1943: 186 prisoners at Plotzensee Prison 1990: Samuel K. Doe

September 8th, 2008 Headsman

On this date in 1642, a teenager was hanged in the Plymouth colony for bestiality — in accordance with the law of the Pentateuch.

William Bradford — we just met him, trying to keep things cool with the Indians — relates the “very sadde accidente of the like foule nature in this govermente”:

Ther was a youth whose name was Thomas Granger; he was servant to an honest man of Duxbery, being aboute 16 or 17 years of age. (His father and mother lived at the same time at Sityate.) He was this year detected of buggery (and indicted for the same) with a mare, a cowe, tow goats, five sheep, 2 calves, and a turkey. Horrible it is to mention, but the truth of the historie requires it. He was first discovered by one that accidentally saw his lewd practise towards the mare. (I forbear perticulers.) Being upon it examined and committed, in the end he not only confest the fact with that beast at that time, but sundrie times before, and at severall times with all the rest of the forenamed in his indictmente; and this his free-confession was not only in private to the magistrates, (though at first he strived to deney it,) but to sundrie, both ministers and others, and afterwards, upon his indictemente, to the whole court and jury; and confirmed it at his execution. And whereas some of the sheep could not so well be knowne by his description of them, others with them were brought before him, and he declared which were they, and which were not. And accordingly he was cast by the jury, and condemned, and after executed about the 8 of Sept 1642. A very sade spectakle it was; for first the mare, and then the cowe, and the rest of the lesser catle, were kild before his face, according to the law, Levit: 20.15 and then he him selfe was executed.* The catle were all cast into a great and large pitte that was digged of purposs for them, and no use made of any part of them.

So, pilgrims: weird about sex, a bit rough with the punishment. No wonder they got a rep.

Granger is the first juvenile known to be executed in the territory of the modern United States — if you like, you could read it as the start of a pattern, even though almost a century would pass before the next such execution. “Juvenile” is a relative term, of course, since we see our day’s victim across a historical redefinition (arguably, outright creation) of “childhood” in the centuries to come: Granger left a wife and daughter.

“Sodomy, rapes, buggery,” were one of the five classes of crimes punishable by death according to the Plymouth Colony’s 1636 statutes. Still, Granger’s is the only one of ten recorded Plymouth Colony executions not imposed for murder (Source, via.) — not that other hot-blooded Puritans, including later zoophiles, didn’t get themselves into hot water.

American poet Charles Olson reimagined Thomas Granger in the 1940’s by remixing William Bradford’s narrative into a startlingly poignant piece, “There was a Youth whose Name was Thomas Granger”:

From the beginning, SIN

and the reason, note, known from the start says Mr. Bradford: As it is with waters when

their streames are stopped or damed up, wickednes (Morton, Morton, Morton)

here by strict laws as in no more,

or so much, that I have known or heard of,

and ye same nerly looked unto

(Tom Granger)

so, as it cannot rune in a comone road of liberty

as it would, and is inclined, it searches every wher (everywhere)

and breaks out wher it getts vente, says he Rest, Tom, in your pit where they put you

a great & large pitte digged of purposs for them

of Duxbery, servant, being aboute 16. or 17. years of age

his father & mother living at the time at Sityate espetially drunkennes & unclainnes

incontinencie betweene persons unmaried

but some maried persons allso

And that which is worse

(things fearfull to name) HAVE BROAK FORTH OFTENER THAN ONCE

IN THIS LAND 2

indicated for ye same) with

a mare, a cowe, tow goats, five sheep, 2. calves

and a turkey (Plymouth Plantation) Now follows ye ministers answers 3

Mr Charles Channcys a reverend, godly, very larned man

who shortly thereafter, due to a difference aboute baptising

he holding it ought only to be by diping

that sprinkling was unlawful, removed him selfe

to the same Sityate, a minister to ye church ther in this case proved, by reference to ye judicials of Moyses

& see: Luther, Calvin, Hen: Bulin:. Theo: Beza. Zanch:

what greevous sin in ye sight of God,

by ye instigation of burning lusts, set on fire of hell, to procede to contactum & fricationem ad emissionem seminis,

&c.,

& yt contra naturam, or to attempt ye grosse acts of 4 Mr Bradford: I forbear perticulers.

And accordingly he was cast by ye jury,

and condemned. It being demanded of him

the youth confessed he had it of another

who had long used it in old England,

and they kept cattle together. And after executed about ye 8. Of Septr, 1642.

A very sade spectakle it was; for first the mare,

and then ye cowe, and ye rest of ye lesser catle, were kild before his face, according to ye law

Levit: 20.15. and then he him selfe



and no use made of any part of them

* The hangman, John Holmes — no, not that one — claimed a fee “for x weeks dyett for Granger £1., and for executing Granger and viij beasts, £2.10.0.” His count of executed beasts falls short of the total (12) enumerated by Bradford, presumably accounted by the difficulty in identifying the sheep.

On this day..

Entry Filed under: 17th Century,Animals,Arts and Literature,Capital Punishment,Children,Common Criminals,Death Penalty,England,Execution,God,Hanged,History,Massachusetts,Notable Jurisprudence,Occupation and Colonialism,Public Executions,Sex,USA

Tags: 1642, animal cruelty, bestiality, charles olson, john holmes, pilgrims, plymouth colony, puritans, september 8, thomas granger, william bradford, zoophilia

