Book Feature: One of Windsor: The Untold Story of America's First Witch Hanging by Beth M. Caruso & Giveaway!
We're pleased to host Beth M. Caruso today during her ONE OF WINDSOR: THE UNTOLD STORY OF AMERICA'S FIRST WITCH HANGING Virtual Book Tour! Please enter to win a free copy of her book below!
Title:
One of Windsor: The Untold Story of
America’s First Witch Hanging
Author: Beth M. Caruso
Publisher: Ladyslipper Press
Pages: 358
Genre: Historical Fiction
Author: Beth M. Caruso
Publisher: Ladyslipper Press
Pages: 358
Genre: Historical Fiction
Alice,
a young woman prone to intuitive insights and loyalty to the only family she
has ever known, leaves England
for the rigid colony of the Massachusetts Bay in 1635 in
hopes of reuniting with them again. Finally settling in Windsor, Connecticut,
she encounters the rich American wilderness and its inhabitants, her own healing
abilities, and the blinding fears of Puritan leaders which collide and set the
stage for America’s first witch hanging, her own, on May 26, 1647.
This
event and Alice’s ties to her
beloved family are catalysts that influence Connecticut’s
Governor John Winthrop Jr. to halt witchcraft hangings in much later years.
Paradoxically, these same ties and the memory of the incidents that led to her
accusation become a secret and destructive force behind Cotton Mather’s written
commentary on the Salem witch
trials of 1692, provoking further witchcraft hysteria in Massachusetts
forty-five years after her death.
The
author uses extensive historical research combined with literary inventions, to
bring forth a shocking and passionate narrative theory explaining this tragic
and important episode in American history.
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Book Excerpt:
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS
BAY COLONY, 1692
The elderly reverend knew it was crucial to stop Satan. As
if in unison with the Dark Lord’s latest antics, tremendous bolts of lightning
and deafening thunder heralded the ensuing rainstorm of that early autumn day
in Boston. The reverend’s dedicated
son would have preferred that he stay home by a fire and rest. Still feisty in
his later years of life, he refused. He was fervently determined to discuss
pertinent matters at hand concerning the witchcraft calamities in Salem
and surrounding towns. As a minister, albeit a retired one, he felt responsible
for guiding younger ministers, such as Cotton Mather, to make their
congregations understand the menacing threats of witchcraft.
The aged minister was someone who had personally suffered
through a de- monic incursion in Windsor, a river town of the Connecticut
Colony, back in 1647. He was fully cognizant of its evil impacts. Satan had
infiltrated Windsor through a
consort and witch whom he knew all too well. The Great Demon had been stealthy
in his trickery. But this time, the respected pastor hoped to arrest the
Devil’s mischief before the same level of destruction and harm could occur.
Accordingly, he was there to offer his assistance to Cotton Mather in dealing
with witchcraft presently taking hold in Massachusetts Bay
towns and villages. The young minister welcomed him into his home.
“Good day, dear
Reverend. You must come in quickly out of the rain and take comfort by the
hearth. I will have my servants bring you my fin- est cider and freshly baked,
delicious cakes to eat. I have so much to share with you. By your experience,
you have been the inspiration I have needed to start the work that we were
speaking of the other week,” spoke Cotton Mather.
“Thank you, Cotton. It will warm my body as well as my heart
to sit by the fire and hear of the inspirations that took hold of your soul. I
hope it helped you to do the honorable task of warning our people of the great
wrath of Satan,” replied the elderly reverend.
With that pronouncement, the old reverend took off his soggy
cloak and sat down at a table next to the hearth. He paused and grew distinctly
somber before continuing.
“Satan must not be allowed to advance further into our New
England wil- derness, for we have painstakingly worked at taming
it over the years. Yet our young people lapse into disobedience of the
commandments of Jesus Christ. Our current admonishment by the Lord through the
events in Salem and be- yond act to
bring us back to the righteous path,” explained the aged pastor as the rain
poured down.
He looked wide-eyed and serious at Cotton.
Cotton Mather nodded at the old reverend in agreement and
replied, “You see, honored Reverend, by your histories of the very earliest
acts of war first waged upon these colonies by Lucifer, I have been able to put
the current dif- ficulties in Salem into a broader view of understanding for
our present govern- ment. I hope it will aid those justices that would weigh
their opinions upon such cases of bewitchments. It is also for the benefit of
younger generations. I know you prefer not to be mentioned by name, but hear
what it is that I have reiterated concerning those times,” he implored.
Cotton quickly pulled out a satchel full of papers written
upon with a righteous and eloquent hand and requested, “Please tell me what you
think, Reverend. This is from the introduction of my commentary. These words
were taken directly from our lengthy conversations of what is transpiring now
at Salem and in our congregations
in relation to the Devil and his armies’ frustration of
defeat in Connecticut
so many years ago. I am naming this commentary Wonders of the Invisible
World.”
“Wonders of the Invisible World,” nodded the old
reverend, speaking loudly over the storm.
A servant came in and poured warm cider for the two
ministers. At being interrupted, the elderly pastor pursed his lips, staying
silent, but met Cotton’s eyes with a secret understanding. They waited until
the servant left before con- tinuing their discussion.
Cotton continued, “This is part of the Introduction,
Enchantments Encountered”.
He read, “We have been advised by Credible Christians
still alive, that a Malefactor accused of Witchcraft as well as Murder, and
executed in this place, more than Forty years ago, did then give Notice of An
Horrible PLO T against the country by W I TCHCR A F T, and a foundation of
Witchcraft then laid, which if it were not seasonably discovered, would
probably Blow up and pull down all the Churches in the Country.”
“ Yes. Yes!” agreed the agitated old minister, and added, “
The young people need to know how, if we had not ferreted out the witch that
spawned all oth- ers on the shores of the Great Connecticut, all of our
churches in the colonies would have failed indeed. Nothing would have pleased
Satan and his legions more than to see those intent on building a godly and
pure Utopian state in this wilderness beaten down and forced by evil to return
to England. We,
the people of Windsor, agonized
much in bringing to light of day the bewitchments brought upon us by a naughty
and wayward woman. She who made a pact with the Devil allowed him to nearly
destroy us. By the Grace of God he did not, thanks to the watchful vigilance of
God’s dedicated and steadfast servants!” he howled with the tempest.
The aged pastor continued, enraged, “No one likes to speak
her name. She deserves no recognition for her defamation of this country by
unleashing devils that would dare claim this corner of the earth for their own
in an affront to the Lord Jesus Christ. By her hand, a great pestilence of
disease infiltrated the daily life of the fledgling colony of Connecticut,
especially in the town of Windsor.
We had settled into our homes only about twelve years when the Devil was over-
come with venomous jealousy that we had claimed formerly heathen territory and
tamed wilderness for our Lord Jesus. Satan saw a prime opportunity to permeate
and upset our small community through the wickedness and unfaith- fulness of
that woman,” he spoke as the sky rumbled.
The old reverend took a sip of cider, wetting his dry lips.
“Such was the power that Satan infused her with that a great
many people died, including many young children, for the Devil has no
conscience and no compassion. Upon her death, she did swear in a fit of lies
that she was innocent. She cursed those whose testimonies and swift actions led
her to the hangman’s noose. The good Reverend Thomas Hooker was presiding at
the First Church
in Windsor for the Reverend John
Wareham during the time of her bewitch- ments,” recounted the old cleric.
He clenched his fists as he took a deep breath.
“He helped to expose her and was touched by her wickedness
in such a way that he died less than one month later of
the same dreaded disease that she helped to proliferate and use to kill other
devout soldiers of Christ,” the old reverend said.
Cotton Mather spoke again intensely, “Yes, I understand,
Reverend. I pref- ace the first reading I recited just now with this...The
New Englanders are a People of God settled in those, which were once the
Devil’s Territories; and it may easily be supposed that the Devil was
exceedingly disturbed, when he perceived such a People here accomplishing the
Promise of old made unto our Blessed Jesus, that He should have the Utmost
parts of the Earth for his Possession.”
Cotton continued, “I believe that never were more
Satanical Devices used for the Unsettling of any People under the Sun, than
what have been employed for the Extirpation of the Vine which God has here
Planted, Casting out the Heathen, and preparing a Room before it, and causing
it to take deep Root, and fill the Land, so that it sent its Boughs unto the
Atlantic Sea Eastward, and its Branches unto the Connecticut River westward,
and the Hills were covered with the shadow thereof. But in all those attempts
of Hell, have hitherto been Abortive and Having obtained Help from God, we
continue to this Day. Where fore the Devil is now making one Attempt more
difficult, more Surprising, more snarled with unintelligible circumstances than
any we have hitherto encountered.”
The senior cleric nodded his head approvingly. Their
conversation contin- ued for the better part of two hours. The time was
interspersed with prayers
as well, imploring the Almighty Father to empower them in
their fight against the Prince of Darkness. Cider was refilled several times.
They discussed the importance of weeding out all of Satan’s imps and witches in
Salem and other nearby villages and towns so that New England could be as pure
again as that first generation of godly wayfarers who led the ultimate
religious Utopian ex- periment into the wilderness.
When the conversation eased, the thoughtful and grave old
minister stared into the fire. He wondered if she were burning in hellfires in
that very moment. And what of the souls of the family who had forever fractured
in their defense or blame of her, the first colonial witch? He was becoming
quite old now. Soon, he hoped to be called to God’s kingdom. Until that time,
he would continue to be of service to the younger generations of ministers
trying to guide their lost flocks away from Satan.
Abruptly, there was a knock on the door that jerked the
ministers from their pious imaginings. It was the elderly reverend’s son. He
had come to re- trieve his father. He paid his respects to the Reverend Cotton
Mather and then gently guided his father out into the streets of Boston,
newly drenched from the rain. The elderly pastor turned around and shouted to
Reverend Mather.
“Please feel free to call for my assistance again. For an
old man such as I delights in nothing more than making his last acts upon this
earth ones that are dedicated to bringing God’s people closer to Him and away
from the wretches of the Devil. I shall be honored to continue to help you with
your mission,” of- fered the old cleric.
“Thank you, honorable Reverend,” answered Cotton with a
slight bow.
About the Author
Beth
M. Caruso grew up in Cincinnati, Ohio
and spent her childhood writing puppet shows and witches’ cookbooks. She became
interested in French Literature and Hispanic Studies, receiving a Bachelor of
Arts from the University of Cincinnati.
She later obtained Masters degrees in Nursing and Public Health.
Working
as a Peace Corps volunteer in Thailand,
she helped to improve the public health of local Karen hill tribes. She also
had the privilege to care for hundreds of babies and their mothers as a labor
and delivery nurse.
Largely
influenced by an apprenticeship with herbalist and wildcrafter, Will Endres, in
North Carolina, she surrounds
herself with plants through gardening and native species conservation.
Her
latest passion is to discover and convey important stories of women in American
history. One of Windsor is her
debut novel. She lives in New England with her awesome
husband, amazing children, loyal puppy, and cuddly cats.
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Giveaway Details:
Beth M. Caruso is giving away a FREE Kindle copy of ONE OF WINDSOR: THE UNTOLD STORY OF AMERICA'S FIRST WITCH HANGING!
Terms & Conditions:
- By entering the giveaway, you are confirming you are at least 18 years old.
- One winner will be chosen via Rafflecopter to receive both books
- This giveaway ends midnight November 30.
- Winner will be contacted via email on December 1.
- Winner has 48 hours to reply.
Good luck everyone!
Thank you for hosting me at The Writer's Life today.
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