Cu Mhorrigan
April 20th 2005, 10:04 PM
http://www.oakleafcircle.org/Renfrew.htm
The Renfrewshire Witches
© Val Dobson (Written 1997 )
Nowadays, Bargarran is a minute Clydeside suburb to the West of Glasgow, surrounded and overshadowed by motorways. In 1696, it was a remote rural community, with no industry except agriculture.
One day in August of that year, Christian Shaw, the eleven-year-old daughter and eldest child of the Laird of Bargarran, was in the kitchen of Bargarran House; she saw a maid, Katherine Campbell, sneaking a drink of milk. Christian told her mother, who admonished Katherine. As soon as Mrs. Shaw was gone, the teenage maid turned on Christian and cursed her no less than three times thus: "The Devil harl (drag) your soul through hell!" The child, frightened, turned and ran; in those days curses were taken very seriously. Moreover Christian was a notably religious child - the Bible was her favourite reading, she knew every word of her Catechism and paid close attention to the two-hour long kirk sermons each Sunday. But it was to be some days before anything untoward was to happen.
A few mornings later, Christian was playing in the courtyard with a younger sister when they were approached by Agnes Naismith, an elderly and poor widow who often came to the House' kitchen to beg a little food. (At this time, Scotland was going through a period of harsh winters and poor harvests; consequently, beggars were many and large Houses like Bargarran would set aside food for them.) She spoke to the children, asking after their new-born baby sister, then left.
The following afternoon, Christian had her first "attack". Napping on a day-bed, with her parents at the other end of the room, she suddenly began struggling and crying in her sleep. She then jerked out of bed, bounced off the door and became stiff, rigid and silent. Eyes wide and staring, she remained so for half an hour, despite all efforts to rouse her. Then she began screaming and contorting in pain, crying out that knives were stabbing her all over. This continued for forty-eight hours without respite, after which the contortions turned into convulsions, which went on for days in quick succession before giving way to a new set of symptoms. These took the form of violent strugglings against invisible attackers, so violent that sometimes four men were required to hold down the emaciated eleven-year old. And now she began to talk in her fits; she cried out again and again that Katherine Campbell and Agnes Naismith were cutting open her body with knives and refused to believe it when told that neither woman was anywhere nearby. Doctors had been attending her from the first day of her fits, but none of their treatments had any effect whatsoever and they could not produce a diagnosis. One or both of her parents had sat with her every minute (her mother had even handed over the new baby to a wetnurse so that she could spend more time with Christian); but, also, crowds of locals were allowed to gather in the sickroom each afternoon and evening to watch the performance. It became something of a somber community entertainment; quite why her parents allowed it is a mystery.
In October, Christian, still suffering from fits and convulsions and still accusing Campbell and Naismith, was taken to see an eminent Glasgow doctor. She produced a spectacular fit while he was examining her, he pronounced 'hypochondriac melancholy' and prescribed some medicine.The medicine appeared to work - for three weeks she was free of all fits and attacks. One day, however (when she was back at home) she spoke of having a pain in her side, announced that she was having a fit, and became rigid and corpse-like. Her tongue stretched out over her chin and her teeth clenched over it. After several days of similar attacks, her distraught parents took her back to Glasgow.
On the journey there, a new manifestation occurred. Christian fainted, then began coughing up little bundles of hair. There were a great many of these bundles, they were all different colours and mostly knotted or plaited. Once the family were settled in their Glasgow accommodation the child continued fainting and coughing up objects of an enormous quantity and variety. There was not just hair, but straw, handfuls of pins, small bones from animals and birds, feathers, twigs, dung, warm coal cinders, stones, candle-wax and egg-shell pieces. Doctors admitted bafflement. They were certain that she was not vomiting these things up from her stomach because there was no sign of vomit and the objects were always dry - they simply seemed to appear from the back of her throat.
Christian herself maintained that Campbell, Naismith and others were causing all this by supernatural means - they were trying to kill her. She frequently saw them in her room, trying to attack her in various ways. She held long one-sided conversations with these apparitions in which she admonished them, gave them her forgiveness and quoted Bible texts at great length. On one occasion, the apparition of Katie Campbell pierced her side with a great sword so that she convulsed in pain. Her parents, along with the crowds who (as usual) were allowed to fill the bedroom, began to speak anxiously of witchcraft. The doctors reluctantly concurred - they could produce no rational explanation. Depressed and downcast, the little family went back home.
At this point, a piece of Shaw family history deserves exposition. Twenty years earlier, Christian's grandfather, John Shaw Snr., had disappeared whilst fording a flooded river in a November snowstorm. His body had been found three months later in a ditch some distance away that had been searched the day after his disappearance. The corpse was in a good state of preservation, as though the old man had died only days previously instead of three months before. There was no signs of robbery - money and a watch were still on the body - but, horrifyingly, the right hand and genitals had been hacked off and were missing.
Going on these bare facts, it would appear that old Mr. Shaw had drowned in the river and his body had been found by someone who removed the hand and genitals to use as magical charms. The body had then been thrown into the already-searched ditch, where three months of frost and snow had kept it hidden and preserved until the spring thaw (as I have said, this was a period of hard winters). However, it was clear to everybody at the time that this was witches' work.
Although there must have been suspects, nobody was charged and the incident remained a celebrated and gory local mystery. When his daughter fell ill, John Shaw Jnr. must have felt that his family was being attacked by witches for a second time.
Back at Bargarran, Christian's attacks developed even more bizarre forms. In between regurgitating pins and hairs, she would sing, shriek, dance and leap wildly. She pirouetted rapidly up and down stairs, onlookers swearing that she was levitating. Several times, she attempted to throw herself from a landing, but only when someone was close enough to pull her back from the edge. Bleeding cuts, scratches and bites appeared on her limbs and open clasp-knives appeared in her clothing. During all of these fits, she was unresponsive and seemingly unconscious. In between fits, she was fully conscious and articulate, adamant that Campbell, Naismith and a whole 'crew' of unidentified witches were invisibly attacking her. She told a story of being taken one August night into a witches' circle in the orchard behind the house. There she was introduced to the Devil, who had placed his hand on her head and promised her many wonderful things, on condition that she become a witch and kill her baby sister. She had refused, which was why the witches were now trying to kill her.
It took her several weeks to tell this story, slowly, haltingly, in bits; she was clearly terrified of revealing too much at once. By then it was January 1697, and John Shaw decided that he now had enough evidence to act against the witches. Katie Campbell was already in custody - she had tried to flee when she heard that Christian was naming her as a witch.
Upon arrest, a bundle of hair similar to those the child had been coughing up was found on her. Campbell denied all knowledge of it, but it was taken as proof of her guilt.
Agnes Naismith was found and bought to Bargarran House. Christian swooned at the sight of her, but the old beggar-woman stayed silent under questioning. With no evidence other than the child's accusation, she was reluctantly released.
At John Shaw's instigation, a special Commission was appointed to examine the case. Of the eleven members, nine were Renfrewshire lairds, and three were related to the Shaw family. They had the power to detain and question any suspects. Meanwhile Christian's attacks continued as before. The invisible "crew" were still besetting her with blows and scratches, and urging her to kill her baby sister. One day in early February, she caught sight of John Lyndsay of Barloch, one of her father's tenant farmers. She immediately accused him of being one of her tormentors. When told to touch his cloak, she felt pains shooting over her body, then had a fit. Lyndsay was arrested.
Later that day, an old Highland beggar came to the gate asking for alms. Christian overheard him and denounced him as one of the "crew". He was bought before the child and told to touch her hand. - she instantly had a fit. The old Highlander was arrested.
Next to be arrested were Alexander Anderson, already locally notorious for drunkenness and blasphemy, and his 17-year old daughter Elizabeth. Christian had named Alexander as another of the "crew"; Elizabeth Anderson was arrested because she had testified the previous year at a witchcraft inquiry at nearby Inchinnan, naming her own grandmother as a witch.
At the initial questioning before the Commission at Paisley, Elizabeth at first denied everything. Quite soon, however, she broke. Yes, she was a member of the witches' "crew". Yes, they were trying to kill Christian Shaw. Yes, she could supply names. She named six - her father, her great-aunt Margaret Fulton, Agnes Naismith, teenage brothers Thomas and James Lyndsay (no relation to John Lyndsay of Barloch) and the old Highland beggar, whose name she did not know (in common with everyone else, apparently - no name for him was never recorded).
Those not already in custody were rounded up, and the whole party assembled at Bargarron House for the formal sitting of the Commission, who would decide if there were grounds for a witchcraft trial.
All of the suspects were first shown to Christian Shaw and ordered to touch her. The child obligingly went into a fit or a swoon each time. They were then individually questioned. All but one strongly denied the charges against them - Elizabeth Anderson was positively eager to admit her guilt. Describing her life as a witch in some detail, she confirmed Christian's account of the August sabbat gathering in the orchard and alleged that the "crew" was responsible for murders and much general evil-doing. Christian herself was then questioned. She repeated her story ; the Commissioners admired her intelligence and calmness. Asked about a "Margaret" that she had previously mentioned in connection with her tormentors, she replied that she could knew the woman's surname, but could not say it out loud. Asked to write it down, she got as far as "Margaret L...." and then fainted. When she had recovered, one of the clergymen present decided to show the Commissioners just what they were dealing with , and asked Christian to read from a bible. As soon as she saw the open book, the child fell to the floor, lay rigid and sang an unearthly wordless melody that echoed through the house. She stopped as soon as the bible was shut - the Commissioners were suitably impressed. After some days of deliberation and consultation with the Shaws and more clergymen, two of the Commissioners decided to question Elizabeth Anderson again; she was only too happy to talk. For a full day, she described all of the witches' gatherings she had attended, the cursings, the plottings, the murdered babies, the flights through the night-time sky and so forth. She seemed to have an excellent memory for details and easily recalled the names of dozens of co-witches.
As all this testimony poured forth, at least one of the Commissioners expressed some scepticism. Some details of her evidence were inconsistent, he said, and pointed out that many of the people named were half-crazed old beggars who would find it difficult to organise anything, let alone crimes and murders. Additionally, it was extraordinary that a person should be able to recognise so many in the dark of a moonless night in the open, when many of these gatherings allegedly took place.
But the others pointed out that two of the babies claimed by Elizabeth to have been killed by witchcraft had indeed died suddenly from unknown causes. Also, she had named Margaret Lang as a witch, when Christian Shaw had named a Margaret L. as one of her tormentors. Moreover, this Margaret Lang was a midwife, and all the books on witchcraft warned that midwives could be servants of the Devil. The sceptic was overruled and the order given to arrest Lang and her daughter Martha Semple.
The two women did not wait to be arrested. As soon as the local grapevine had bought them word of the accusations against them, they went straight to Bargarran House and indignantly demanded that they be allowed to clear their names. They had every right to be indignant - the two of them were liked and respected by the whole community. Moreover, Margaret Lang was a most pious and good Christian woman, who always carried a bible and traveled many miles a week to attend as many church services as she could. Martha was eighteen and as pious as her mother.
They were shown to Christian, who amazed her parents by behaving perfectly normally. Once the two women were out of sight, however, she had a seizure and announced that she had been prevented from making any accusations by a magical charm that Margaret Lang had dropped in the hallway outside. Sure enough, a small bundle of hair was discovered there.
The Renfrewshire Witches
© Val Dobson (Written 1997 )
Nowadays, Bargarran is a minute Clydeside suburb to the West of Glasgow, surrounded and overshadowed by motorways. In 1696, it was a remote rural community, with no industry except agriculture.
One day in August of that year, Christian Shaw, the eleven-year-old daughter and eldest child of the Laird of Bargarran, was in the kitchen of Bargarran House; she saw a maid, Katherine Campbell, sneaking a drink of milk. Christian told her mother, who admonished Katherine. As soon as Mrs. Shaw was gone, the teenage maid turned on Christian and cursed her no less than three times thus: "The Devil harl (drag) your soul through hell!" The child, frightened, turned and ran; in those days curses were taken very seriously. Moreover Christian was a notably religious child - the Bible was her favourite reading, she knew every word of her Catechism and paid close attention to the two-hour long kirk sermons each Sunday. But it was to be some days before anything untoward was to happen.
A few mornings later, Christian was playing in the courtyard with a younger sister when they were approached by Agnes Naismith, an elderly and poor widow who often came to the House' kitchen to beg a little food. (At this time, Scotland was going through a period of harsh winters and poor harvests; consequently, beggars were many and large Houses like Bargarran would set aside food for them.) She spoke to the children, asking after their new-born baby sister, then left.
The following afternoon, Christian had her first "attack". Napping on a day-bed, with her parents at the other end of the room, she suddenly began struggling and crying in her sleep. She then jerked out of bed, bounced off the door and became stiff, rigid and silent. Eyes wide and staring, she remained so for half an hour, despite all efforts to rouse her. Then she began screaming and contorting in pain, crying out that knives were stabbing her all over. This continued for forty-eight hours without respite, after which the contortions turned into convulsions, which went on for days in quick succession before giving way to a new set of symptoms. These took the form of violent strugglings against invisible attackers, so violent that sometimes four men were required to hold down the emaciated eleven-year old. And now she began to talk in her fits; she cried out again and again that Katherine Campbell and Agnes Naismith were cutting open her body with knives and refused to believe it when told that neither woman was anywhere nearby. Doctors had been attending her from the first day of her fits, but none of their treatments had any effect whatsoever and they could not produce a diagnosis. One or both of her parents had sat with her every minute (her mother had even handed over the new baby to a wetnurse so that she could spend more time with Christian); but, also, crowds of locals were allowed to gather in the sickroom each afternoon and evening to watch the performance. It became something of a somber community entertainment; quite why her parents allowed it is a mystery.
In October, Christian, still suffering from fits and convulsions and still accusing Campbell and Naismith, was taken to see an eminent Glasgow doctor. She produced a spectacular fit while he was examining her, he pronounced 'hypochondriac melancholy' and prescribed some medicine.The medicine appeared to work - for three weeks she was free of all fits and attacks. One day, however (when she was back at home) she spoke of having a pain in her side, announced that she was having a fit, and became rigid and corpse-like. Her tongue stretched out over her chin and her teeth clenched over it. After several days of similar attacks, her distraught parents took her back to Glasgow.
On the journey there, a new manifestation occurred. Christian fainted, then began coughing up little bundles of hair. There were a great many of these bundles, they were all different colours and mostly knotted or plaited. Once the family were settled in their Glasgow accommodation the child continued fainting and coughing up objects of an enormous quantity and variety. There was not just hair, but straw, handfuls of pins, small bones from animals and birds, feathers, twigs, dung, warm coal cinders, stones, candle-wax and egg-shell pieces. Doctors admitted bafflement. They were certain that she was not vomiting these things up from her stomach because there was no sign of vomit and the objects were always dry - they simply seemed to appear from the back of her throat.
Christian herself maintained that Campbell, Naismith and others were causing all this by supernatural means - they were trying to kill her. She frequently saw them in her room, trying to attack her in various ways. She held long one-sided conversations with these apparitions in which she admonished them, gave them her forgiveness and quoted Bible texts at great length. On one occasion, the apparition of Katie Campbell pierced her side with a great sword so that she convulsed in pain. Her parents, along with the crowds who (as usual) were allowed to fill the bedroom, began to speak anxiously of witchcraft. The doctors reluctantly concurred - they could produce no rational explanation. Depressed and downcast, the little family went back home.
At this point, a piece of Shaw family history deserves exposition. Twenty years earlier, Christian's grandfather, John Shaw Snr., had disappeared whilst fording a flooded river in a November snowstorm. His body had been found three months later in a ditch some distance away that had been searched the day after his disappearance. The corpse was in a good state of preservation, as though the old man had died only days previously instead of three months before. There was no signs of robbery - money and a watch were still on the body - but, horrifyingly, the right hand and genitals had been hacked off and were missing.
Going on these bare facts, it would appear that old Mr. Shaw had drowned in the river and his body had been found by someone who removed the hand and genitals to use as magical charms. The body had then been thrown into the already-searched ditch, where three months of frost and snow had kept it hidden and preserved until the spring thaw (as I have said, this was a period of hard winters). However, it was clear to everybody at the time that this was witches' work.
Although there must have been suspects, nobody was charged and the incident remained a celebrated and gory local mystery. When his daughter fell ill, John Shaw Jnr. must have felt that his family was being attacked by witches for a second time.
Back at Bargarran, Christian's attacks developed even more bizarre forms. In between regurgitating pins and hairs, she would sing, shriek, dance and leap wildly. She pirouetted rapidly up and down stairs, onlookers swearing that she was levitating. Several times, she attempted to throw herself from a landing, but only when someone was close enough to pull her back from the edge. Bleeding cuts, scratches and bites appeared on her limbs and open clasp-knives appeared in her clothing. During all of these fits, she was unresponsive and seemingly unconscious. In between fits, she was fully conscious and articulate, adamant that Campbell, Naismith and a whole 'crew' of unidentified witches were invisibly attacking her. She told a story of being taken one August night into a witches' circle in the orchard behind the house. There she was introduced to the Devil, who had placed his hand on her head and promised her many wonderful things, on condition that she become a witch and kill her baby sister. She had refused, which was why the witches were now trying to kill her.
It took her several weeks to tell this story, slowly, haltingly, in bits; she was clearly terrified of revealing too much at once. By then it was January 1697, and John Shaw decided that he now had enough evidence to act against the witches. Katie Campbell was already in custody - she had tried to flee when she heard that Christian was naming her as a witch.
Upon arrest, a bundle of hair similar to those the child had been coughing up was found on her. Campbell denied all knowledge of it, but it was taken as proof of her guilt.
Agnes Naismith was found and bought to Bargarran House. Christian swooned at the sight of her, but the old beggar-woman stayed silent under questioning. With no evidence other than the child's accusation, she was reluctantly released.
At John Shaw's instigation, a special Commission was appointed to examine the case. Of the eleven members, nine were Renfrewshire lairds, and three were related to the Shaw family. They had the power to detain and question any suspects. Meanwhile Christian's attacks continued as before. The invisible "crew" were still besetting her with blows and scratches, and urging her to kill her baby sister. One day in early February, she caught sight of John Lyndsay of Barloch, one of her father's tenant farmers. She immediately accused him of being one of her tormentors. When told to touch his cloak, she felt pains shooting over her body, then had a fit. Lyndsay was arrested.
Later that day, an old Highland beggar came to the gate asking for alms. Christian overheard him and denounced him as one of the "crew". He was bought before the child and told to touch her hand. - she instantly had a fit. The old Highlander was arrested.
Next to be arrested were Alexander Anderson, already locally notorious for drunkenness and blasphemy, and his 17-year old daughter Elizabeth. Christian had named Alexander as another of the "crew"; Elizabeth Anderson was arrested because she had testified the previous year at a witchcraft inquiry at nearby Inchinnan, naming her own grandmother as a witch.
At the initial questioning before the Commission at Paisley, Elizabeth at first denied everything. Quite soon, however, she broke. Yes, she was a member of the witches' "crew". Yes, they were trying to kill Christian Shaw. Yes, she could supply names. She named six - her father, her great-aunt Margaret Fulton, Agnes Naismith, teenage brothers Thomas and James Lyndsay (no relation to John Lyndsay of Barloch) and the old Highland beggar, whose name she did not know (in common with everyone else, apparently - no name for him was never recorded).
Those not already in custody were rounded up, and the whole party assembled at Bargarron House for the formal sitting of the Commission, who would decide if there were grounds for a witchcraft trial.
All of the suspects were first shown to Christian Shaw and ordered to touch her. The child obligingly went into a fit or a swoon each time. They were then individually questioned. All but one strongly denied the charges against them - Elizabeth Anderson was positively eager to admit her guilt. Describing her life as a witch in some detail, she confirmed Christian's account of the August sabbat gathering in the orchard and alleged that the "crew" was responsible for murders and much general evil-doing. Christian herself was then questioned. She repeated her story ; the Commissioners admired her intelligence and calmness. Asked about a "Margaret" that she had previously mentioned in connection with her tormentors, she replied that she could knew the woman's surname, but could not say it out loud. Asked to write it down, she got as far as "Margaret L...." and then fainted. When she had recovered, one of the clergymen present decided to show the Commissioners just what they were dealing with , and asked Christian to read from a bible. As soon as she saw the open book, the child fell to the floor, lay rigid and sang an unearthly wordless melody that echoed through the house. She stopped as soon as the bible was shut - the Commissioners were suitably impressed. After some days of deliberation and consultation with the Shaws and more clergymen, two of the Commissioners decided to question Elizabeth Anderson again; she was only too happy to talk. For a full day, she described all of the witches' gatherings she had attended, the cursings, the plottings, the murdered babies, the flights through the night-time sky and so forth. She seemed to have an excellent memory for details and easily recalled the names of dozens of co-witches.
As all this testimony poured forth, at least one of the Commissioners expressed some scepticism. Some details of her evidence were inconsistent, he said, and pointed out that many of the people named were half-crazed old beggars who would find it difficult to organise anything, let alone crimes and murders. Additionally, it was extraordinary that a person should be able to recognise so many in the dark of a moonless night in the open, when many of these gatherings allegedly took place.
But the others pointed out that two of the babies claimed by Elizabeth to have been killed by witchcraft had indeed died suddenly from unknown causes. Also, she had named Margaret Lang as a witch, when Christian Shaw had named a Margaret L. as one of her tormentors. Moreover, this Margaret Lang was a midwife, and all the books on witchcraft warned that midwives could be servants of the Devil. The sceptic was overruled and the order given to arrest Lang and her daughter Martha Semple.
The two women did not wait to be arrested. As soon as the local grapevine had bought them word of the accusations against them, they went straight to Bargarran House and indignantly demanded that they be allowed to clear their names. They had every right to be indignant - the two of them were liked and respected by the whole community. Moreover, Margaret Lang was a most pious and good Christian woman, who always carried a bible and traveled many miles a week to attend as many church services as she could. Martha was eighteen and as pious as her mother.
They were shown to Christian, who amazed her parents by behaving perfectly normally. Once the two women were out of sight, however, she had a seizure and announced that she had been prevented from making any accusations by a magical charm that Margaret Lang had dropped in the hallway outside. Sure enough, a small bundle of hair was discovered there.