Hi Everyone, I'm new to the list and was surprised to learn about the involvement of the Goodale family with Gile's Corey. Robert Goodale and his first wife Catherine/Kathrine (I've seen it spelled both ways) were my paternal, 8th g. grandparents. My direct line comes down through Jacob's and Zachariah's brother Isaac, who m. Patience Cook. I never had heard the story until I read all this, but I'd often wondered if the Salem Witch Trials had touched their lives in any way. My 9th g. grandmother Margaret Scott was tried and executed as a witch during the trials and a few of my other ancestors were accused, tried, but escaped being put to death. (John Alden Jr, Mary Bradbury, Esther Elwell, and Sarah Pease.) I'm trying to learn everything I can about the people that were involved so this is very interesting to me. Does anyone know, where Robert Goodale and his family are buried? Is it in Salem or in Danvers as we know it today? I'm planning another trip to Ma, sometime during the summer months, I live in Maine. Also, I'd love to hear from anyone who is related to any of the people I've mentioned. Thanks so much, Bea Irene Del Bono wrote: > I tried to send this response to the discussion on Giles Cory's murder of > Jacob Goodale and finally figured out why my message was being returned (it > kept going through in HTML). I got this from the Salem-witch archives: > > From: <KSmith5532@aol.com> > Subject: Re: [SALEM-WITCH-L] re: Jacob Goodale > Date: Sun, 27 Jun 1999 13:41:20 EDT > > Dawn and Marc > > Sorry for my earlier confusion. I found an account of the incident that > Dawn spoke of in the book, _The Devil Discovered: Salem Witchcraft 1692_ by > Enders A. Robinson. Here is what it says: > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > Martha Corey, previously arrested and examined was the third wife of Giles > Corey. In 1692, Giles Corey was 80 years old. Civil and criminal charges > had followed him most of his life. In 1660 Corey had bought fifty acres > from Robert Goodale, who owned over 500 acres in Salem Village. 1n 1675, > one of Robert Goodale's sons, Jacob Goodale, age 33, was living and working > on Corey's farm. Corey was extremely strong, and in a fit of temper > "unreasonably beat Jacob with a stick of about one inch diameter nearly 100 > blows in the presence of Elisha Kebee, who told Corey that he would knock > him down if he did not forbear." About ten days later, Corey went to the > house of Jacob's brother Zachariah Goodale and told him that Jacob had taken > a fall. Corey said that he was afraid that Jacob had broken his arm, and > desired him to take Jacob to Mrs. Mole's in town. Zachariah went to Corey's > house and found Jacob confused, pale, stooping, and unable to walk properly. > > Zachariah asked Corey if Jacob had any other injury besides to his arm, but > Corey would not answer. Corey, a stubborn man, refused to help. Instead > his second wife, Mary, helped Zachariah take Jacob to town, where Jacob died > a few days later. An inquest was held. The coroner's jury, headed by Dr. > Zerubabel Endicott, son of the late governor, said, "The man had been > bruised to death, having great bruises with the skin broken, and having > clodders of blood about his heart." Corey was brought before the court and > fined, "upon suspicion of having abused the body of Jacob Goodale." > > Legend has it that the ghost of Jacob Goodale appeared from time to time, > crying out about his foul murder. > > Look! Look! It is the ghost of Jacob Goodale > Whom fifteen years ago this man did murder, > By stomping on his body! In his shroud > He comes here to bear witness to this crime. > (Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, "New England Tragedies.") > > Jacob Goodale's mother, Katherine, had died in 1645, when he was only three. > Two years later, in 1647, Jacob's father, Robert Goodale, married Margaret > Lazenby who, as Jacob's stepmother, raised the little boy with loving care. > On March 21, 1692, seventeen years after Jacob's death at the hands of > Corey, Margaret Goodale, characterized by the Rev. Lawson in his popular > book as "an ancient woman, named Goodale," appeared among the afflicted at > the examination of Corey's third wife, Martha. > > Now, on April 18, 1692, on the complaint of Ezekiel Cheever and Sergeant > Thomas Putnam, Giles Corey himself was in custody and under examination. > Jacob's brother Zachariah Goodale, some years earlier, had placed his son, > Joseph Goodale under the guardianship of his good friend Ezekiel Cheever. > > _________________________________________________________________ > Add photos to your e-mail with MSN 8. Get 2 months FREE*. > http://join.msn.com/?page=features/featuredemail