Salem Witchcraft, Volumes I and II eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,075 pages of information about Salem Witchcraft, Volumes I and II.

Salem Witchcraft, Volumes I and II eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,075 pages of information about Salem Witchcraft, Volumes I and II.
it is still held by his children.  Nathaniel Putnam was a deputy to the General Court, and constantly connected with all the interests of the community.  He had great business activity and ability, and was a person of extraordinary powers of mind, of great energy and skill in the management of affairs, and of singular sagacity, acumen, and quickness of perception.  He died July 23, 1700, leaving a numerous family and a large estate.

John Putnam had the same indefatigable activity as Nathaniel.  He was often deputy to the General Court, and accumulated a very great landed property.  He married Rebecca Prince, step-daughter of John Gedney, and died on the 7th of April, 1710.  He was buried with military honors.  He left a large family of sons and daughters.  We shall often meet him in our narrative, and gather the materials, as we go along, to form an opinion of his character.  The earliest rate-list in the parish record book is for 1681.  At that time the three brothers were all living; the aggregate sum assessed upon ninety-four names was two hundred pounds.  The rate of Thomas was L10. 6_s._ 3_d._; that of Nathaniel, L9. 10_s._; that of John, L8.  No other person paid as much as either of them.

These brothers, as well as many others of the large landholders in the village, adopted the practice of giving to their sons and sons-in-law, outright, by deed, good farms, as soon as they became heads of families; so that, as the fathers advanced in life, their own estates were gradually diminished; and, when unable any longer to take an active part in managing their lands, they divided up their whole remaining real estate, making careful contracts with their children for an adequate maintenance, to the extent of their personal wants and comfort.  Joseph Houlton did this:  so did the widow Margery Scruggs, old William Nichols, Francis Nurse, and many others.  In his last years, John Putnam was on the rate-list for five shillings only, while all his sons and daughters were assessed severally in large sums.  In this way they had the satisfaction of making their children independent, and of seeing them take their places among the heads of the community.

Where this practice was followed, there were few quarrels in families over the graves of parents, and controversies seldom arose about the provisions of wills.  In some cases no wills were needed to be made.  It is apparent, that, in many respects, this was a wise and good practice.  It was, moreover, a strictly just one.  As the sons were growing to an adult age, they added, by their labors, to the value of lands,—­inserted a property into them that was truly their own; and their title was duly recognized.  In a new country, land has but little value in itself; the value is imparted by the labor that clears it and prepares it to yield its products.  In 1686, Nathaniel Putnam testified that for more than forty years he had lived in the village, and that in the early part of that time unimproved land brought only a shilling

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Salem Witchcraft, Volumes I and II from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.