Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Gun Loaded For a Witch

1905

Charge Consisted of Shillings, Wadded With Bible Leaves

Nicholas Vedderman, a retired farmer of Angora, has come into possession of what he believes is a relic of the days when superstition and belief in witchcraft was general.

This is an old flintlock musket which contained a charge evidently prepared for the execution of a witch. Vedderman, who devotes his time to the collection of curios, purchased the musket, at an auction sale held in an old farmhouse recently. From its appearance the weapon antedated the revolutionary war, and when found was in a deplorable state of rust.

In cleaning it Vedderman discovered that there was a charge in the gun, and this he carefully withdrew. To his surprise, he found instead of bullets two silver shillings, dated 1781, tightly wadded with leaves from a Bible of ancient print. Beneath the shilling was a small lock of hair and a piece of paper containing an illegible quotation. The gunpowder was coarse and undoubtedly of colonial manufacture.

Vedderman, who has made a study of such things, says it was by firing such charmed charges that the superstitious believed they could scare off witches. — Philadelphia Record.

Note: In this little tiny article, the original manages to have the guy's name spelled three different ways. Vadderman (1), Vedderman (2), and Yedderman (1).

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