My
new novel – The Pendle Curse – has some of its roots in a true story.
In August 1612, ten men and women were convicted, in Lancaster, England, of
crimes related to witchcraft and subsequently hanged on Gallows Hill. They
became known to history as the Pendle Witches.
They
were not alone.
In England’s West Country, in the county of Devon, lies the charming
seaside town of Barnstaple.
Peaceful
enough now, but in 1682, the last women to be hanged for witchcraft were
captured there, held in Exeter before being tried for their alleged crimes,
convicted and then executed. The three were old, confused, poor and scared.
This unhealthy combination appears to have been their downfall.
Rougemont Castle, where they were held prior to their trial, is now
a picturesque ruin and tourist attraction, but back in the seventeenth century,
it was a fortress, strong enough to withstand asiege and easily robust enough
to house three feeble women.
In
fear for their lives, each of the women accused the other. Mary Trembles
blamed Susannah Edwards for leading her astray. Susannah Edwards blamed
Temperance Lloyd for precisely the same misdemeanour.
So
what heinous crimes had these women committed that they should be sentenced to
hang?
Temperance
Lloyd stood accused of the murders by witchcraft of a number of people.
Three women also testified that she had made them suffer by using the dark
arts. Grace Thomas swore that on two occasions she had been tormented by
stabbing pains. An account of her accusation reads:
'Sticking and pricking pains, as though pins and awls had been thrust
into her body, from the crown of her head to the soles of her feet, and she lay
as though it had been upon a rack.'
A
witness – Anne Wakely – claimed she had seen a magpie fly to Grace’s window and
said Temperance Lloyd had told her that she was visited by a black bird that
changed into a black man. Thomas Eastchurch, a shopkeeper, was Grace’s initial
accuser and he added fuel to the fire by claiming he had heard Lloyd talking
about the black man persuading her to go to Grace Thomas’s house to ‘pinch and
prick her’.
While
Lloyd denied harming Grace Thomas, her testimony was confused, as she did
confess to having stabbed a piece of leather nine times – the exact number of
times Grace Thomas claimed to have been stabbed.
Two
more women came forward to claim that they too had been harmed in similar
fashion by Lloyd, who eventually admitted all charges - including charges of
the murder of three local people and the blinding of another. She then
claimed to have been a witch for over 20 years. She said she had sunk
ships at sea. If she hadn’t been mentally unhinged before, it seems she
certainly was by the time she was put in the cart to wheel her to the gallows.
A contemporary report says, she was, "all the way eating, and
seemingly unconcerned".
Mary
Trembles and Susannah Edwards seem to have suffered guilt by associating with
Temperance Lloyd. All three women were reported as being seen in
each other’s company, begging. Whether by fair means or foul, confessions were
obtained from all of them. Their trial took place on 19th August
1682 – exactly 70 years after the trial of the Lancashire Witches from Pendle.
In
those 70 years, the political mood had changed and, even though
condemned, most ‘witches’were usually reprieved. Not in this case. The
whole area was alive with speculation and interest, The witches were popularly
convicted. To reprieve them now could lead to civil unrest. No reprieve was
granted and all three hanged. As she was about to die, Temperance
Lloyd was asked if she believed in Jesus Christ. She replied, "Yes,
and I pray Jesus Christ to pardon all my sins."She then, calmly
accepted her fate.
Judge
Sir Thomas Raymond had directed the Jury that,
"these
three poor women were weary of their lives, and that he thought it proper for
them to be carried to the Parish from whence they came, and that the Parish
should be charged with their Maintenance; for he thought their oppressing
poverty had constrained them to wish for death".
The local populace thought differently. Their will prevailed.
In
1685, a fourth woman – Alice Molland – was also tried, convicted and sentenced
to death but, unlike the other three, no actual record exists of her being
hanged, although she is mentioned in a plaque on the wall of the ruined
gatehouse:
The
Devon Witches. In memory of Temperance Lloyd, Susannah Edwards, Mary Trembles,
of Bideford, died 1682, Alice Molland, died 1685, the last people in England to
be executed for witchcraft, tried here & hanged at Heavitree*. In the hope
of an end to persecution and intolerance.
Four
hundred years ago, ten convicted witches were hanged on Gallows Hill. Now they
are back…for vengeance.
Laura
Phillips’s grief at her husband’s sudden death shows no sign of passing. Even
sleep brings her no peace. She experiences vivid, disturbing dreams of a dark,
brooding hill, and a man—somehow out of time—who seems to know her. She
discovers that the place she has dreamed about exists. Pendle Hill. And she
knows she must go there. But as soon as she arrives, the dream becomes a
nightmare. She is caught up in a web of witchcraft and evil…and a curse that
will not die.
The
Pendle Curse is
available here:
About
the author
Following
a varied career in sales, advertising and career guidance, Cat is now the full
time author of a number of paranormal, ghostly and Gothic horror novels,
novellas and short stories. She is the 2013 joint winner of the Samhain Gothic
Horror Anthology Competition, with Linden Manor, which features in the
anthology What Waits In The Shadows. The Pendle Curse is her latest novel for
Samhain; her first – Saving Grace Devine – was published in
2014.
Article by: Catherine Cavendish
Thank you for hosting me today!
ReplyDeleteOOh....more horror! You have been one busy gal, Cat. These posts would make a non fiction book you know xxx
ReplyDeleteThanks, Shehanne. I love writing them! Maybe one day...
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