Alse Young

Alse Young (ca. 1600 26 May 1647) of Windsor, Connecticut — sometimes Achsah Young or Alice Young — was the first recorded instance of execution for witchcraft in the thirteen American colonies. She had one child, Alice Beamon (Young), born in 1640.[1]

Old State House in Hartford, Connecticut, on the site of Meeting House Square, where Alse Young was possibly hanged

Background and execution

Young is believed to have been the wife of John Young,[2] who bought a small parcel of land in Windsor in 1641, sold it in 1649, and then disappeared from the town records.[3] The best evidence to suggest that John Young was her husband comes from a physician.[4] She had a daughter, Alice Young Beamon, who was accused of witchcraft in nearby Springfield, Massachusetts, some 30 years later.[3] Her daughter Alice Young Beamon married and had children with Simon Beamon.[4] Similarly to her mother, Alice Young Beamon was also accused of witchcraft but defended herself by claiming that she was being slandered.[4] Even though Alice Young was a woman without a son when the witchcraft accusation was lodged, her husband was still alive during her accusation. This makes it unlikely that she was accused simply for the possibility of inheriting her husband's estate in the future. Other reasons are more probable.


There is no record of Young's trial or the specifics of the charge. The same year that Alice was hung the death rate had steadily increased.[4] The influenza affected everyone in that even wealthy people with more resources and access to medical care were dying at extremely high rates.[4] Many prominent members of the noble class and legislature loss their families.[4] Given such circumstances, a member of the elite class organized for someone to be hung and scapegoated.[4] This may have been what happened to Alice. That she was chosen randomly. She may have been hanged at the Meeting House Square in Hartford, Connecticut, now the site of the Old State House, since a jail was on the edge of the square. A journal of then Massachusetts Bay Colony Governor John Winthrop mentions "One... of Windsor arraigned and executed at Hartford for a witch."[5] The second town clerk of Windsor, Matthew Grant, confirms her execution with the May 26, 1647, diary entry, "Alse Young was hanged."

Exoneration

At the urging of Beth Caruso, a local historian who wrote a book on her case, Alyse Young was formally exonerated on February 6, 2017, by a unanimous vote of the Windsor Town Council, along with Lydia Gilbert, the second Connecticut woman to be executed for witchcraft, who was also from Windsor.[6]

See also

References

  1. "Alice Beamon (Young)". geni_family_tree. Retrieved 2021-01-08.
  2. Inquirer, Julie Martin, Journal. "First witch execution was in Conn., not Salem". southcoasttoday.com. Retrieved 2021-01-08.
  3. Salvatore, Mike (16 October 2012). "READER SUBMITTED: Witches' Fates Re-lived". courant.com. Retrieved 2021-01-08.
  4. "Alice 'Alse' Young – First Witch Hanging Victim in Colonial America – Legends of America". www.legendsofamerica.com. Retrieved 2021-02-01.
  5. John Winthrop, Journal: 1630-49, ed. James K. Hosmer (New York, 1908), II, 323.
  6. Jennifer Coe, "Windsor Passes Witch Execution Resolution", Hartford Courant, March 17, 2017.

Further reading

  • David D. Hall, (editor), Witch-Hunting in Seventeenth Century New England, Boston: Northeastern University Press, 1999, ISBN 1-55553-416-3
  • John Demos, Entertaining Satan: witchcraft and the culture of early New England, Oxford University Press, 1982, pp. 346–347.
  • John M. Taylor, The Witchcraft Delusion In Colonial Connecticut (1647-1697), online at Project Gutenberg.
  • Annie Eliot Trumbull, "One Blank of Windsor", Literary Section, Hartford Courant, December 3, 1904.
  • Beth M Caruso, One of Windsor: The Untold Story of America's First Witch Hanging, Hartford: Lady Slipper Press, 2015, ISBN 0692567038
  • Windsor Community Television, Alse Young's Final Journey, December 1, 2016.
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