The Great New England Vampire Panic
Two hundred years after the Salem witch trials, farmers became convinced that their relatives were returning from the grave to feed on the living
- By Abigail Tucker
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2012, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 6)
Mercy Lena Brown lived in Exeter, Rhode Island—“Deserted Exeter,” it was dubbed, or simply “one of the border towns.” It was largely a subsistence farming community with barely fertile soil: “rocks, rocks and more rocks,” says Sheila Reynolds-Boothroyd, president of the Exeter Historical Association. Farmers heaped stones into tumbledown walls, and rows of corn swerved around the biggest boulders.
In the late 19th century, Exeter, like much of agrarian New England, was even more sparsely populated than usual. Civil War casualties had taken their toll on the community, and the new railroads and the promise of richer land to the west lured young men away. By 1892, the year Lena died, Exeter’s population had dipped to just 961, from a high of more than 2,500 in 1820. Farms were abandoned, many of them later to be seized and burned by the government. “Some sections looked like a ghost town,” Reynolds-Boothroyd says.
And tuberculosis was harrying the remaining families. “Consumption,” as it was called, had started to plague New England in the 1730s, a few decades before the first known vampire scares. By the 1800s, when the scares were at their height, the disease was the leading cause of mortality throughout the Northeast, responsible for almost a quarter of all deaths. It was a terrible end, often drawn out over years: a skyrocketing fever, a hacking, bloody cough and a visible wasting away of the body. “The emaciated figure strikes one with terror,” reads one 18th-century description, “the forehead covered with drops of sweat; the cheeks painted with a livid crimson, the eyes sunk...the breath offensive, quick and laborious, and the cough so incessant as to scarce allow the wretched sufferer time to tell his complaints.” Indeed, Bell says, symptoms “progressed in such a way that it seemed like something was draining the life and blood out of somebody.”
People dreaded the disease without understanding it. Though Robert Koch had identified the tuberculosis bacterium in 1882, news of the discovery did not penetrate rural areas for some time, and even if it had, drug treatments wouldn’t become available until the 1940s. The year Lena died, one physician blamed tuberculosis on “drunkenness, and want among the poor.” Nineteenth-century cures included drinking brown sugar dissolved in water and frequent horseback riding. “If they were being honest,” Bell says, “the medical establishment would have said, ‘There’s nothing we can do, and it’s in the hands of God.’”
The Brown family, living on the eastern edge of town, probably on a modest homestead of 30 or 40 stony acres, began to succumb to the disease in December 1882. Lena’s mother, Mary Eliza, was the first. Lena’s sister, Mary Olive, a 20-year-old dressmaker, died the next year. A tender obituary from a local newspaper hints at what she endured: “The last few hours she lived was of great suffering, yet her faith was firm and she was ready for the change.” The whole town turned out for her funeral, and sang “One Sweetly Solemn Thought,” a hymn that Mary Olive herself had selected.
Within a few years, Lena’s brother Edwin—a store clerk whom one newspaper columnist described as “a big, husky young man”—sickened too, and left for Colorado Springs hoping that the climate would improve his health.
Lena, who was just a child when her mother and sister died, didn’t fall ill until nearly a decade after they were buried. Her tuberculosis was the “galloping” kind, which meant that she might have been infected but remained asymptomatic for years, only to fade fast after showing the first signs of the disease. A doctor attended her in “her last illness,” a newspaper said, and “informed her father that further medical aid was useless.” Her January 1892 obituary was much terser than her sister’s: “Miss Lena Brown, who has been suffering from consumption, died Sunday morning.”
As Lena was on her deathbed, her brother was, after a brief remission, taking a turn for the worse. Edwin had returned to Exeter from the Colorado resorts “in a dying condition,” according to one account. “If the good wishes and prayers of his many friends could be realized, friend Eddie would speedily be restored to perfect health,” another newspaper wrote.
But some neighbors, likely fearful for their own health, weren’t content with prayers. Several approached George Brown, the children’s father, and offered an alternative take on the recent tragedies: Perhaps an unseen diabolical force was preying on his family. It could be that one of the three Brown women wasn’t dead after all, instead secretly feasting “on the living tissue and blood of Edwin,” as the Providence Journal later summarized. If the offending corpse—the Journal uses the term “vampire” in some stories but the locals seemed not to—was discovered and destroyed, then Edwin would recover. The neighbors asked to exhume the bodies, in order to check for fresh blood in their hearts.
George Brown gave permission. On the morning of March 17, 1892, a party of men dug up the bodies, as the family doctor and a Journal correspondent looked on. George was absent, for unstated but understandable reasons.
After nearly a decade, Lena’s sister and mother were barely more than bones. Lena, though, had been dead only a few months, and it was wintertime. “The body was in a fairly well-preserved state,” the correspondent later wrote. “The heart and liver were removed, and in cutting open the heart, clotted and decomposed blood was found.” During this impromptu autopsy, the doctor again emphasized that Lena’s lungs “showed diffuse tuberculous germs.”
Undeterred, the villagers burned her heart and liver on a nearby rock, feeding Edwin the ashes. He died less than two months later.
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Comments (31)
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vampires do exist. there are cults around New York and other major cities. while they aren't affected by sunlight, they still partake in the drinking of blood.
Posted by J on January 25,2013 | 10:17 PM
VERY HELPFULL INFORMATION, THANK YOU.
Posted by ROACHESGIRL56@GMAIL.COM on January 21,2013 | 06:07 PM
Do really vampires exist? i think they do cuz may b there r in the dark vampires really exist in dark they need to live in dark places to avoid sunlight cuz sunlight hurts them......
Posted by Kanwal on January 18,2013 | 11:31 AM
i am love with vampires but your translation
Posted by a vampire on January 11,2013 | 04:11 AM
Vampires are cool species
Posted by varia on January 7,2013 | 02:40 AM
The real art by god. Amaging power and mind.
Posted by on January 7,2013 | 06:09 AM
From where the tale arose something true or not
Posted by Leo the hunter on January 1,2013 | 02:47 AM
If vampires are real were would they be today
Posted by Max on December 28,2012 | 12:37 PM
i think vampires are real because there are many people around where i live claim to see them
Posted by michelle h on December 24,2012 | 04:29 AM
is this a true espically believe in vampire but i am little bit confuesd.
Posted by chringdoma sherpa on December 21,2012 | 02:04 AM
i need more in the bit that it sais what they are and things about them!
Posted by ryleigh on December 20,2012 | 07:27 AM
Are vampires real ? I mean not like movies & books but are they real ?
Posted by Ash on December 18,2012 | 11:58 PM
You think we are to blame? If you had just not have been so interested in us then you would have not disturbed us. Can't you think about other people's feelings and understand how we feel. We aren't bad people, it's juts that we have a bad habit of feeding off of people. The crazy thing is that you really think we ate afraid of The Lord god well let me tell you that we are not afraid of crosses, we can go in any type of water, and most of us go to church. Please help us be spreading good things about us, not bad things. This is what I have to say for all of us "monsters" or also known as humans have to say. Thank you for understanding, I hope. Sincerely, your mysterious friend the vampire daughter Angelina
Posted by Ally on November 11,2012 | 01:27 AM
The Griswold, Conn. discovery back in 1990 was very interesting. It is one of the very few tangible examples of this ritual being carried out; the man's name who's bones were found was never conclusively identified except for a "J B-55" in tacks on the coffin lid. He died sometime about 1820 and within a few years he was dug up and the bones rearranged as they were later found. None of the other remains were disturbed, though JB's was found in a makeshift vault of sorts, made of field stone with three large stone slabs covering the whole, it being unique to the area and fueled much speculation as to who he was.
Posted by A Ballard on November 8,2012 | 10:51 AM
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