City of Boston marks November 16 as Goody Glover Day, in honor of Irish servant hanged as a witch in 1688
The City of Boston marks
November 16 as Goody Glover Day in Boston,
in tribute to Goodwife Ann Glover, an Irish women accused of being a witch by
Cotton Mather and other Boston Puritan leaders.
Glover was an Irish indentured servant sent to Barbados by Oliver Cromwell in the
1650s. Her husband died there, and by 1680 she and her daughter were
living in Boston,
employed as housekeepers by John Goodwin. In summer 1688 four of the five
Goodwin children fell ill. The doctor concluded "nothing but a
hellish Witchcraft could be the Origin of these maladies." Martha,
the 13 year old daughter, confirmed the doctor's diagnosis by claiming she
became ill right after she caught Glover stealing laundry.
Glover was arrested and tried as a witch. In the courtroom
there was confusion over Glover's testimony, since she refused to speak
English, despite knowing the language. According to Mather, "the
court could have no answers from her, but in the Irish, which was her native
language." The court convicted Glover of witchcraft and sentenced her to
be hanged on November 16, 1688.
James B. Cullen, author of The Story of the Irish in Boston
(1889) wrote, "she was drawn in a cart, a hated and dreaded figure, chief
in importance, stared at and mocked at, through the principal streets from her
prison to the gallows….The people crowded to see the end, as always; and when
it was over they quietly dispersed, leaving the worn-out body hanging as a
terror to evil-doers."
It is commonly assumed that Glover was hanged at the public
gallows on the Boston Common on the great elm that was destroyed in a storm in
1876. But Cullen reported that Glover was hanged in the South End, on the
site of the South
End Burying Ground on Washington
Street.
On November 16, 1988 Boston City Council proclaimed Goody
Glover Day, and that same year a plaque (photo above) was placed at Our Lady of Victories Church in Boston's South End/Bay
Village neighborhood by the InternationalOrder of Alhambra, a Catholic Men's organization that marks Catholic
landmarks around the world.
An editorial in The Boston Globe, dated November 17, 1988,
noted that a group of academics and a businessman "have formed a committee
to erect a memorial on Boston Common or at the State House, where statues
commemorate Anne Hutchinson and Mary Dyer, who were also victims of religious
intolerance. A memorial to Glover would be a reaffirmation by
today's citizens that bigotry in any form is intolerable. The efforts deserve
support."
For more about Irish heritage in Boston, visit IrishHeritageTrail.com.
For details on Irish cultural activities year round, visit IrishBoston.org.
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