[On March 1st,
1692, authorities in Salem, MA questioned Sarah Good, Sarah Osborne, and
the slave known as Tituba over allegations of witchcraft, the first event in
what would become the
Salem Witch Trials. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy a handful of Salem
Witch Trials contexts and legacies.]
On the three generations that embody the first Anglo American century.
For much of 1633, and again in 1634, London clergyman Richard Mather was suspended
for failing to conform to the Anglican Church’s strict regulations for
preachers. Wearying of that climate of orthodoxy, and encouraged by colleagues
already in the New World (including John Cotton), Mather and his young
family took ship for Massachusetts in June 1635. Once there, Mather became an
impassioned advocate for New World Puritanism
in its debates with the European branch, as in his tract Church Government
and Church Covenant Discussed. Four of his six
sons followed Mather into the ministry, establishing his name as one of the
colony’s most powerful clerical—which is to say also political and
social—forces and legacies.
The youngest of those sons, Increase Mather, certainly illustrated
the potency of that expanding family legacy, not only in his own ecclesiastical
efforts, but also and more tellingly in his multiple other roles: as a president of Harvard College, a recipient of
the new world’s first honorary doctorate, an advocate for reinstating the Massachusetts Charter in opposition to the Dominion of New England, a son-in-law of John Cotton,
and a contemporary historian of King Philip’s War, among others. If that war indicated one way in which
Richard’s idealized Massachusetts was crumbling by the end of the 17th
century, Increase was also and more centrally connected to a second such
fissure: the Salem Witch Trials. By that time one of the region’s most prominent and powerful figures,
Increase had the ability to stop the trials if any individual did; but despite
doubts, about which he did write publicly, he mostly sided with his fellow powerful ministers and
judges.
I’ve written elsewhere about the two sides of Increase’s son Cotton Mather: his own failure to publicly oppose the Witch Trials and indeed his book that
seemed to support the need for them, despite even stronger private reservations than Increase’s; and yet his impressive and influential advocacy for smallpox
inoculation. It’s fair to say, then,
that this third-generation Mather minister, named after both of his influential
grandfathers, exemplified both the worst and best of the family’s legacies: the
kinds of hierarchical power structures that could close ranks around the Witch
Trial judges; and yet the kinds of innovative and bold efforts that led the
Puritans to Massachusetts in the first place, and helped create the new world
and nation of which they were such a significant part.
Last Witch
Trials context tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?