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
Children playing near a hillside gravel mine found the first graves. One ran home to tell his mother, who was skeptical at first—until the boy produced a skull.
Because this was Griswold, Connecticut, in 1990, police initially thought the burials might be the work of a local serial killer named Michael Ross, and they taped off the area as a crime scene. But the brown, decaying bones turned out to be more than a century old. The Connecticut state archaeologist, Nick Bellantoni, soon determined that the hillside contained a colonial-era farm cemetery. New England is full of such unmarked family plots, and the 29 burials were typical of the 1700s and early 1800s: The dead, many of them children, were laid to rest in thrifty Yankee style, in simple wood coffins, without jewelry or even much clothing, their arms resting by their sides or crossed over their chests.
Except, that is, for Burial Number 4.
Bellantoni was interested in the grave even before the excavation began. It was one of only two stone crypts in the cemetery, and it was partially visible from the mine face.
Scraping away soil with flat-edged shovels, and then brushes and bamboo picks, the archaeologist and his team worked through several feet of earth before reaching the top of the crypt. When Bellantoni lifted the first of the large, flat rocks that formed the roof, he uncovered the remains of a red-painted coffin and a pair of skeletal feet. They lay, he remembers, “in perfect anatomical position.” But when he raised the next stone, Bellantoni saw that the rest of the individual “had been completely...rearranged.” The skeleton had been beheaded; skull and thighbones rested atop the ribs and vertebrae. “It looked like a skull-and-crossbones motif, a Jolly Roger. I’d never seen anything like it,” Bellantoni recalls.
Subsequent analysis showed that the beheading, along with other injuries, including rib fractures, occurred roughly five years after death. Somebody had also smashed the coffin.
The other skeletons in the gravel hillside were packaged for reburial, but not “J.B.,” as the 50ish male skeleton from the 1830s came to be called, because of the initials spelled out in brass tacks on his coffin lid. He was shipped to the National Museum of Health and Medicine, in Washington, D.C., for further study. Meanwhile, Bellantoni started networking. He invited archaeologists and historians to tour the excavation, soliciting theories. Simple vandalism seemed unlikely, as did robbery, because of the lack of valuables at the site.
Finally, one colleague asked: “Ever heard of the Jewett City vampires?”
In 1854, in neighboring Jewett City, Connecticut, townspeople had exhumed several corpses suspected to be vampires that were rising from their graves to kill the living. A few newspaper accounts of these events survived. Had the Griswold grave been desecrated for the same reason?
In the course of his far-flung research, Bellantoni placed a serendipitous phone call to Michael Bell, a Rhode Island folklorist, who had devoted much of the previous decade to studying New England vampire exhumations. The Griswold case occurred at roughly the same time as the other incidents Bell had investigated. And the setting was right: Griswold was rural, agrarian and bordering southern Rhode Island, where multiple exhumations had occurred. Many of the other “vampires,” like J.B., had been disinterred, grotesquely tampered with and reburied.
In light of the tales Bell told of violated corpses, even the posthumous rib fractures began to make sense. J.B.’s accusers had likely rummaged around in his chest cavity, hoping to remove, and perhaps to burn, his heart.
***
Headquartered in a charming old schoolhouse, the Middletown Historical Society typically promotes such fortifying topics as Rhode Island gristmill restoration and Stone Wall Appreciation Day. Two nights before Halloween, though, the atmosphere is full of dry ice vapors and high silliness. Fake cobwebs cover the exhibits, warty gourds crowd the shelves and a skeleton with keen red eyes cackles in the corner. “We’ll turn him off when you start talking,” the society’s president assures Michael Bell, who is readying his slide show.
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Comments (31)
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
I am a resident of West Greenwich, RI. My mother's family has lived here for over two hundred years. The locals resent any interest in the Browns, and we would appreciate no further publicity. Would you want strangers mucking through the cemetery where your dear ones were buried?
Posted by Heather Knight on November 2,2012 | 09:59 PM
I do not see any comments concerning "sparkly vampires" there "Sanity" Inspector. Even if there were such a post who are you to speak for the readership? You are best off remaining quite and quit trying to be everyone's daddy and quit trying to kiss up to the moderators.
Posted by Mitchell F. on October 26,2012 | 10:08 PM
I think the author of "The Great Vampire Panic" would be interested in my family history regarding warlocks (or however you spell it). I do not know what is the purported relationship between warlocks and vampires. Seems to me they occupy a similar space in our consciousness. But I do know the following. And believe me, you can't make up this stuff. I earned my M.A. at Indiana University, Bloomington, IN in Tibetan language, with minors in Old Turkic, Mongolian and Sanskrit, 1977. While taking a Mongolian language course in 1972, a classmate named Prof. Lee from France was in our class. He came to learn Mongolian language. At that time, our dept. was one of the best in the USA for Mongolian language instruction. Prof. Lee and I talked from time to time. He was a Russian language professor in France. That means he also knows the old forms of the Cyrillic language, its predecessors, and so on. I told him my Dad's original last name was Warcholak. My father changed it to Watson when he was in college due to the rascism against so-called "Hungarians" when the Hungarian revolution drove many people to America. They were derided as "hunkies" because they took jobs that folks already here wanted instead. My Dad was raised in Ford City, PA, a town on the Allegheny river where lots of industrial factories were located with lots of jobs. Prof. Lee looked up our last name in an ancient "dictionary" he owned. The dictionary was published around the 13th century. In it, a warcholak is defined as a supernatural being. We figured out that word came into the English language as "warlock", having dropped the middle palatal syllable since such a sound doesn't exist in English. That makes our family the warlock family. Dad's family was likely centered in Transylvania, in the southern Carpathian Mts. There you have it. Like I said at the beginning, you can't make up this stuff!
Posted by Craig Watson on October 26,2012 | 05:48 PM
That was an amazing article on American vampire folklore. I had no idea. Traditional New England grave markers being both an avocation and vocation of mine, I feel compelled to make a couple of corrections. Mrs. Tucker writes of the carving on slate stones, “fading away” with time, but this is inaccurate. Slate holds up better than anything else out there and such stones cut 250 years ago or more still show the crisp, individual chisel marks left on the day they were carved. It is marble (the same stone that poor Mercy Brown’s stone was cut from. Opposed to granite, as was stated in the article) that has seen such rapid and catastrophic deterioration over the last few decades. Sadly, we will loose the history of a hundred years of burials in this lifetime because of marble. Some of what I’ve done in fact has been replacing illegible marble markers with hand cut slate.
Posted by Yankee Slate Cutting on October 25,2012 | 08:11 PM
Agree with Thoreau ~ "The savage in man is never quite eradicated..." Both this article and the Unmasking Thomas Jefferson article show that vampires, body snatchers and zombies do exist. The look like regular people and behave like regular people until some perceived ecstasy of need. Then they do really nasty things. I can only think that eating his sister's exhumed, then incinerated heart and liver hastened Edwin's end. A modern day parallel to this is routine infant circumcision.
Posted by Jerry Norton on October 14,2012 | 12:26 AM
Matt, thanks for the post about Thoreau. The article inaccurately refers to Thoreau's Journal of Sept 29, not Sept 26. But I appreciate your finding the correct reference. However, the article implies that "exhumations = vampires." Thoreau's account is of exhumation and burning in order to eradicate the spread of disease, in this case, tuberculosis. He says this quite clearly.
Posted by on October 14,2012 | 03:54 PM
Out of curiosity, I checked Thoreau's Journal entry of September 29, 1859. I find no reference to exhumations. I would appreciate a clarification of where this reference is made.
Posted by Renee Barrick on October 6,2012 | 11:48 AM
Hello Matt, I read this article in the Smithsonian magazine and thought of you and your excellent summer course. Hope your move is going well. Emily Howard
Posted by gunterman@gmail.com on October 4,2012 | 02:56 PM
The reference by Thoreau to exhumation as an example of contemporary superstition may be found in his journals on September 26, 1859. "The savage in man is never quite eradicated. I have just read of a family in Vermont--who, several of its members having died of consumption, just burned the lungs & heart & liver of the last deceased, in order to prevent any more from having it." http://thoreau.library.ucsb.edu/writings_journals_pdfs/J15f4-f6.pdf
Posted by Doug Henning on October 1,2012 | 11:13 AM
Interesting! I hope that everyone's Sunday is going great and safe!
Posted by Mike on September 30,2012 | 03:25 PM
Yes, there is a photo, it's part of The Quilt Index: http://www.quiltindex.org/fulldisplay.php?kid=4D-85-35
Posted by Casey on September 29,2012 | 06:35 PM
"Simple vandalism seemed unlikely, as did robbery, because of the lack of valuables at the site." Wouldn't 'no valuables at the site' be the end result of robbery? That doesn't mean it happened, of course, but it seems a nonsensical reason to rule it out.
Posted by Laura on September 29,2012 | 07:27 AM
I have Thoreau's Journal for 1859 and there's absolutely no mention of any exhumation--nor for any other day in Sept., 1859.
Posted by on September 27,2012 | 08:10 PM
Dear mods, please do the readership a favor and block in advance any comments about sparkly vampires.
Posted by The Sanity Inspector on September 27,2012 | 02:41 PM
Are there photos of the quilt mentioned in the article?
Posted by Amy Wilson on September 25,2012 | 12:49 PM
I was hoping that the additional material contained references for the exhumations in the 17 Century as a result of or related to vampirism. Minnesota is cited as a site of this activity. I would love to know more. With the exception of random adventurers and French "Canadians", there weren't a whole lot of European based folks out here in the 1700's. While not expert in the burial customs of the Native Peoples who were out here in the 1700's, I wonder who would be conducting such exhumations. Thanks.
Posted by patricia turbes-mohs on September 24,2012 | 09:18 PM