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Family vows to clear name of grandmother tried as witch

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Published Date: 30 October 2006
THE grand-daughter of the last person in Britain to be tried as a witch yesterday vowed she and her family would never give up the fight to clear her relative's name.
Helen Duncan, of Niddrie, Edinburgh, travelled the country performing seances at which she claimed to contact people killed during the Second World War.

In 1944, she was convicted under the 1735 Witchcraft Act of "pretending to raise the spirits
of the dead" and sentenced to nine months in jail. She died 12 years later.

Her grand-daughter, Mary Martin, of Craigmillar, Edinburgh, applied in 1999 to the then-home secretary, Jack Straw, for a posthumous pardon, but it was refused.

Mrs Martin was a guest at a ceremony at the Prestoungrange Gothenburg pub, in Prestonpans, yesterday in remembrance of 81 people from the East Lothian town killed after 16th and 17th centuries witchcraft trials.

They were pardoned in 2004 by the Baron of Prestoungrange, who could not pardon Ms Duncan as she was tried in Portsmouth.

Mrs Martin said: "As long as I live, I will fight for this and when I die, another of my family will take over.

"This is a terrible thing to have hanging over our family. It was not witchcraft, it was spiritualism, and the charge should never have been made."



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  • Last Updated: 29 October 2006 11:16 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Witchcraft
 
1

Mikey,

30/10/2006 09:33:40

Errmm, can anyone tell me who is the Baron of Prestoungrange and what he did to achieve the title?

So this woman spent 9 months in jail for being a witch? Why was she tried in Portsmouth? Was she arrested there?

2

Guga,

Rockall 30/10/2006 09:38:22

Is the 1735 Witchcraft Act still in operation? Is it an English act or does it cover Scotland too. Can we get the New Labour cabinet charged under it?

3

'Suck' McCrunchie,

30/10/2006 10:01:14

1. Mike

I think the police are currently investigating the likes of this.

4

Andrew Crummy,

prestonpans 30/10/2006 10:13:43

What is so interesting is that Mary Martin has a letter from Jack Straw refusing to give Helen Duncan a pardon. So there is a New Labour link

5

IanW,

30/10/2006 11:05:13

Mike #1 - I put this title into Google search and found it that his name is Gordon. Interestingly he says "Today, of course," explains Gordon, "the role of a Scottish baron is almost solely titular.." so I want what powers he still retains.

6

Budgie,

Glasgow. 30/10/2006 11:16:58

people with her powers are making a fortune with their own telly shows nowadays.

7

Dave,

Western Isles 30/10/2006 11:55:40

They should introduce a witch and warlock hunt in some establishments I care not to mention for fear of being "Banned"!

8

prestoungrange,

Prestoungrange Gothenburg 30/10/2006 13:17:21

Mike and Ian asked where the Baron comes from. 'Tis I, and I acquired the feudal lands in 1997 from the Grant Sutties who had held them since the 1740s. The feudal title is attached to the lands from which it is derived.

Until November 28th 2004 Barons still had legal rights to hold courts and to place miscreants in the stocks for up to 2 daylight hours and levy fines of up to 40/-.

In Scotland's last session of a Baronial Court at The Prestoungrange Gothenburg on July 27th we formally pardoned the town's 81 Witches.

Details of the proceedings that day can be found at:

http://www.prestoungrange.org/arts-festival/html/news/sho...

We hope and believe that our approach in The Pans to witches at Hallowe'en i.e. the Pardoning and an Annual Commemoration thereof [with our interpretive murals, theatre and poetry from the Arts Festival], can play a significant role in highlighting the cruety of that time but also the ever present danger in any society of 'witch hunts' driven by hysteria.

9

Hugh Jars,

Prestonpans 30/10/2006 13:36:25

And they give out a nice card at Christmas time.

Leave our Baron alone.

10

MikeXL,

Edinburgh 30/10/2006 17:39:40

This woman was arrested under a law which was there to prevent people tkaing advantage of the ignorant. She was taking advatage of a national tragedy traveling the country taking money from the grieving relatives of the war dead, she deserved her time in jail and does not deserve a pardon.

11

Andrew Crummy,

prestonpans 30/10/2006 18:45:41

She was arrested under the witchraft act and accused of witchcraft.

12

Sylvia,

Los Angeles, California 30/10/2006 20:45:34

She should be pardon, it is her right to have her owns beliefs. However the conviction should be reistated for her fraud in taking advantage of the innocent and vulnerable.

13

Doreen,

Glasgow 30/10/2006 22:52:00

Who says she was a fraud? and as far as being pardoned for being a witch, everyone by now should have been pardoned for this particular blight in our history so whats the problem?

14

J. A.,

31/10/2006 03:08:16

Did she hold her seances for money?

She has a right to her own beliefs, but lucre would seem to blur the line between a religious social concern expressed in (whoops! I nearly said "in the medium of") spiritualism and witchcraft.

15

Shuggie,

03/11/2006 17:36:54

Was there not some question of poor Mrs Duncan being deemed a security risk because of her astonishing revelations of (unpublished) Allied losses? The period of her imprisonment covered the D-Day landings.


 

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