was found to be torn in the exact spot. Mather mentions that the truth of these many accusations carried too much suspicion, however.
Ezekiel Cheevers and John Putnam made the complaint against Bridget, and she was charged for committing witchcraft upon five women. Ann Putnam stated that Bishop called the devil her God, while other people such as Richard Coman accused Bishop of taking hold of their throats and ripping Coman and his wife out of bed. Other girls accused her of harming them with just a quick glance. Even Bishop's own husband claimed she praised the devil.
William Stacy, a middle aged, man in Salem Town, testified that Bishop had previously made statements to him that other people in the town considered her to be a witch. He confronted her with the allegation that she was using witchcraft to torment him, which she denied. Another local man, Samuel Shattuck, accused Bishop of bewitching his child and also of striking his son with a spade.
He also testified that Bishop asked him to dye lace, which apparently was too small to be used on anything but a poppet, a doll used in spell-casting. John and William Bly, father and son, testified about finding poppets in Bishop's house and also about their cat that appeared to be bewitched, or poisoned, after a dispute with Bishop. Other victims of Bishop, as recorded by Mather, include Deliverance Hobbs, John Cook, Samuel Gray, and John Louder.
During her sentencing, a jury of women found a third nipple upon Bishop (then considered a sure sign of witchcraft), yet upon a second examination the nipple was not found. In the end Mather states that the greatest thing that condemned Bishop was the gross amount of lying she committed in court. According to Mather, "there was little occasion to prove the witchcraft, it being evident and notorious to all beholders."
"'Goodwife Bishop her Neighb'r wife of Edw: Bishop Jun'r might not be permitted to receive the Lords Supper in our church till she had given her the said Trask satisfaction for some offences that were against her .viz because the said Bishop did entertaine people in her house at unseasonable hours in the night to keep drinking and playing at shovel-board whereby discord did arise in other families & young people were in danger to bee corrupted & that the s'd Trask these things & had once gon into the house & fynding some at shovel-board had taken the of peices thay played with & thrown them into the fyre & had reprooved the said Bishop for promoting such disorders, But received no satisfaction from her about it"
One interpretation of the historical record suggests that she was a resident of Salem Town and thus not the tavern owner. Perhaps she did not know her accusers. This would be supported in her deposition in Salem Village before the authorities stating, "I never saw these persons before, nor I never was in this place before." The indictments against her clearly note that she was from "Salem" which meant Salem Town, as other indictments against residents of Salem Village specified their locations as such. She was often confused with Sarah Bishop, one of the other accused during the Salem trial. While men were still being accused of witchcraft, it was mostly women being indicted during this time period.
They were often quickly accused and sentenced to death within days. Bridget Bishop had already been accused and deemed innocent a whole decade following up to the witchcraft hysteria.
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