Jonathan CLASON

Male 1656 - 1685  (29 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Jonathan CLASON was born on 11 Feb 1655/6 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., Connecticut (son of Stephen CLASON and Elizabeth PEREMENT); died on 10 Apr 1685 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., Connecticut.

    Jonathan married Sarah ROBERTS on 16 Dec 1680 in Stamford, Fairfield, Connecticut, USA. Sarah was born on 04 Sep 1661 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., Connecticut; died on 30 Jun 1684 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., Connecticut. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Stephen CLASON was born on 2 Dec 1681; died in Apr 1746.
    2. Sarah CLASON was born about Oct 1683.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Stephen CLASON was born about 1630; died in Mar 1698/9 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., Connecticut.

    Stephen married Elizabeth PEREMENT on 11 Jan 1654/5 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., Connecticut. Elizabeth was born about 1631; died on 10 May 1714 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., Connecticut. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Elizabeth PEREMENT was born about 1631; died on 10 May 1714 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., Connecticut.

    Notes:

    Name:

    Elizabeth (Perement) Clason of Stamford, Connecticut, Who Was Tried for Witchcraft, and her Clason Descendants
    Harlan R. Jessup

    In 1692, at the same time as the witchcraft hysteria in Salem, Massachusetts, Elizabeth Clason and Mercy Disborough were tried as witches at the county seat in Fairfield, Connecticut. The case against Elizabeth has been well documented and is briefly summarized in this article. In a booklet dated 1959, which does not mention the case, Robert W. Carder1 summarized the Clason descendants of Elizabeth and her husband Stephen Clason of Stamford. That family summary, somewhat amended, follows the trial summary.

    The Witchcraft Trial of Elizabeth Clason

    Katherine Branch, a seventeen-year-old servant of the Clasons?s neighbors Daniel and Abigail Wescot, was subject to convulsive and paralytic seizures, and in the aftermath of several of these she accused Elizabeth, along with Mercy Disborough and several others, of bewitching her. Elizabeth vigorously denied the accusation but acknowledged there had been an ongoing tension between her and Katherine?s mistress, arising from a dispute over the weight of a quantity of spun flax. On another earlier occasion Elizabeth had chastised Mary Newman whose children had stolen some fruit from the Clason orchard. That evening three of the Newman?s sheep had died, and, finding no other cause, some believed them to have been bewitched. In May of 1692 a Court of Inquiry began hearings in Stamford

    "Upon ye Information & sorrofull complainte of Serjeant Daniel Wescot in Regard of his maide Servant Katherine Branch whom he suspects to be afflicted pr witchcraft."

    While hearings continued, Elizabeth Clason and Mercy Disborough were held in the county jail at Fairfield until the October conclusion of the trial. In June both Elizabeth and Mercy were put to the water test, being bound hand and foot and pushed into a deep pond or millrace where the guilty were expected to float because of the devil?s aversion to water. This test was already being discredited by New England cleric Increase Mather and by others. Elizabeth being

    "bownd head & foote & put into the water she swam like a corck & one laboured to pry her into the water & she boyed up like a corck..."

    On 4 Jun 1692, in Elizabeth?s defense, some seventy-six of her neighbors and friends signed a petition assuring the court that


    "...we have not known her to be of a contentious frame nor giuen to use threatening words or to act maliciously towards her neighbors but hath bene siuil and orderly...and not to be a busybody..."

    The special court, headed by Governor Robert Treat, was convened in Fairfield on 14 Sep 1692, and their formal indictment reads in part:

    "Elizabeth Clawson is complayned of & accused as Guilty of witchcraft...for that on the 25th of Aprill ...& at sundry other times she hath by the Instigation & help of the divell...afflicted & don harme to the bodye & estates of sundry of [their Majesties?] subjects..."

    The court heard evidence for several days, but after long deliberation the jury was unable to reach a conclusion in either case. The court reconvened on 28 October and, after additional testimony and further examination for ?witchmarks,? the jury found Elizabeth not guilty and she was freed, returning to her family in Stamford where she lived another 22 years to age 83. The jury found Mercy Disborough guilty and maintained this conclusion even after reconsideration. Apparently alarmed by the possibility of an execution, Governor Treat appointed a special committee, which reported in May 1693 that they had reprieved Mercy Disborough. Their report admonished against further such trials stating that

    "...the miserable toyl they are in in the Bay [Massachusetts] for Adhereing to those last mentioned Litigious things is warning enof, those that wil make witchcraft of such things wil make hanging work apace...."

    Children:
    1. 1. Jonathan CLASON was born on 11 Feb 1655/6 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., Connecticut; died on 10 Apr 1685 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., Connecticut.
    2. Stephen CLASON was born on 17 Feb 1657/8 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., Connecticut.
    3. Rebecca CLASON was born on 01 Mar 1659/60 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., Connecticut; died before 15 Mar 1700.
    4. David CLASON was born on 18 May 1662 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., Connecticut; died on 29 Mar 1721 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., Connecticut.
    5. Elizabeth CLASON was born about 1665; died after 1728.
    6. Samuel CLAWSON was born about 1670 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., Connecticut; died on 06 May 1723 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., Connecticut.