„Grace Sherwood“ – Versionsunterschied

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== Legacy ==
== Legacy ==
[[File:Witchduck and Sherwood sign 5a.jpg|right|thumb|Alt=Green and white street sign in Virginia Beach, VA|Street sign in the Witch Duck Point housing area of Virginia Beach. Many things are named "Witchduck" or "Witch Duck" in Virginia Beach and both spellings are in use.]]
[[File:Witchduck and Sherwood sign 5a.jpg|right|thumb|Alt=Green and white street sign in Virginia Beach, VA|Street sign in the Witch Duck Point housing area of Virginia Beach. Many things are named "Witchduck" or "Witch Duck" in Virginia Beach and both spellings are in use.]]
Grace Sherwood's case was little known until Virginia Beach historian and author Louisa Venable Kyle wrote a children's book about her in 1973. Called ''The Witch of Pungo'', it is a collection of seven local [[fairy tale|folk tales]] written as fiction, although based on historical events.{{sfnp|Virginia Beach Historical Society|2001}}{{sfnp|Gibson|2007|pp=95-97}} Sherwood's story was adapted for ''Cry Witch'', a courtroom drama at [[Colonial Williamsburg]], the restored early capital of Virginia.{{sfnp|USA Today|2006}}
Grace Sherwood's case was little known until Virginia Beach historian and author Louisa Venable Kyle wrote a children's book about her in 1973. Called ''The Witch of Pungo'', it is a collection of seven local [[fairy tale|folk tales]] written as fiction, although based on historical events.{{sfnp|Virginia Beach Historical Society|2001}}{{sfnp|Gibson|2007|pp=95–97}} Sherwood's story was adapted for ''Cry Witch'', a courtroom drama at [[Colonial Williamsburg]], the restored early capital of Virginia.{{sfnp|USA Today|2006}}


A statue by California sculptor Robert Cunningham depicting Sherwood with a raccoon and a basket of rosemary was unveiled on April 21, 2007, on the site of the present-day Sentara Bayside Hospital, close to the sites of both the colonial courthouse and the ducking point.{{sfnp|Batts|2007}}{{sfnp|Adams|2009}} The raccoon represents Sherwood's love of animals and the rosemary her knowledge of herbal healing.{{sfnp|Batts|2007}} A Virginia Department of Historic Resources marker (K-276) was erected in 2002, about {{convert|25|yd}} from Sherwood's statue. The place of her watery test and the adjacent land are named Witch Duck Bay and Witch Duck Point.{{efn|Witch Duck Bay location: {{Coord|36.881|N|76.117|W|display=inline}}}}{{sfnp|Adams|2009}} One of Virginia Beach's minor north–south thoroughfares on its western side, traversing [[Interstate 264 (Virginia)|Interstate 264]] at exit numbers 14–16, has been named "[[Virginia State Route 190|Witchduck Road]]".{{sfnp|Interstate Guide|2013}} Other commemorations in Virginia Beach include Sherwood Lane and Witch Point Trail.{{sfnp|Virginia Beach.com|2009}}{{sfnp|Dunphy|1994}} A local legend in Virginia Beach states that all of the rosemary growing there came from a single plant Sherwood carried in an eggshell from England.{{efn|While it was common at the time to protect seedlings in eggshells,{{sfnp|Chewning|2006|pp=83-90}} this tale appears to be a variant of another legend that she once ran out of rosemary and rowed an eggshell to a ship in the harbor, bewitched the lone person on board, and sailed in a single night to and from England.{{sfnp|Hume|2005|p=85}} Another version of the story describes her sailing to the Mediterranean in an eggshell. See {{harvnb|Campbell|1934}}, {{harvnb|Harpers|1884|pp=99–102}}}}{{sfnp|Department of Public Libraries|2006|pp=27-30}}
A statue by California sculptor Robert Cunningham depicting Sherwood with a raccoon and a basket of rosemary was unveiled on April 21, 2007, on the site of the present-day Sentara Bayside Hospital, close to the sites of both the colonial courthouse and the ducking point.{{sfnp|Batts|2007}}{{sfnp|Adams|2009}} The raccoon represents Sherwood's love of animals and the rosemary her knowledge of herbal healing.{{sfnp|Batts|2007}} A Virginia Department of Historic Resources marker (K-276) was erected in 2002, about {{convert|25|yd}} from Sherwood's statue. The place of her watery test and the adjacent land are named Witch Duck Bay and Witch Duck Point.{{efn|Witch Duck Bay location: {{Coord|36.881|N|76.117|W|display=inline}}}}{{sfnp|Adams|2009}} One of Virginia Beach's minor north–south thoroughfares on its western side, traversing [[Interstate 264 (Virginia)|Interstate 264]] at exit numbers 14–16, has been named "[[Virginia State Route 190|Witchduck Road]]".{{sfnp|Interstate Guide|2013}} Other commemorations in Virginia Beach include Sherwood Lane and Witch Point Trail.{{sfnp|Virginia Beach.com|2009}}{{sfnp|Dunphy|1994}} A local legend in Virginia Beach states that all of the rosemary growing there came from a single plant Sherwood carried in an eggshell from England.{{efn|While it was common at the time to protect seedlings in eggshells,{{sfnp|Chewning|2006|pp=83–90}} this tale appears to be a variant of another legend that she once ran out of rosemary and rowed an eggshell to a ship in the harbor, bewitched the lone person on board, and sailed in a single night to and from England.{{sfnp|Hume|2005|p=85}} Another version of the story describes her sailing to the Mediterranean in an eggshell. See {{harvnb|Campbell|1934}}, {{harvnb|Harpers|1884|pp=99–102}}}}{{sfnp|Department of Public Libraries|2006|pp=27–30}}


Belinda Nash, in addition to writing a biography of Sherwood, worked tirelessly to get her pardoned.{{sfnp|Shapira|2006}} Governor [[Tim Kaine]] officially restored Sherwood's good name on July 10, 2006, the 300th anniversary of her conviction.{{sfnp|Barisic|2006}} Annual reenactments of the ducking have taken place since 2006. No one is actually ducked in these events, which embark from a spot across from [[Ferry Plantation House]] along Cheswick Lane, which is very close to Witch Duck Bay.{{sfnp|Wethersfield Historical Society|2012}}{{sfnp|Batts|2006}} According to local residents, a strange moving light, said to be Sherwood's restless spirit, still appears each July over the spot in Witch Duck Bay where Sherwood was thrown into the water.{{sfnp|Adams|2009}}
Belinda Nash, in addition to writing a biography of Sherwood, worked tirelessly to get her pardoned.{{sfnp|Shapira|2006}} Governor [[Tim Kaine]] officially restored Sherwood's good name on July 10, 2006, the 300th anniversary of her conviction.{{sfnp|Barisic|2006}} Annual reenactments of the ducking have taken place since 2006. No one is actually ducked in these events, which embark from a spot across from [[Ferry Plantation House]] along Cheswick Lane, which is very close to Witch Duck Bay.{{sfnp|Wethersfield Historical Society|2012}}{{sfnp|Batts|2006}} According to local residents, a strange moving light, said to be Sherwood's restless spirit, still appears each July over the spot in Witch Duck Bay where Sherwood was thrown into the water.{{sfnp|Adams|2009}}

Version vom 2. Oktober 2013, 02:01 Uhr

Vorlage:Featured article Vorlage:Infobox person

Grace White Sherwood (c. 1660 – c. 1740), known as the Witch of Pungo, is the last person known to have been convicted of witchcraft in Virginia. A farmer, healer, and midwife, her neighbors accused her of transforming herself into a cat, damaging crops and causing the death of livestock. She was charged with witchcraft several times; at her eventual trial in 1706, Sherwood was accused of bewitching Elizabeth Hill, causing Hill to miscarry. The court ordered that Sherwood's guilt or innocence be determined by ducking her in water. If she sank, she was innocent; if she did not, she was guilty. Sherwood floated to the surface and may have subsequently spent up to eight years in jail before being released.

Sherwood lived in Pungo, Princess Anne CountyDie Verwendung dieser Vorlage ist in der deutschsprachigen Wikipedia unerwünscht. (today part of Virginia Beach), and married James Sherwood, a planter, in 1680. The couple had three sons: John, James, and Richard. The elder James died in 1701; Grace Sherwood inherited his property and never remarried.

Sherwood's first case was in 1697; she was accused of casting a spell on a bull, resulting in its death, but the matter was dismissed by the agreement of both parties. The following year she was accused of witchcraft by two neighbors; she supposedly bewitched the hogs and cotton crop of one of them. Sherwood sued for slander after each accusation but her lawsuits were unsuccessful and her husband had to pay court costs. In 1706 she was convicted of witchcraft and was incarcerated. Freed from prison by 1714, she recovered her property from Princess Anne County, after which she lived on her farm until her death in 1740 at the age of about 80.

On July 10, 2006, the 300th anniversary of Sherwood's conviction, Governor Tim Kaine restored her good name, recognizing that her case was a miscarriage of justice. A statue depicting her was erected near Sentara Bayside Hospital on Independence Boulevard in Virginia Beach, close to the site of the colonial courthouse where she was tried. She is sculpted alongside a raccoon, representing her love of animals, and carrying a basket containing garlic and rosemary, in recognition of her knowledge of herbal healing.

Family background

Sherwood was born in 1660Vorlage:Sfnp to John and Susan White. John White was a carpenter and farmerVorlage:Sfnp of Scottish descent; it is uncertain whether he was born in America. Susan was English by birth;Vorlage:Sfnp their daughter Grace was born in Virginia, probably in Pungo.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp

Grace White married a respected small-farm landowner, James Sherwood, in April 1680, and they were wed in the Lynnhaven Parish Church.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp The couple had three sons: John, James, and Richard.Vorlage:Sfnp John White gave the Sherwoods Vorlage:Convert of land when they married, and on his death in 1681 left them the remainder of his Vorlage:Convert farm.Vorlage:Sfnp The Sherwood family was poor, and lived in an area inhabited by small landowners or those with no land at all.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp In addition to farming, Grace Sherwood grew her own herbs, which she used to heal both people and animals. She also acted as a midwife.Vorlage:Sfnp When James died in 1701, Grace inherited his property.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp She did not remarry.Vorlage:Sfnp

No drawings or paintings of Sherwood exist, but contemporary accounts describe her as attractive and tall and possessing a sense of humor. Sherwood grew medicinal herbs and wore trousers instead of a dress while working on her farm; both traits were atypical of ladies of that era. This combination of clothing and good looks was said to attract men and upset their wives.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp Sherwood biographer and advocate Belinda Nash suggests that Sherwood's neighbors may have been jealous of Sherwood and that the witchcraft tales may have been conjured up in an effort to remove her from and gain her property.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp Sherwood was required to go to court at least a dozen times, in order to defend against accusations of witchcraft or to sue accusers for slander.Vorlage:Sfnp

Witchcraft and Virginia

Vorlage:Further

One of the many creeks and marshes in Pungo, VA.Die Verwendung dieser Vorlage ist in der deutschsprachigen Wikipedia unerwünscht.

The existence of witches and demonic forces was taken for granted by the American colonists—witchcraft was considered the work of the Devil.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp Strange behaviors supposedly identified witches to the colonists.Vorlage:Sfnp As early as 1626, nineteen years after the founding of the Jamestown colony, a grand jury sat to consider whether Goodwife Joan Wright was a witch—she had supposedly predicted the deaths of three women and had caused illness as revenge for not hiring her as midwife. No record of the outcome is extant.Vorlage:Sfnp Nevertheless, Virginia did not experience the type of mass hysteria evidenced by the Salem, Massachusetts witch trials in 1692–1693, where 19 people were executed on allegations of sorcery, several years before the first accusations against Sherwood.Vorlage:Sfnp Ecclesiastical influence in Virginian courts was much less than in those of New England—Virginia's clergy participated little in witchcraft accusations and trials, unlike their New England counterparts.Vorlage:Sfnp New England's Puritans had settled in towns, and community pressure helped contribute to witchcraft convictions. There were few such towns in Virginia, where the population mostly lived on farms and plantations, scattered over a large area.Vorlage:Sfnp

Virginia's lay and religious leaders sought to prosecute offenses such as gossip, slander, and fornication, which they felt were a threat to social stability in the new colony. They wished to avoid witchcraft prosecutions, which were divisive.Vorlage:Sfnp Virginia courts were reluctant to hear accusations of witchcraft and were even more reluctant to convict. Unlike the Salem witch trial courts, where the accused had to prove her innocence, in Virginia courts the accuser carried the burden of proof.Vorlage:Sfnp Further, Virginia courts generally ignored evidence said to have been obtained by supernatural means, whereas the New England courts were known to convict people based solely on it.Vorlage:Sfnp Virginia required proof of guilt through either searches for witch's marks or ducking. Judges and magistrates would dismiss unsubstantiated cases of witchcraft and allow the accusers, who found themselves "under an ill tongue", to be sued for slander.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp Frances Pollard of the Virginia Historical Society states: "It was pretty clear that Virginia early on tried to discourage these charges being brought of witchcraft because they were so troublesome."Vorlage:Sfnp People's fears of witchcraft in Virginia were not based on their religious beliefs as much as they were rooted in folklore, although the two often intermingled.Vorlage:Sfnp The southeastern corner of Virginia around present-day Norfolk and Virginia Beach (where Pungo is located), saw more accusations of witchcraft than other areas. According to Leslie M. Newman, this may have been due to local poverty as there was no cultural elite to restrain such prosecutions.Vorlage:Sfnp

Although few Virginia records survive from that era,Vorlage:Sfnp 19 known witchcraft cases were brought there during the 17th century, all but one of which ended in acquittal.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp The one conviction was a 1656 case of a man convicted of witchcraft and sentenced to 10 stripes and banishment from the county.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp There were no executions for witchcraft in Virginia.Vorlage:Sfnp Nonetheless, as late as in 1736, Virginia's justices of the peace were reminded that witchcraft was still a crime, and that first offenders could expect to be pilloried and jailed for up to a year.Vorlage:Sfnp In 1745, John Craig, a Presbyterian minister in Augusta County, Virginia, made assertions of witchcraft after his child and several of his animals died, and was in response accused of using evil arts to divine who was responsible. Neither he nor those who accused him brought their claims to court to face "unsympathetic magistrates", though prosecution for witchcraft was still possible in Virginia.Vorlage:Sfnp The last Virginia witchcraft trial took place in 1802 in Brooke County, which is now in West Virginia. In that case, a couple claimed that a woman was a witch, an accusation ruled slanderous.Vorlage:Sfnp

The trial by ducking (immersing the accused, bound, in water, to see if she would float) appears to have been used only once in Virginia, to try Sherwood.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp It was believed that, as water was considered pure, it would reject witches, causing them to float, whereas the innocent would sink.Vorlage:Sfnp

Accusations against Sherwood

Initial claims of witchcraft

Sherwood was first charged with witchcraft in a court case held in early 1697, in which Richard Capps alleged that she had used a spell to cause the death of his bull. The court made no decision on this charge;Vorlage:Sfnp the Sherwoods then filed a defamation suit against Capps that was discontinued when the parties came to an agreement.Vorlage:Sfnp In 1698, Sherwood was accused by her neighbor John Gisburne of enchanting his pigs and cotton crop. No court action followed this accusation, and another action for defamation by the Sherwoods also failed. In the same year Elizabeth Barnes, alleged that Sherwood had assumed the form of a black cat, entered Barnes' home, jumped over her bed, drove and whipped her, and left via the keyhole. Again the allegation was unresolved, and again the subsequent defamation action was lost. For each of the failed actions Sherwood and her husband had to pay court related costs.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:SfnpVorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp

According to Richard Beale Davis in his journal article on witchcraft in Virginia, by this time "Princess Anne County had obviously grown tired of Mrs. Sherwood as a general nuisance".Vorlage:Sfnp In 1705, Sherwood was involved in a fight with her neighbor, Elizabeth Hill.Vorlage:Sfnp Sherwood sued Hill and her husband for assault and battery, and on December 7, 1705, was awarded damages of twenty shillings (1 pound sterling).Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp On January 3, 1706, the Hills accused Grace Sherwood of witchcraft, although she failed to answer the charge in court.Vorlage:Sfnp On February 7, 1706, the court ordered her to appear on a charge of having bewitched Elizabeth Hill, causing a miscarriage.Vorlage:Sfnp

Trial by water

17th-century engraving of ducking similar to that of Sherwood

Proceedings resumed in March 1706; the Princess Anne County justices sought to empanel two juries, both made up of women. The first was ordered to search Sherwood's home for waxen or baked figures that might indicate she was a witch. The second was ordered to look for "demon suckling teats" by examining her.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp In both instances, reluctance on the part of the local residents made it difficult to form a jury and both juries refused to carry out the search.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp On March 7, 1706, Sherwood was examined by a jury of 12 "ancient and knowing women" appointed to look for markings on her body that might be brands of the Devil.Vorlage:Sfnp They discovered two "marks not like theirs or like those of any other woman."Vorlage:Sfnp The forewoman of this jury was the same Elizabeth Barnes who had previously accused Sherwood of witchcraft.Vorlage:Sfnp

Neither the colonial authorities in Williamsburg nor the local court in Princess Anne were willing to declare Sherwood a witch.Vorlage:Sfnp Those in Williamsburg considered the charge overly vague, and on April 16 instructed the local court to examine the case more fully. For each court appearance, Sherwood had to travel Vorlage:Convert from her farm in Pungo to where the court was sitting.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp

On May 2, 1706, the county justices noted that while no particular act of maleficium had been alleged against Sherwood, there was "great cause of suspicion".Vorlage:Sfnp Consequently, the Sheriff of Princess Anne County took Sherwood into custody, though Sherwood could give bond for her appearance and good behavior.Vorlage:Sfnp Maximilian Boush, a warden of Lynnhaven Parish Church, was the prosecutor in Sherwood's case.Vorlage:Sfnp On July 5, 1706, the justices ordered a trial by ducking to take place, with Sherwood's consent,Vorlage:Sfnp but heavy rains caused a postponement until July 10, as they feared the wet weather might harm her health.Vorlage:Sfnp Sherwood was taken inside Lynnhaven Parish Church, placed on a stool and ordered to ask for forgiveness for her witchery.Vorlage:Sfnp She replied, "I be not a witch, I be a healer."Vorlage:Sfnp

Witch Duck Bay as seen from the very end of North Witchduck Road on Witch Duck Point in Virginia Beach, looking north. This is the place where Grace Sherwood was ducked.

At about 10 a.m. on July 10, 1706, Sherwood was taken down a dirt lane now known as Witchduck Road,Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp to a plantation near the mouth of the Lynnhaven River.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp News had spread, and the event attracted people from all over the colony,Vorlage:Sfnp who began to shout "Duck the witch!"Vorlage:Sfnp According to the principles of trial by water, if Sherwood floated she would be deemed guilty of witchcraft; if she did not, she would be innocent. It was not intended that Sherwood drown; the court had ordered that care be taken to preserve her life.Vorlage:Sfnp

Five women of Lynnhaven Parish Church examined Sherwood's naked body on the shoreline for any devices she might have to free herself, and then covered her with a sack.Vorlage:Sfnp Six of the justices that had ordered the ducking rowed in one boat Vorlage:Convert out in the river,Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp and in another were the sheriff, the magistrate, and Sherwood. Just before she was pushed off the boat Sherwood is said to have stated, under clear skies, "Before this day be through you will all get a worse ducking than I."Vorlage:Sfnp Bound across the body – her right thumb to her left big toe and her left thumb to her right big toe – she was "cast into the river",Vorlage:Sfnp and quickly floated to the surface.Vorlage:Sfnp The sheriff then tied a Vorlage:Convert Bible around her neck. This caused her to sink, but she untied herself, and returned to the surface, convincing many spectators she was a witch.Vorlage:Sfnp As Sherwood was pulled out of the water a downpour reportedly started, drenching the onlookers.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp Several women who subsequently examined her for additional proof found "two things like titts on her private parts of a black coller [color]". She was jailed pending further proceedings.Vorlage:Sfnp

Aftermath

What happened to Sherwood after her ducking is unclearVorlage:Sfnp as many court records have been lost.Die Verwendung dieser Vorlage ist in der deutschsprachigen Wikipedia unerwünscht.Vorlage:Sfn She served an unknown time in the jail next to Lynnhaven Parish Church,Vorlage:Sfnp perhaps as long as seven years and nine months.Vorlage:Sfnp She was ordered to be detained "to be brought to a future trial", but no record of another trial exists, so it is possible the charge was dismissed at some point.Vorlage:Sfnp On September 1, 1708, she was ordered to pay Christopher Cocke Vorlage:Convert of tobaccoDie Verwendung dieser Vorlage ist in der deutschsprachigen Wikipedia unerwünscht. for a reason not indicated in surviving records, but there is no mention of the payment.Vorlage:Sfnp She appears to have been released some time in or before 1714, since in that year she paid back taxes on her Vorlage:Convert property—which Virginia Lieutenant Governor Alexander Spotswood helped her to recover from Princess Anne County—off what is now Muddy Creek Road.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp She lived the remainder of her life quietly until her death in 1740, aged about 80.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp She is believed to have died in August or September 1740.Vorlage:Sfnp Her will was proved on October 1, 1740; it noted that she was a widow.Vorlage:Sfnp She left five shillings each to her sons James and Richard and everything else to her eldest son John.Vorlage:Sfnp

According to legend, Sherwood's sons put her body near the fireplace and a wind came down the chimney. Her body disappeared amid the embers, with the only clue being a cloven hoofprint.Vorlage:Sfnp Sherwood lies in an unmarked grave under some trees in a field close to the intersection of Pungo Ferry Road and Princess Anne Road in Virginia Beach.Vorlage:Sfnp Stories about the Devil taking her body, unnatural storms, and loitering black cats quickly arose after her death, and local men killed every feline they could find; this widespread killing of cats might have caused the infestation of rats and mice recorded in Princess Anne County in 1743.Vorlage:Sfnp

Legacy

Street sign in the Witch Duck Point housing area of Virginia Beach. Many things are named "Witchduck" or "Witch Duck" in Virginia Beach and both spellings are in use.

Grace Sherwood's case was little known until Virginia Beach historian and author Louisa Venable Kyle wrote a children's book about her in 1973. Called The Witch of Pungo, it is a collection of seven local folk tales written as fiction, although based on historical events.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp Sherwood's story was adapted for Cry Witch, a courtroom drama at Colonial Williamsburg, the restored early capital of Virginia.Vorlage:Sfnp

A statue by California sculptor Robert Cunningham depicting Sherwood with a raccoon and a basket of rosemary was unveiled on April 21, 2007, on the site of the present-day Sentara Bayside Hospital, close to the sites of both the colonial courthouse and the ducking point.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp The raccoon represents Sherwood's love of animals and the rosemary her knowledge of herbal healing.Vorlage:Sfnp A Virginia Department of Historic Resources marker (K-276) was erected in 2002, about Vorlage:Convert from Sherwood's statue. The place of her watery test and the adjacent land are named Witch Duck Bay and Witch Duck Point.Die Verwendung dieser Vorlage ist in der deutschsprachigen Wikipedia unerwünscht.Vorlage:Sfnp One of Virginia Beach's minor north–south thoroughfares on its western side, traversing Interstate 264 at exit numbers 14–16, has been named "Witchduck Road".Vorlage:Sfnp Other commemorations in Virginia Beach include Sherwood Lane and Witch Point Trail.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp A local legend in Virginia Beach states that all of the rosemary growing there came from a single plant Sherwood carried in an eggshell from England.Die Verwendung dieser Vorlage ist in der deutschsprachigen Wikipedia unerwünscht.Vorlage:Sfnp

Belinda Nash, in addition to writing a biography of Sherwood, worked tirelessly to get her pardoned.Vorlage:Sfnp Governor Tim Kaine officially restored Sherwood's good name on July 10, 2006, the 300th anniversary of her conviction.Vorlage:Sfnp Annual reenactments of the ducking have taken place since 2006. No one is actually ducked in these events, which embark from a spot across from Ferry Plantation House along Cheswick Lane, which is very close to Witch Duck Bay.Vorlage:SfnpVorlage:Sfnp According to local residents, a strange moving light, said to be Sherwood's restless spirit, still appears each July over the spot in Witch Duck Bay where Sherwood was thrown into the water.Vorlage:Sfnp

Notes and references

Explanatory notes

Vorlage:Notes

References

Vorlage:Reflist

Bibliography

Vorlage:Refbegin

  • Kathy Adams: What's in a name? Virginia Beach's Witchduck Road In: The Virginian-Pilot, June 1, 2009. Abgerufen im August 5, 2013 
  • Sonja Barisic: Va. Gov. Gives Informal Pardon to Witch In: The Washington Post, July 10, 2006. Abgerufen im August 5, 2013 
  • Denise Watson Batts: Statue of exonerated 'Witch of Pungo' finds place to rest In: The Virginian-Pilot, March 24, 2007. Abgerufen im August 5, 2013 
  • Denise Watson Batts: Witch of Pungo pardoned by governor after 300 years In: The Virginian-Pilot, July 10, 2006. Abgerufen im August 10, 2013 
  • George Lincoln Burr: Narratives of the Witchcraft Cases 1648–1706. Charles Scribner's Sons, New York 1914 (infomotions.com).
  • Sona Rose Burstein: Some Modern Books on Witchcraft. In: Folklore. 72. Jahrgang, Nr. 3. Folklore Society, London September 1961, S. 520, doi:10.1080/0015587X.1961.9717297, JSTOR:1258580.
  • Jon Butler: Magic, Astrology, and the Early American Religious Heritage, 1600-1760. In: The American Historical Review. 84. Jahrgang, Nr. 2. Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Historical Association, Oxford April 1979, S. 317–46, doi:10.2307/1855136, PMID 11610526, JSTOR:1855136.
  • Beverly Campbell: When Virginia Ducked Milady Witch In: Richmond Times-Dispatch, December 30, 1934. Abgerufen im August 5, 2013 
  • Jonathan Peter Cushing: Collections of the Virginia Historical and Philosophical Society. Band 95. Virginia Historical and Philosophical Society, Richmond, VA 1833, Record of the Trial of Grace Sherwood in 1705 Princess Anne County for Witchcraft (google.com). Note: includes transcripts of legal proceedings.
  • Alpheus J. Chewning: Haunted Virginia Beach. History Press, Charleston, SC 2006, ISBN 978-1-59629-188-1 (google.com).
  • Richard Beale Davis: The Devil in Virginia in the Seventeenth Century. In: The American Historical Review. 65. Jahrgang, Nr. 2. Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, VA April 1979, JSTOR:4246295.
  • Department of Public Libraries: The Beach: A History of Virginia Beach, Virginia. 3rd Auflage. City of Virginia Beach, Virginia Beach, VA 2006, ISBN 978-0-9779570-0-2, 4. Witches and Witchcraft (archive.org).
  • Janet Dunphy: Rural Charm Meets City Splendor, Landmark Communications, August 13, 1994 
  • Marion Gibson: Witchcraft Myths in American Culture. Routledge, Milton Park, Abingdon 2007, ISBN 978-0-415-97977-1.
  • Christopher Hill: The World Turned Upside Down: Radical Ideas during the English Revolution. Viking Press, New York 1972, ISBN 0-14-013732-7.
  • Ivor Noël Hume: Something From The Cellar. The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, Williamsburg, VA 2005, ISBN 978-0-87935-229-5 (google.com).
  • Edward W. James: Grace Sherwood, the Virginia Witch. In: The William and Mary Quarterly. 3. Jahrgang, Nr. 2. College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA Oktober 1894, JSTOR:1914583. Note: includes transcripts of legal proceedings.
  • Edward W. James: Grace Sherwood, the Virginia Witch. In: The William and Mary Quarterly. 3. Jahrgang, Nr. 3. College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA Januar 1895, JSTOR:1914774. Note: includes transcripts of legal proceedings.
  • Edward W. James: Grace Sherwood, the Virginia Witch. In: The William and Mary Quarterly. 3. Jahrgang, Nr. 4. College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA April 1895, JSTOR:1915288. Note: includes transcripts of legal proceedings.
  • Edward W. James: Grace Sherwood, the Virginia Witch. In: The William and Mary Quarterly. 4. Jahrgang, Nr. 1. College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA Juli 1895, JSTOR:1916177. Note: includes transcripts of legal proceedings.
  • Belinda Nash, Danielle Sheets: A Place in Time: The Age of the Witch of Pungo. W. S. Dawson Company, Virginia Beach, VA 2012, ISBN 1-57000-107-3.
  • Vorlage:Cite thesis
  • Bob Ruegsegger: Virginia's 'Witch of Pungo': Accused Remembered as Colony's Joan of Arc In: The Free-Lance Star, October 30, 1999. Abgerufen im August 20, 2013 
  • Richard Seltzer: Grace Sherwood, the witch of Virginia. Samizdat, abgerufen am 5. August 2013. Note: this is a transcript in modern English, with shorthand expanded, of the Burr book.
  • Ian Shapira: After Toil and Trouble, 'Witch' Is Cleared In: The Washington Post, July 12, 2006. Abgerufen im August 10, 2013 
  • Monica C. Witkowski: Grace Sherwood (ca. 1660–1740). In: Encyclopedia Virginia. Virginia Foundation for the Humanities, 15. August 2012, abgerufen am 5. August 2013.
  • Amy Waters Yarsinske: Virginia Beach: A History of Virginia's Golden Shore. Arcadia Publishing, Charleston, SC 2002, ISBN 978-0-7385-2402-3.
  • The Good Luck Horseshoe. In: The William and Mary Quarterly. 17. Jahrgang, Nr. 4. College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA 1909, JSTOR:1915528.
  • Grace Sherwood – The One Virginia Witch. In: Harper's New Monthly Magazine. 69. Jahrgang. Harper & Brothers, New York (google.com).
  • Grace Sherwood & The Witch of Pungo. Princess Anne County/Virginia Beach Historical Society, abgerufen am 5. August 2013.
  • Grace Sherwood – the Witch of Pungo (1660–1740). Old Donation Episcopal Church, 2010, archiviert vom Original am 12. April 2012; abgerufen am 15. August 2013.
  • The Haunting of Witchduck Road. Virginiabeach.com, abgerufen am 5. August 2013.
  • Interstate 264 Virginia. Interstate Guide, abgerufen am 5. August 2013.
  • Pardoning the Witches. Wethersfield Historical Society, 20. Juni 2012, abgerufen am 10. August 2013.
  • Pungo. Princess Anne County/Virginia Beach Historical Society, abgerufen am 5. August 2013.
  • Va. Woman Seeks To Clear Witch of Pungo In: USA Today, July 9, 2006. Abgerufen im August 5, 2013 
  • Virginia Beach History Guide. Vabeach.com, abgerufen am 5. August 2013.
  • The Witch of Pungo: 300 Years After Her Conviction, Governor Restores Grace Sherwood's Good Name. Virginia Historical Society, 2006, archiviert vom Original am 13. November 2012; abgerufen am 17. August 2013.
  • Witchcraft in Virginia. In: The William and Mary Quarterly. 1. Jahrgang, Nr. 3. College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA Januar 1893, JSTOR:1939689.

Vorlage:Refend

Further reading

  • Edward Bond: Damned Souls in a Tobacco Colony: Religion in Seventeenth-Century Virginia. Mercer University Press, Macon, GA 2000, ISBN 0-86554-708-4 (google.com).
  • Lillie Gilbert, Belinda Nash, Deni Norred-Williams: Ghosts, Witches & Weird Tales Of Virginia Beach. Eco Images, Virginia Beach, VA 2004, ISBN 0-938423-12-6.
  • Michael Hardy, Bill Geroux: Ding dong, the stigma's gone, July 11, 2006 
  • Louisa Venable Kyle: The Witch of Pungo, and Other Historical Stories of the Early Colonies. Four O'Clock Farms, Virginia Beach, VA 1973, ISBN 978-0-927044-00-4.
  • C. H. Levermore, George L., J. Franklin: Narratives of the Witchcraft Cases, 1648-1706 by George L. Burr. In: American Historical Review. 20. Jahrgang, Nr. 1. American Historical Association, Bloomington, IN Oktober 1914, S. 164–166, doi:10.2307/1836141, JSTOR:1836141.
  • Mary Beth Norton, Benjamin: Salem Witch Trials Documentary Archive and Transcription Project by Benjamin Ray. In: The Journal of American History. 90. Jahrgang, Nr. 2. Organization of American Historians, Bloomington, IN September 2003, S. 747–748, doi:10.2307/3659596, JSTOR:3659596. Note: Discusses Burr's work
  • Richard Weisman: Witchcraft, Magic and Religion in 17th-Century Massachusetts. University of Massachusetts Press, Amherst, MA 1985, ISBN 0-87023-494-3.
  • Writer's Program of the Works Projects Administration of the State of Virginia: Virginia: A Guide To The Old Dominion. Oxford University Press, New York 1941, ISBN 978-1-60354-045-2, S. 142 (google.com).
  • Grace Sherwood. Ferry Plantation, abgerufen am 5. August 2013.
  • Notes and Queries. In: The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 34. Jahrgang, Nr. 3. Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, VA Juli 1926, S. 278–279, JSTOR:4244097.

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