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Lt. John Parsons

Male 1672 - 1746  (74 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Lt. John Parsons was born on 11 Jan 1672 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts (son of Joseph Parsons and Elizabeth P Strong); died on 4 Sep 1746 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts; was buried in Bridge Street Cem, Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts.

    John married Sarah Atherton on 15 Feb 1697 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts. Sarah was born on 26 Oct 1676 in Hatfield, Massachusetts; died about 1746. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    John married Hannah Clapp on 12 Jun 1729 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts. Hannah was born on 5 May 1681 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts; died on 9 Nov 1758 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Joseph Parsons was born on 01 Nov 1647 in Springfield, Hampden Co, Massachusetts (son of Joseph Parsons and Mary Bliss, (witch trials)); died on 21 Nov 1749 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts; was buried in Bridge Street Cem, Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts.

    Notes:

    Buried:
    Inscription:
    "Here lyeth the body of Joseph Parsons Esqr who Deceased November ye 29 AD 1729 Aged 83 Years"

    Joseph married Elizabeth P Strong on 17 Mar 1668 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts. Elizabeth was born on 24 Feb 1648 in Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut; died on 11 May 1736 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts; was buried in Bridge Street Cem, Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Elizabeth P Strong was born on 24 Feb 1648 in Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut; died on 11 May 1736 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts; was buried in Bridge Street Cem, Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts.

    Notes:

    Buried:
    Inscription:
    "Here lyeth the body of Mrs Elisebeth Parsons relick of Joseph Parsons Esqr who dyed May ye 11 AD 1736 aged 89 years"

    Children:
    1. Rev Joseph Parsons was born on 28 Jun 1671 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts; died on 13 Mar 1740 in Salisbury Beach, Essex Co, Massachusetts.
    2. 1. Lt. John Parsons was born on 11 Jan 1672 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts; died on 4 Sep 1746 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts; was buried in Bridge Street Cem, Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts.
    3. Capt Ebenezer Parsons was born on 31 Dec 1675 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts; died on 01 Jul 1744 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts; was buried in Bridge City Cem, North Hampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts.
    4. Elizabeth Parsons was born on 3 Feb 1678 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts; died on 17 Apr 1763.
    5. David Parsons was born on 03 Feb 1680 in Springfield, Hampden Co, Massachusetts; died on 12 Oct 1743 in Liecester, Worcester Co, Massachusetts.
    6. Josiah Parsons was born on 02 Jan 1682 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts; died on 12 Apr 1768 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts.
    7. Daniel Parsons was born on 18 Aug 1685; died on 27 Jan 1774 in Springfield, Hampden Co, Massachusetts.
    8. Moses Parsons was born on 15 Jan 1687; died on 25 Sep 1754.
    9. Abigail Parsons was born on 1 Jan 1689 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts; died on 17 Aug 1763 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts.
    10. Noah Parsons was born on 15 Aug 1692 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts; died on 27 Oct 1779.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Joseph Parsons was born in 1618 in Beaminster, Dorset, England; was christened about 25 Jun 1620 in St. Mary's, Beaminster, Dorset, England (son of (..) Parsons); died on 09 Oct 1683 in Springfield, Hampden Co, Massachusetts.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Immigration: 04 Jul 1635, Gravesend, England; Barque Transport

    Notes:

    Emigrated to the USA with his younger brother, Benjamin, at the age of 15 or 17 aboard the Barque Transport out of Gravesend, Co. Kent, England.
    According to one source - CT Family Histories - Benjamin and his brother Joseph Parsons sailed from Gravesend, England for Boston in the "Transport" on 4 Jul 1635.
    Other Parsons were in Springfield at this time.

    Other Parsons who resided in MA during this time were:
    Hugh PARSONS, Springfield in 1649, son Samuel born 1649.
    **Joseph PARSONS, Springfield in 1646; d. 9 Oct 1683, son Benjamin b. 1649.
    William PARSONS, Boston, admitted to church 1643; d. 29 Jan 1702, age 87.
    Samuel PARSONS at East Hampton, Long Island, NY in 1650.
    Thomas PARSONS at Dedham and Medfield, MA.
    (These men may have been brothers of Deacon Benjamin and **Cornet Joseph Parsons.)


    Mr. Parsons, associated with Mr. Pynchon, was`one of the most prominent men in the public business of the place, and qiute wealthy. He was witness to the deed given by the Indians to Pynchon, July 15, 1636. Joseph and Mary Parsons had five children before their removal to Northampton, Massachusetts, in 1654.( Their son Ebenezer, born in this place, May 1, 1655, was the first white child born oin the town, and he was killed by the Indians as Northfield, Sept. 2,1675) Here in Northampton they had seven more children, making twelve in all, but three, named Benjamin, John and David died young. Mary Bliss, the mother of this family, two years after the birth of her youngest child, was charged with witchcraft by some of her neighbors who were envious of their prosperity and endeavored in this way to disgrace them. She was sent to Boston, Massachusetts for trail, where the jury gave her full acquittal of the crime, and she return to Northampton, from whence they removed back to Springfield in 1679. Just after the acquittal in Boston, Massachusetts, her son Ebenezer was killed by Indians, and those who had been instrumental in bringing her to trail said: "Behold, though human judges may be bought off, God's vengeance neither turns aside nor slumbers." It is said that she possessed great beauty and talents, but was not very amiable.


    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=princessinot&id=I00630


    The new settlement of Springfield, Mass., was laid out and conducted by William Pynchon, a man of great energy and enterprise and uncommon independence in religious opinions, which had brought him into great trouble in Boston, and eventually left SPringfield and returned home to England (1652) on account of the greater liberty of conscience enjoyed there than in the colonies. He was rich and liberal, and the settlers owed him better treatment than he received from them.
    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=knrivers&id=I4094

    Birth:
    date, place of birth, and parents conflict among various researchers.

    Joseph married Mary Bliss, (witch trials) on 26 Nov 1646 in Hartford Co, Connecticut. Mary (daughter of Thomas Bliss and Margaret Lawrence Hulines) was born about 1623 in Rodborough, England; died on 29 Jan 1712 in Springfield, Hampden Co, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Mary Bliss, (witch trials) was born about 1623 in Rodborough, England (daughter of Thomas Bliss and Margaret Lawrence Hulines); died on 29 Jan 1712 in Springfield, Hampden Co, Massachusetts.

    Notes:

    Mary was charged with witchcraft 1674 and sent to Boston, Massachusetts for trail in 05-1675. She was acquitted by the jury and lived until 1712.


    Mary Bliss Parsons, wife of Cornet Joseph Parsons, daughter of Thomas and Margaret Bliss of Hartford, Ct., both very prominent families, was born in England about 1628 and came to this country with her parents when she was about eight years old. She was eleven or twelve when they decided on still another move, to the rude little settlement of Hartford. There for a time life stablized, and Mary grew to womanhood as an average member of an ordinary New England community. In 1646 she married Joseph Parsons, a successful merchant, and went to live in Springfield. Henceforth, her life would be increasingly set apart from the average.

    In 1654 the Parsonses moved to Northampton. The family, which included eleven children, became members of the church. Local tradition has remembered Mary as being "possessed of great beauty and talents, but ... not very amiable ... exclusive in the choice of her associates, and ... of haughty manners."

    In 1656, soon after the Parsons family moved to Northampton, Joseph Parsons brought an action for slander against Sarah Bridgeman, charging that Sarah had accused Mary, his wife, of being a witch. On the docket of the Middlesex County Court, for its session of October 7, 1656, is found the following entry: "Joseph Parsons, plaintiff, against Sarah, the wife of James Bridgman, defendant, in an action of the case for slandering her [Parson's wife] in her name. This action, by consent of both parties, was referred to the judgment of the Honored Bench of Magistrates." A separate document records the magistrates' finding in favor of the plaintiff and their order that the defendant make "public acknowledgment" of the wrong she had done. The acknowledgment was to be a dual performance - once in the town of Northampton and again at Springfield. Failure to fulfill either part of this requirement would result in a fine of £10.

    The testimony against Mary Parsons was that following hard upon the heels of any disagreement or quarrel between Mary Parsons and any member of the Bridgeman family, a fatal disease would seize upon some horse, cow, or pig, belonging to the Bridgeman family and, as the disease could not be accounted for in any other way, it must be the result of Mary's uncanny influence exercised by way of revenge.

    The first set of testimonies was recorded at Northampton on or about the 20th of June. For example: Robert Bartlett testifieth that George Langdon told him the last winter that Goody Bridgman and Goody Branch were speaking about Mary Parsons concerning her being a witch. And the said George told to the said Robert that my [Langdon's] wife being there said she could not think so - which the said Goody Bridgman seemed to be distates with. As also [according to Langdon] they had hard thoughts of the wife of the said Robert [Bartlett] because she was intimate with the said Mary Parsons."

    The other depositions in this early group enlarge on the gossip theme. The same Hannah Langdon mentioned in Bartlett's statement testified that "Sarah Bridgman ... told her that her boy when his knee was sore cried out of the wife of Joseph Parsons." Bridgman had also alleged widespread "jealousies that the wife of Joseph Parsons was not right." For a time Langdon herself had entertained suspicions of Mary Parsons, but recently "it hath pleased God to help her over them, ... and [she] is sorry she should have [had] hard thoughts of her upon no better grounds." These depositions converged on the issue of what Goody Bridgman had said.

    The second major group of papers in the case carries a date several weeks later. They were taken before a different official, and probably in a different place (Springfield). They expressed a different viewpoint, as the recorder noted at the top of the opening page: "Testimonies Taken on Behalf of Sarah, the wife of James Bridgman, the 11th day of August, 1656." The Bridgmans themselves supplied lengthy testimony on the events which had caused them to suspect Goody Parsons.

    The previous summer the Bridgemans' eleven-year-old son had suffered a bizarre injury while tending their cows: "In a swamp there came something and gave him a great blow on the had ... and going a little further he ... stumbled ... and put his knee out of joint." Subsequently, the knee was "set" but it would not heal properly - and he was in grievous torture about a month." Then the boy discovered the cause of his sufferings: "He cried out [that] Goody Parsons would pull off his knee, [saying] 'there she sits on the shelf.' ... I and my husband labored to quiet him, but could hardly hold him in bed for he was very fierce. We told him there was nobody ... 'Yea," says he, 'there she is; do you not see her? There she runs away and a black mouse follows her.' And this he said many times and with great violence ... and he was like to die in our apprehension." At about the same time the Bridgmans had also lost an infant son:

    "I [Sarah] being brought to bed, about three days after as I was sitting up, having the child in my lap, there was something that gave a great blow on the door. And that very instant, as I apprehended, my child changed. And I thought with myself and told my girl that I was afraid my child would die ... Presently .... I looking towards the door, through a hole ... I saw ... two women pass by the door, with white clothes on their heads; then I concluded my child would die indeed. And I sent my girl out to see who they were, but she could see nobody, and this made me think there is wickedness in the place."

    The decision of the court was in favor of the plaintiff and against Mrs. Bridgeman, and she was ordered to make public acknowledgment of her fault at Northampton and Springfield, and that her husband, James Bridgman, pay to plaintiff 10£ and cost of court.

    But the charge of witchcraft against Mary Parsons did not end with the judgment in the slander suit. Her name was cleared, but only from a legal standpoint. In the years that followed, her husband prospered ever more greatly, her children grew in number and (mostly) flourished, her mother and brothers sank the Bliss family roots deep into the CT Valley. But her reputation for witchcraft hung on.

    In 1674 the whole matter was renewed in court - with the important difference that now Mary Parsons was cast as defendant. Unfortunately, most of the evidence from this later case has disappeared. All that survives is the summary material from the dockets of the two courts involved. In August 1674, a young woman of Northampton, Mary Bartlett, had died rather suddenly. She was twenty-two, wife of Samuel Bartlett and the mother of an infant son. More importantly, she was a daughter of Sarah and James Bridgman. Her husband and father jointly believed, as they later testified in court, that "she came to her end by some unlawful and unnatural means, ... viz. by means of some evil instrument." And they had distinct ideas about the person most likely to have used such means..

    On September 29, the Hampshire County Court received "diverse testimonies" on the matter. Mary Parsons was also there - on her own initiative: "She having intimation that such things were bruited abroad, and that she should be called in question ... ..."the fact that Mrs. Parsons voluntarily appeared before the court desiring to clear herself of such an execrable crime, and that subsequently she argued her own case before the court must not be overlooked. On both these occasions she met her accusers boldly, protesting her innocence, and showing 'how clear she was of such a crime.' In this trial Mrs. Parsons was called to speak for herself and from the meager report upon record, undoubtedly did so most effectively." The court examined her, considered all the evidence, and deferred further action to its next meeting in November. There followed a second deferral "for special reasons" (about which the court did not elaborate).

    On January 5, 1675, the county magistrates conducted their most extended hearing of the case. The previous depositions were reviewed and (apparently) some new ones were taken. Both Samuel Bartlett and Mary Parsons were present in person once again.

    Mary was "called to speak for herself, [and] she did assert her own innocency, often mentioning ... how clear she was of such a crime, and that the righteous God knew her innocency - with whom she had left her cause." The magistrates decided that final jurisdiction in such matters belonged not to them but to the Court of Assistants in Boston . Still, considering "the season" and "the remoteness" [i.e., of their own court from Boston] and "the difficulties, if not incapabilities, or persons there to appear," they determined to do their utmost "in inquriing into the case." Among other things, they appointed a committee of "soberdized, chaste women" to conduct a body-search on Mary Parsons, to see "whether any marks of witchcraft might appear." (The result was "an account" which the court did not disclose.) Eventually, all the documents were gathered and forwarded to Boston.

    At the same court, and apparently as part of the same proceeding, "some testimony" was offered "reflecting on John Parsons." John was Mary's second son: he was twenty-four at the time, and as yet unmarried. How and why he should have been implicated in the charges against his mother cannot now be discovered; but the evidence was in any case unpersuasive. The court did "not find ... any such weight whereby he should be prosecute on suspicion of witchcraft" and discharged him accordingly.

    Meanwhile, the case against Mary Parsons moved towards its final round. On March 2, Mary was taken to Boston, "presented" at the Court of Assistants, and formally indicted by the grand jury. Thereupon the court ordered her commitment to prison until "her further trial." The trial came some ten weeks later (May 13, 1675). An imposing roster of Assistants lined the bench: the governor, the deputy-governor, and a dozen magistrates (including her husband's old associate, John Pynchon). However, her fate rested with "the jury of trails for life and death" - twelve men, of no particular distinction, from Boston and the surrounding towns. The indictment was read one last time: "Mary Parsons, the wife of Joseph Parsons ... being instigated by the Devil, hath ... entered into familiarity with the Devil, and committed several acts of witchcraft on the person or persons of one or more." The evidence in the case was also read. And "the prisoner at the bar, holding up her hand and pleading not guilty, ... [put] herself on her trial." The tension of this moment must have been very great, but it does not come through in the final, spare notation of the court recorder: "The jury brought in their verdict. They found her not guilty. And so she was discharged."

    The jury gave her a full acquittal of the crime. Of Mary's life subsequent to 1674 there is little direct information. She and her husband would eventually give up their home in Northampton and move back to Springfield. Joseph would died in 1683, leaving a substantial estate of £2,088, and Mary would enter a very long widowhood.

    She remained thereafter in Springfield, completed the rearing of her numerous progeny, and saw her sons - and then her grandsons - assume positions of prominence in several CT Valley towns. Death claimed her in January, 1712, when she was about eighty-five years old. She was not again tried for witchcraft, but neither was she ever free from local suspicion.



    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    References

    Descendants of Cornet Joseph Parsons, Springfield, 1636--Northampton, 1655 by Henry Parsons, A.M., Frank Allaben Genealogical Company

    History of Northampton by J. Hammond Trumbull, Vol. I, pp. 43-50; also on pages 228-234

    Witch-Hunting in Seventeenth-Century New England by Davd D. Hall, Northeastern University Press, Second Edition, Boston, MA, 1999

    Entertaining Satan by John Putnam Demons, Oxford University Press, New York, 1982

    Graphic - "Arresting a Witch" - 1883 Illustration in Harper's New Monthly Magazine by Howard Pyle


    The Witchcraft Case (1674)

    ife for the Parsons continued, with Mary bearing more children, and Joseph growing more successful in his business and civic life. But in August of 1674, Mary (Bridgman) Bartlett, wife of Samuel Bartlett and daughter of Sara and James Bridgman, died unexpectedly at a young age (probably about 22).

    Mary Parsons was again suspected of witchcraft. At the urging of Mary's father, the widower Samuel Bartlett filed a complaint against Mary Parsons, and on September 29th, 1674, Hampshire County Court received the testimonies of family, friends, and neighbors. On January 5th, 1675, county magistrates conducted a hearing, at which Mary spoke for herself. Her body was searched for signs of "witch marks." The magistrates decided that this was beyond their jurisdiction, so they sent the case to the Court of Assistants in Boston.

    On March 2nd, Mary was taken to Boston and "presented" at the Court of Assistants. She was then committed to prison until her trial, where she no doubt endured harsh conditions. While her family's money was probably able to buy her a larger cell and provide her with decent food and clean water, the situation was certainly unpleasant. On May 13th, Mary was acquitted by a jury of twelve men from the Boston area. William Pynchon sat on the case (along with other dignitaries). Again, Joseph's business dealings with Pynchon may have helped his wife's case, and surely the money and prestige of the family worked in Mary's favor.

    After this, it appears that Mary and Joseph may have remained in Boston for some time, as Joseph had a warehouse in Boston and may have been engaged in some business. They still maintained their residence in Northampton for the next few years, but as Mary's reputation in Northampton had not improved, they do not appear to have been eager to return.

    When Mary's son, Ebenezer was killed September of 1675 in battle with the Indians at Northfield, many felt that this was punishment for Mary's dealings with the devil. Local legend claims that they believed: "though human judges may be bought off, God's vengeance neither turns aside nor slumbers!"

    Aftershocks and Outcome

    In 1676, James Bridgman died; his estate probate inventory yielded a value of 114 pounds. While it might seem that with him, the grudge between the Parsons and Bridgmans would die out, this was not the case. Back in Northampton, on March 7th of 1678[/9], a man named John Stebbins died in mysterious circumstances. His wife was the sister of Samuel Bartlett, who was the widower of Mary (Bridgman) Bartlett. Believing that Stebbins had been killed by witches, Samuel Bartlett gathered evidence to send to Boston in 1679, although the court did not make any indictments. Unfortunately, Bartlett's evidence and the records of the case have disappeared; many suppose that Mary Parsons was suspected in the case, due to the involvement of Bartlett.

    Since it was clear that the rumors and suspicions were not going to end, Mary and Joseph Parsons permanently left Northampton in 1679 or 1680, and returned to Springfield. Mary and Joseph Parsons' grandson, Nathaniel Parsons (1686 - 1736) probably raised the house that is known today as "The Parsons House."

    Cornet Joseph Parsons died in Springfield on October 9th, 1683, leaving a large estate of over 2000 pounds to his wife and children. Mary went on to live almost 30 years more, and appears to have made a considerable fortune with the money.

    While it might seem that Mary Parsons' troubles were left behind once she removed from Northampton, her reputation as a witch apparently lived on for many years. In 1702, Mary was again the subject of neighborhood gossip. Hannah (Parsons) Glover's husband, Peletiah Glover complained in local court that Betty Negro struck their son (Peletiah junior) and told him that his grandmother (i.e., Mary Parsons) had killed several people, and that his mother (Hannah) was "half a witch." Both John Pynchon and Joseph Parsons Junior presided and sentenced Betty to lashes at the hand of Thomas Bliss.

    If marriages can mend fences between such bitterly opposed families, perhaps there was eventually reconciliation. In 1711, Mary Parsons, granddaughter of Mary (Bliss) Parsons, married Ebenezer Bridgman, grandson of Sarah Bridgman. Mary Parsons herself was alive to witness the union, although no accounts survive to detail her reaction to it. The young couple removed to Belchertown and had three children, Joseph, Ebenezer, and Mary. That their children were named after both of Mary's parents perhaps might indicate that they were still on good terms with her side of the family.

    Mary (Bliss) Parsons died in Springfield on January 29th, 1712. Five of her eleven children survived her (Joseph, John, Samuel, Hannah, and Esther).



    The Slander Case (1656)

    s Sarah Bridgman's gossip about Mary Parsons spread, Joseph Parsons decided to take decisive action to stop any further damage to the reputation of his wife and family. In 1656, during the month of August, testimony was presented before commissioners at Springfield in the case of Parsons v Bridgman, and in October the case was brought before the Magistrates' Court at Cambridge.

    The testimony in the case involves various community members testifying on behalf of Mary Parsons that they had heard Sarah Bridgman abusing her character. On the other side of the case were the many individuals defending Sarah's accusations as not slander, but truth; these individuals cited various encounters with Mary that seemed to prove that she had caused them (or their property) harm.

    It seems that Mary was believed to be the cause of a strange variety of problems for her neighbors. Chief among her offenses is the death of William Hannum's cow. Hannum testified that "Mary came to my house about the yarn that she missed and then we had a falling out about it and some discontented words passed on both sides: this was in an evening, and as I take it in March last and that evening all my Cattle were well for ought I could see by them, the next morning One cow lay in my yard, ready to die as I thought: which when I had considered I endeavored to get her up and at length got her to stand: but she languished away and died about a fortnight after, though I took great care night and day to save her, giving her wholesome drinks eggs etc. and this Cow being young was hefty before this very time." Such accusations, indicating that Mary was responsible for damage to livestock and property, appear frequently in the record, and were intended to "prove" that Mary was involved in witchcraft.

    The focus of the case, however, was not Mary's guilt, but Sarah's. Sarah Bridgman's own testimony is perhaps the most damaging, accusing Mary of causing harm, not to her animals, but to her own child. Sarah testified that "having my child in my lap, there was something that gave a great blow on the door, and at very instant as I apprehended my child changed : and I thought with myself and told my girl I was afraid my child would die. And I sent out the girl to look who it was at the door, but she could see nobody about the house : Presently after the girl came in, I looking towards the door thorough a hole by the door, I saw to my apprehension two women pass by the door with white clothes on their heads, then I concluded my child would die indeed : and I sent out the girl to see who they were but she could see nobody : they made me think there is wickedness in the place."

    As the case unfolded however, the many alliances within the community were uncovered, and it seems that some individuals who had first testified on Sarah's behalf later changed their stories. For instance, we learn that soon after testifying about Mary's curious behavior, John Matthews recanted, claiming that he "hath at present no grounds of jealousy for himself, of Mary Parsons the wife of Joseph Parsons, to be a witch, and that what he testified yesterday on oath was upon the earnest Importunity of James Bridgman and his Brother."

    While the strange coincidences and incidents with livestock might be ignored by us today, members of her community, and perhaps even her own family firmly believed that Mary had supernatural powers. Curious stories of Mary had been circulating in the area for some time. For instance, "William Branch of Springfield testified on oath that when I lived at the long meadow and Joseph Parsons lived there, a certain time Joseph Parsons told me that wherever he lay the key his wife could find it : and would go out in the night and that when she went out a woman went out with her and came in with her but says Joseph Parsons God preserves his with his Angels: and further the said William Branch sayth that while they lived together in the Long Meddow; George Cotton told me that he following Mary Parsons in her fit, he followed her thorough the water where he was up to the knees and she was not wet : this thing I told to William Pynchon when he was here : who wondered at it but said he could not tell what to say to it."

    But ultimately, what had to be proven was that Sarah had been spreading rumors maliciously. To this end, Mary's own mother, Margaret Bliss, "testifieth that Sarah Bridgman told her that she did hear that her daughter Parsons was suspected to be a witch." Hearing the recanting of some testimony, and finding other stories perhaps inexplicable or too wild it seemed clear that Sarah was guilty of slander.

    The magistrates issued their decision in favor of the Parsonses, and ordered Sarah Bridgman to make public apology for her slander in both Northampton and Springfield, or to pay a fine. It appears that despite the financial hardship, Sarah chose to pay the fine rather than submit to the public humiliation.

    The court's decision did nothing to change the opinion of Sarah or the Bridgman clan. In 1668 Sarah Bridgman died at the age of about forty-seven, but her family still held a grudge against the Parsons, and over time, the testimony from the slander case would be evidence in Mary's own trial for witchcraft.



    The Mary (Bliss) Parsons Story

    ary Parsons is perhaps the most infamous resident of Northampton's early settlement period. She was involved in witchcraft-related trials in 1656 and 1674, and possibly again in 1679. Her story is a fascinating one that sheds light on the workings of the Puritan mind and the complicated social and cultural situation of the period.

    The Parsonses were one of the first families of Northampton; Historic Northampton's buildings are located on what was once Parsons family land, where Mary and her husband, Cornet Joseph Parsons, started their family in the newly settled town. The Parsonses moved to Northampton in 1654, where the were very successful. Cornet Joseph Parsons earned his title as a color-bearer in the Hampshire Troop of Horses, and held various positions of merit in the town. In his early career, he earned money and distinction working as a merchant and fur trader for the Pynchon family, and eventually kept the first house of entertainment in Northampton; the Parsonses would eventually become the wealthiest family in Northampton. Their wealth can also be measured in terms of their family size: Mary and Joseph had a total of eleven children, most of whom lived to adulthood.

    But soon after the Parsonses moved to Northampton, rumors of witchcraft began to circulate, implying that the family's success came at the expense of other families, and was the result of Mary's dealings with the devil. To head off the allegations, Joseph Parsons initiated a slander case in 1656, which he won. But eighteen years later, Mary was officially accused of and tried for witchcraft in 1674. She was eventually acquitted, but it seemed that the residents of Northampton, despite any court decrees, were convinced that Mary was a witch. Mary may have been the subject of another witchcraft inquiry in 1679; however, no records remain to prove this theory. Joseph and Mary Parsons left Northampton in 1679 or 1680, amid lingering questions and gossip.

    The story of Mary's trial in Northampton serves to show how the law courts worked in such complicated cases, and establishes a pattern that can be seen in witchcraft trials across New England, eventually culminating in the Salem Witch Hysteria in 1692.

    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=princessinot&id=I00620

    Children:
    1. 2. Joseph Parsons was born on 01 Nov 1647 in Springfield, Hampden Co, Massachusetts; died on 21 Nov 1749 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts; was buried in Bridge Street Cem, Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts.
    2. John Parsons was born on 14 Aug 1650 in Springfield, Hampden Co, Massachusetts; died on 19 Apr 1728 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts.
    3. Sarah Parsons, (daughter?) was born on 13 Aug 1656 in Springfield, Hampden Co, Massachusetts; was christened on 18 Aug 1656 in Springfield, Hampden Co, Massachusetts; died on 27 Jun 1740 in Springfield, Hampden Co, Massachusetts.
    4. Abigail Parsons was born on 3 Sep 1666 in Northampton, Hampshire Co, Massachusetts; died on 27 Jun 1689 in Longmeadow, Hampden Co, Massachusetts.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  (..) Parsons was born about 1600 in England; died after 1650.

    Notes:

    According to the book "Early NY Families, 1600-1900s, Hudson-Mohawk Family Memoirs", Vol I, pg 271, the parents of Deacon Benjamin PARSONS were Hugh PARSONS, son of Thomas and Catherine (HESTER) PARSONS. Hugh was born 27 Nov 1563 in Great Milton, Oxfordshire, England, and married Elizabeth (BAGSHAW) THOMPKINS, who died 24 Jan 1642. They were the parents of ten children. Thomas PARSONS, of Great Milton, Oxfordshire, England, was buried 23 May 1597; married Catherine HESTER, and had five children.

    It is unknown at this time who the parents of Joseph and Benjamin were - Hugh and Elizabeth or William and Margaret. Further research is being conducted.

    William PARSONS b: ABT 1570 in Great Torrington, Devonshire, England
    Margaret HOSKINS b: ABT 1584 in Beaminster, Dorset, England


    Children:
    1. 4. Joseph Parsons was born in 1618 in Beaminster, Dorset, England; was christened about 25 Jun 1620 in St. Mary's, Beaminster, Dorset, England; died on 09 Oct 1683 in Springfield, Hampden Co, Massachusetts.
    2. Benjamin Parsons was born about 1627 in Great Torrington, Devonshire, Englan; was christened on 17 Mar 1627 in Sandford Co, Oxford, England; died on 24 Aug 1689 in Springfield, Hampden Co, Massachusetts.

  2. 10.  Thomas Bliss was born on 20 Mar 1583 in Belstone, Devonshire, England (son of Thomas Bliss, Sr. and Alice Smith); died in Mar 1651 in Hartford, Hartford Co, Connecticut.

    Notes:

    From A Gen Dict of the First Settlers of New Eng:

    THOMAS, Hartford, was an early, but not original settler of whose com. from England nothing is kn. but his first residence was in that part of Boston called the mount, afterwards Braintree, now Quincy. In 1639 or 40 he is first
    ment. in Connecticut at the same time with Thomas, Jr. who may be the freeman of 18 May 1642 in Mass., there left by his father whose death is early heard of, tho. exact date is not gain. His widow Margaret was very resolute and capable, and after two or three yrs. remained with all her children except Thomas, and Ann, to Springfield, there died 28 Aug. 1684. She had nine ch. and it has been absurd. said, that all were brought from Eng. Of most, this is true.
    Ann, who married 29 Apr 1642, Robert Chapman of Saybrook; Mary m. 20 Nov. 1646, Joseph Parsons;
    Thomas; Nathaniel; Lawrence; and perhaps Samuel; were born in England but our side of the water may have claim, prob.
    Sarah, m. 20 July 1659, John Scott; Eliz. m. 15 Feb 1670, as his second wife Miles Morgan; possib. Hannah, who died 25 Jan 1662, unmarried and certain. John.

    www.ancestry.com
    Pioneers of Massachusetts
    Nicholas Hyde (Ide, Iyde?), Rehoboth, propr. 1645, frm. 7 June, 1648. He petitioned the Court in 1648 for a child's portion of the est. of Thomas Bliss, who called him son-in-law. Wife Mary bur. Sept. 9, 1699. Ch. Nathaniel b. Nov. 11, 1647, Mary b. Dec. 10, 1649, John b. Dec. 1652, Nicholas b. Nov. 1654, Martha b. Oct. 1656, Elizabeth b. April 6, 1658, Timothy b. Oct. 1660, Dorothy b. May 11, 1662, Patience b. May 25, 1664, Experience b. Oct. 1665.

    __

    Founders Thomas was one of the founders of Hartford, Connecticut
    Occupation: Clothier
    Reference Number: 80

    Cousin of Thomas Bliss of Preson Parva and Rehoboth and George Bliss of Preston Parva and Newport, was probably from Painswick, Glouschester, England. Thomas emigrated with his cousins about 1638, for he owned land in Hartford on the Connecticut River by 1639. By the time of his death in1651, he owned 58 acres of land and a house lot on the road west of Lafayette Street in Hartford.

    His fore-fathers were almost certainly from Wales, descendants of the Celts who escaped the Saxon Hordes by surviving in the hillcountry of Wales.-----according to Gerald Lawrence Bliss


    The Bliss Family
    in Hartford, Connecticut


    Thomas Bliss, cousin of Thomas Bliss of Preston Parva and Rehoboth and George Bliss of Preston Parva and Newport, was probably from Painswick, Glos. Born about 1590, Thomas married Margaret Hulins of Rodborough at St. Nicholas in Gloucester on October 18, 1621. Thomas may have emigrated with his cousins about 1638, for he owned land in Hartford on the Connecticut River by 1639. By the time of his death in 1650 or 1651, he owned 58 acres of land and a house lot on a road west of Lafayette Street in Hartford. Margaret Bliss died in 1684. [Source: Genealogy of the Bliss Family in America by Aaron Tyler Bliss]

    From James Savage's book, A Genealogical Dictionary of The First Settlers of New England, Before 1692 Volume #1, Pgs 198 - 209:
    THOMAS, Hartford, was an early, but not orig. sett. of whose com. from Eng. nothing is kn. but his first resid. was in that pt. [[vol. 1, p. 202]] of Boston call. the mount, afterwards Braintree, now Quincy. In 1639 or 40 he is first ment. in Conn. at the same time with Thomas, jr. wh. may be the freem. of 18 May 1642 in Mass., there left by his f. whose d. is early heard of, tho. exact date is not gain. His wid. Margaret was very resolute and capable, and after two or three yrs. rem. with all her ch. exc. Thomas, and Ann, to Springfield, there d. 28 Aug. 1684. She had nine ch. and it has been absurd. said, that all were brot. from Eng. Of most, this is true. Ann, wh. m. 29 Apr. 1642, Robert Chapman of Saybrook; Mary m. 26 Nov. 1646, Joseph Parsons; Thomas; Nathaniel; Lawrence; and perhaps Samuel; were b. in Eng. but our side of the water may claim, prob. Sarah, m. 20 July 1659, John Scott; Elizabeth m. 15 Feb. 1670, as his sec. w. Miles Morgan; possib. Hannah, wh. d. 25 Jan. 1662, unm. and certain. John. THOMAS, Weymouth, was possib. the freem. of 18 May 1642, but next yr. certain. rem. to Rehoboth, there d. June 1649. His will, by careless statem. in Geneal. Reg. IV. 282, said to bear date of 8th of that mo. but also on same day to be brot. into Ct. gives valua. inform. a. his ch. Jonathan, to wh. he devis. his ho., his eldest d. whose bapt. name is not told, w. of Thomas Williams; Mary, w. of Nathaniel Harmon of Braintree; s.-in-law (perhaps mean. s. of his w.) Nicholas Ide, and his s. Nathaniel. From find. no ment. of him after 1649 at R. I suppose, confus. of him with Thomas of Norwich was easy. THOMAS, Norwich, 1660, s. of Thomas the first, had been of Hartford, and early after d. of his f. rem. to Saybrook, a. the end of Oct. 1644, took u. Elizabeth had Elizabeth b. 20 Nov. 1640; Sarah, 26 Aug. 1647; Mary, 7 Feb. 1649; Thomas, 3 Mar. 1652, wh. d. 29 Jan. 1682, prob. unm.; Deliverance, Aug. 1655; Samuel, 9 Dec. 1657; all bef. rem. from S. and at N. had Ann, Sept. 1660, the sec. Eng. ch. b. in that place; Rebecca, Mar. 1663; and he d. 15 Apr. 1688. By will, made two days bef. (req. by the insuffer. tyranny of Sir Edmund Andros to be brot. to Boston for proof and rec., support. his retainers by the fees of office), provis. for w. Elizabeth six ds. and only s. Samuel, is seen. Of this name, in 1834, four had been gr. at Harv. four at Dart. seventeen at Yale, beside six at other N. E. coll. of wh. most disting,. are Rev. Daniel of Concord, b. at Springfield, Jan. 1715, Y. C. 1732, d. 11 May 1764; his s. Daniel, b. 1740, H. C. 1760, d. in the Prov. of New Brunswick 1806; Jonathan, H. C. 1763, Ch. Just. of the Sup. Ct. of N. B. and George, Y. C. 1784, LL. D. wh. d. 8 May 1830, aged 6



    First Puritan Settlers of Connecticut, pages 116-117.

    Bliss, Thomas, sen'r and jr. were among the early settlers of Hartford, before 1639. It is more than probable that in the constant emigration down the Connecticut river, from the three old towns, that the Thomas Bliss who settled at Norwich in '60 was one of the above -- probably was Thomas, jr. who had then grown to manhood. Thomas made free in '63.



    Seven Hundred Ancestors, page 2
    The Founders Monument erected by the Ancient Burying Ground Association of Hartford in 1837 in memory of the first settlers of Hartford contains the names of Thomas Bliss, Matthew Marvin, Richard Lyman and Timothy Stanley.


    A DIGEST OF THE EARLY CONNECTICUT PROBATE RECORDS. 1650 to 1663, Page 28

    Name: Thomas Bliss Location: Hartford
    Invt. ?86-12-08. Taken 14 February, 1650, by Nathaniel Ward, Joseph Mygatt. Nuncupative Will. Testimony of John Pinchon & Hen: Smith gives property to his wife. Mary Parsons, a daughter, of Springfield, doth Testify to the same.
    Court Record, Page 17--20 February, 1650-1: Adms. to the Relict, She to keep the whole Estate in her Hands for her Use and the Education of the Children during her life, then to be divided among the Children, viz: to Lawrence, to John, to Samuel, to Hester, to Elizabeth, to Hannah, and to Sarah Bliss.

    The American Bliss families can trace their roots mainly to two counties in England, Northamptonshire and Gloucestershire. Contrary to the information erroneously reported by many, the Bliss lines are NOT from Belstone, Devonshire. Belstone, Devonshire was never the home of Thomas Bliss or any other Bliss. Genealogies based on Blisses from Belstone are incorrect.

    The (George Bliss) Newport and (Thomas Bliss) Rehoboth lines link back to their father, John Blisse of Daventry, and later, Preston Capes and Preston Parva.

    The (Thomas Bliss) Hartford line is traced to County Gloucester, probably to Painswick, an old Cotswold wool town. We know that Thomas Bliss resided in Rodborough, Gloucestershire for a time, and that his wife, Margaret was born there. Thomas's father is unknown. According to the research of Aaron Tyler Bliss, Thomas is undoubtedly a descendant of John Blisse of Tyringham, a feudal serf.

    The earliest Blisses are described by Aaron Tyler Bliss in Genealogy of the Bliss Family in America. Click here for a summary.

    The Bliss Charity School in Nether Heyford, Northants, was endowed with income from lands in the will of William Bliss. William Bliss, a wine merchant living in Southwark, died in 1674. William had been born and brought up in Nether Heyford, later moving to London. In his will, William left £400 to the village: £100 to buy a Schoolhouse and £300 to buy land, whose rent would pay for the Schoolmaster and the upkeep of the School. (See the school's page to continue the history and the Nether Heyford link to see pictures.)The Bliss Charity School in Nether Heyford, Northants, was endowed with income from lands in the will of William Bliss. William Bliss, a wine merchant living in Southwark, died in 1674. William had been born and brought up in Nether Heyford, later moving to London. In his will, William left £400 to the village: £100 to buy a Schoolhouse and £300 to buy land, whose rent would pay for the Schoolmaster and the upkeep of the School. (See the school's page to continue the history and the Nether Heyford link to see pictures.)

    Here are some links to images and information about these counties.


    Gloucestershire Northamptonshire
    Church of St. Nicholas, Gloucester Althorp House

    Cotswold Picture Gallery
    Genuki Northamptonshire

    Genuki Gloucestershire
    History of Daventry

    Gloucestershire Map
    Holy Cross Church, Daventry

    Gloucestershire Photo Library
    Northamptonshire Look-up Exchange

    Painswick - GenUKI
    Preston Capes Virtual Tour

    Painswick - Things to See and Do
    Website of Northamptonshire Council

    Parish Registers: Gloucestershire

    South Cotswold Genealogical Guide

    The Visitation of the County of Gloucester, 1623

    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=princessinot&id=I00080

    Thomas married Margaret Lawrence Hulines on 18 Oct 1621 in St.Nicholas, Glouchestershire, England. Margaret was born on 15 Jul 1595 in of, Rodborough, Glouchestershire, England; died on 28 Aug 1684 in Springfield, Hampden Co, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  3. 11.  Margaret Lawrence Hulines was born on 15 Jul 1595 in of, Rodborough, Glouchestershire, England; died on 28 Aug 1684 in Springfield, Hampden Co, Massachusetts.

    Notes:

    daughter of John Hulines (abt 1565 Rodborough, Gloucestershire, England; and Margaret Lawrence, b 1559, in Rodborough, Gloucestershire, England. They were married in 1588.

    Children:
    1. Ann Bliss was born about 1621 in Gloucestershire, England; died on 20 Nov 1685 in Saybrook, Middlesex Co, Connecticut.
    2. Nathaniel Bliss was born on 28 Dec 1622 in Rodborough, Glouchestershire, England; died on 8 Nov 1654 in Springfield, Hampden Co, Massachusetts.
    3. Thomas Bliss was born in Dec 1622 in Daventry, Northampton, England; died on 13 Apr 1688 in Norwich, New London, Connecticut.
    4. Lawrence Bliss was born in 1628 in of, Rodborough, Glouchestershire, England; died on 8 Nov 1676 in Springfield, Hampden Co, Massachusetts.
    5. John Bliss was born in 1635 in of, Rodborough, Glouchestershire, England; died on 10 Sep 1702 in Longmeadow, Hampden Co, Massachusetts.
    6. Elizabeth Bliss was born in 1640 in of, Hartford, Hartford Co, Connecticut; died on 2 Oct 1683 in Springfield, Hampden Co, Massachusetts.
    7. Samuel Bliss was born in 1637 in Cloucestershire, England; was christened on 04 Feb 1537 in St. Mary de Crypt, Gloucester, England; died on 23 Mar 1720 in Springfield, Hampden Co, Massachusetts.
    8. 5. Mary Bliss, (witch trials) was born about 1623 in Rodborough, England; died on 29 Jan 1712 in Springfield, Hampden Co, Massachusetts.