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 4 of 6)
So-called vampires do escape the grave in at least one real sense: through stories. Lena Brown’s surviving relatives saved local newspaper clippings in family scrapbooks, alongside carefully copied recipes. They discussed the events on Decoration Day, when Exeter residents adorned the town’s cemeteries.
But the tale traveled much farther than they knew.
Even at the time, New England’s vampire panics struck onlookers as a baffling anachronism. The late 1800s were a period of social progress and scientific flowering. Indeed, many of the Rhode Island exhumations occurred within 20 miles of Newport, high society’s summer nucleus, where the scions of the industrial revolution vacationed. At first, only people who’d lived in or had visited the vampire-ridden communities knew about the scandal: “We seem to have been transported back to the darkest age of unreasoning ignorance and blind superstition, instead of living in the 19th century, and in a State calling itself enlightened and christian,” one writer at a small-town Connecticut paper opined in the wake of an 1854 exhumation.
But Lena Brown’s exhumation made news. First, a reporter from the Providence Journal witnessed her unearthing. Then a well-known anthropologist named George Stetson traveled to Rhode Island to probe “the barbaric superstition” in the surrounding area.
Published in the venerable American Anthropologist journal, Stetson’s account of New England’s vampires made waves throughout the world. Before long, even members of the foreign press were offering various explanations for the phenomenon: Perhaps the “neurotic” modern novel was driving the New England madness, or maybe shrewd local farmers had simply been pulling Stetson’s leg. A writer for the London Post declared that whatever forces drove the “Yankee vampire,” it was an American problem and most certainly not the product of a British folk tradition (even though many families in the area could trace their lineage directly back to England). In the Boston Daily Globe, a writer went so far as to suggest that “perhaps the frequent intermarriage of families in these back country districts may partially account for some of their characteristics.”
One 1896 New York World clipping even found its way into the papers of a London stage manager and aspiring novelist named Bram Stoker, whose theater company was touring the United States that same year. His gothic masterpiece, Dracula, was published in 1897. Some scholars have said that there wasn’t enough time for the news accounts to have influenced the Dracula manuscript. Yet others see Lena in the character of Lucy (her very name a tempting amalgam of “Lena” and “Mercy”), a consumptive-seeming teenage girl turned vampire, who is exhumed in one of the novel’s most memorable scenes. Fascinatingly, a medical doctor presides over Lucy’s disinterment, just as one oversaw Lena’s.
Whether or not Lucy’s roots are in Rhode Island, Lena’s historic exhumation is referenced in H.P. Lovecraft’s “The Shunned House,” a short story about a man being haunted by dead relatives that includes a living character named Mercy.
And, through fiction and fact, Lena’s narrative continues today.
Part of Bell’s research involves going along on “legend trips,” the modern graveside pilgrimages made by those who believe, or want to believe, that the undead stalk Rhode Island. On legend trips, Bell is largely an academic presence. He can even be a bit of a killjoy, declaring that the main reason that “no grass grows on a vampire’s grave” is that vampire graves have so many visitors, who crush all the vegetation.
Two days before Halloween, Bell and I head through forests of swamp maple and swamp oak to Exeter. For almost a century after Lena died, the town, still sparsely settled, remained remarkably unchanged. Electric lights weren’t installed in the western part of Exeter until the 1940s, and the town had two pound keepers, charged with safekeeping stray cattle and pigs, until 1957. In the 1970s, when I-95 was built, Exeter evolved into an affluent bedroom community of Providence. But visitors still occasionally turn a corner to discover the past: a dirt road cluttered with wild turkeys, or deer hopping over stone fences. Some elderly locals square-dance in barns on the weekends, and streets keep their old names: Sodom Trail, Nooseneck Hill. The white wooden Chestnut Hill Baptist Church in front of Lena’s cemetery, built in 1838, has its original blown-glass windows.
An early Nor’easter is brewing as we pull into the church parking lot. The heavy rain will soon turn to snow, and there’s a bullying wind. Our umbrellas bloom inside out, like black flowers. Though it’s a somber place, there’s no immediate clue that an accused vampire was buried here. (Except, perhaps, for an unfortunately timed Red Cross blood drive sign in front of the farmer’s grange next door.) Unlike Salem, Exeter doesn’t promote its dark claim to fame, and remains in some respects an insular community. Old-timers don’t like the hooded figures who turn up this time of year, or the cars idling with the lights off. They say the legend should be left alone, perhaps with good reason: Last summer a couple of teenagers were killed on a pilgrimage to Lena’s grave when they lost control of their car on Purgatory Road.
Most vampire graves stand apart, in wooded spots outside modern cemetery fences, where snow melts slower and there’s a thick understory of ferns. But the Chestnut Hill Cemetery is still in use. And here is Lena. She lies beside the brother who ate her heart, and the father who let it happen. Other markers are freckled with lichen, but not hers. The stone looks to have been recently cleaned. It has been stolen over the years, and now an iron strap anchors it to the earth. People have scratched their names into the granite. They leave offerings: plastic vampire teeth, cough drops. “Once there was a note that said, ‘You go, girl,’” Bell says. Today, there’s a bunch of trampled daisies, and dangling from the headstone’s iron collar, a butterfly charm on a chain.
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Comments (32)
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Vampires are not real. At least not 'original' ones. If vampires were real, they would be afraid of the Lord God and crosses. They would be afraid because they are evil. Anyone who thinks that they can suck other peoples blood is not only sick, but also possibly possessed. There is NO such thing as the undead and if you think that you are a vampire, i am saying this for your safty."Get help."I hope that this helps anyone who is confused about the subject of vampires.
Posted by fangtooth on March 21,2013 | 08:37 PM
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
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