Salem Witch Trials in History and Literature
An Undergraduate Course, University of Virginia
Spring Semester 2001
Rev. Francis Dane was born around 1615 in England and died on February
16, 1697 at the age of eighty-one in Andover, Massachusetts. He is the
son of John Dane, who settled in both Ipswich and Roxbury. Dane's name
is found among the early residents of Ipswich in 1641, and according
to Joseph Felt's History of Ipswich, Dane moved to Andover in
1648. Dane became the second pastor of the North Parish in 1649. He
remained in this position for forty-eight years until his death in 1697.
In regard to his education, Rev. Cotton Mather lists Dane as one of
the young men who finished his studies in the Colony before Harvard
College conferred degrees. In addition to his ministry, Dane founded
school for Andover youth. Dane had two sons, Nathaniel and Francis,
and four daughters, Elizabeth (Johnson), Hannah (Goodhue), Phebe (Robinson),
and Abigail (Faulkner). He himself was married three times: Elizabeth
Ingals (pre 1645-1676), Mary Thomas (1677-1689), and Hannah Abbot (1690-his
death 1697).
Abiel Abbot's History of Andover notes that there is no record
of any discord between Dane and his congregation from 1649 to 1680,
although historian Sarah L. Bailey calls the reality of such a situation
into question in her Historical Sketches of Andover. Whether
flawless or not, it is evident that Dane was a highly respected and
powerful member of the Andover community, comparable only to Dudley
Bradstreet, former Governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Around
1680, church members began to complain about the capabilities of Dane
and requested a younger, more vibrant minister for their church. In
January of 1682, the congregation called the young Rev. Thomas Barnard,
a recent graduate of Harvard and protege of Cotton Mather. Soon thereafter,
the congregation stopped paying Dane's salary and gave Barnard a full
salary. Dane petitioned the General Court in Boston, and the Andover
church was required to pay Dane thirty pounds a year to share pastoral
duties with Barnard. The church decided to pay Barnard fifty pounds
a year, which much less than Barnard expected, with the stipulation
that when Dane retired or died, Barnard would receive the full eighty
pounds annual salary.
Andover church politics were fairly stagnate for the next ten years,
although it appears that the tension between Dane and Barnard was evident
throughout this time. In 1692, however, things started to heat up when
the witch hunt broke out in near by Salem Village. By August, the hunt
had stretched to Andover with an invitation to two of the Salem accusers
to come and find witches in Andover. Rev. Barnard did much to facilitate
the witch hunt, holding prayer meetings in the church that resulted
in "touch tests" where the accusers could simply touch community members
who were then accused of witchery. Rev. Dane refused to take part in
the witch hunt from the outset, and perhaps because of this as well
as the tension between Dane, Bradstreet, and Barnard, more members of
Dane's family were accused than any other single family in the entire
episode. In addition to Dane's extended family, two of Dane's daughters,
his daughter in law, and five of his grandchildren were accused.
Upham writes, "The Rev. Francis Dane deserves to be recognized preeminent
and for a time almost alone in bold denunciation and courageous resistance
of the expiable proceedings of that dark day." Dane was the driving
force behind ending the trials in Andover. He first arranged for the
Andover children to be let out of jail on bond in October 1692. Husbands,
brothers, and fathers of the accused witches then joined Dane in petitioning
the General Court for the release of the Andover women on the grounds
that they were needed at home and with the coming of winter would not
fare well in the prisons. On October 18, 1692, Dane wrote a petition
addressing what he believed to be the forced and false confessions of
guilt made by women during the frenzy of the "touch test," in order
to save themselves from trial and possible execution. Dane writes that
there was, "reason to think that the extreme urgency that was used with
some of them by their friends and others who privately examined them,
and the fear they were then under, hath been an inducement to them to
admit such things." This was the first attempt to explain the confessions
of those who had been accused. Dane also wrote letters to the courts
and his fellow ministers condemning spectral evidence using such strong
language as, "I believe the reports have been scandalous and unjust,
neither will bear y light." Slander charges filed by Dane and members
of his family, particularly Abigail Dane Faulkner, did much to deter
a resurgence of accusations in Andover as well.
Local historian Enders Robinson in his book Salem Witchcraft
concluded from the above facts that the Andover incident was a direct
conspiracy of Barnard against Dane. Although this theory cannot be proven,
and Dane was responsible for halting the Andover proceedings, Robinson
makes an unfounded assumption. Barnard was highly respected and had
studied with Cotton Mather at Harvard. Mather was one of the top proponents
of the trials and the necessity of purging the colony of witches. Barnard
was not the only minister at the time to be lured to Mather's convincing
theological arguments. In Barnard's mind, promoting the witch trials
could very well have been the best thing he could do for his congregation.
One must also note that as Dane's resistance movement gained momentum,
Barnard sided with Dane over the courts. Robinson believes this to be
indicative of Barnard's manipulative nature. Although this is possible,
there is no evidence for Barnard's motive in changing sides on the witchcraft
issue. Regardless of the social motives behind what occurred in Andover
in 1692, Dane immerged as a fearless and effective leader. He suffered
under the accusations of numerous members of his family, yet found the
strength to guide an entire community through an irrationality that
could have lead to many more innocent deaths had he not taken such an
outspoken, controversial, and admirable stand.
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Bibliography
Abiel Abbott, History of Andover from its Settlement to 1829,
1829.
Sarah Loring Bailey, Historical Sketches of Andover, 1880.
Joseph B. Felt, The Annals of Salem, 1827.
--------, History of Ipswich, Essex and Hamilton, 1834.
Enders A. Robinson, Salem Witchcraft, 1992.
Charles W. Upham, Salem Witchcraft, 1867.
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