Scott, there's some information on the Dane family in 1) Carol F. Karlsen's _The Devil in the Shape of a Woman: Witchcraft in Colonial New England_ (Norton and Co., 1987) and 2) Richard Godbeer's _The Devil's Dominion: Magic and Religion in Early New England (Cambridge University Press, 1992). Karlson devotes three pages to the case of Abigail Faulkner, one of Hannah's step-children. Godbeer has a couple stray references to some of Rev. Dane's sermons. Many of Hannah (Chandler) Dane's relatives were accused at Salem. Step-daughter Abigail (Dane) Faulkner was accused, along with two of her daughters, her sister (I believe this was Elizabeth (Dane) Johnson), her sister-in-law (Deliverance Dane), two of her nieces (one was, I believe, Elizabeth Johnson's daughter) and a nephew. (The "her" in that sentence is Abigail Faulkner. This summary comes from Karlsen.) Abigail was convicted of witchcraft. Since she was pregnant, however, her execution was stayed -- long enough for the craze to pass, so she was not executed. There are some indications that her husband, Rev. Francis Dane, was suspected of witchcraft. He was never formally charged, though. Jenny