Ursula Kemp or
Ursley Kempe alias
Grey (circa 1525 - 1582) was an
English cunning
woman and
midwife who in 1582 was tried
for
witchcraft and
hanged. Kemp was accused of (and apparently
confessed to) using
familiars to
kill and bring sickness to her neighbours.
Biography
Kemp was
born circa 1525 in St
Osyth
, Essex. She was a
cunning woman who was frequently called upon by her neighbours to
heal various ailments and sicknesses.
She was later blamed
for intentionally causing illness and death, eventually being tried
for witchcraft at Chelmsford
in February 1582. At her trial, several of
her neighbours testified against her, making statements to Justice
Brian Darcy. Along with her friend,
Alice
Newman, she was accused of causing the deaths of Edna Stratton,
and two children, Joan Thurlow and Elizabeth Letherdale.
Neighbour and former friend Grace Thurlow testified that when her
son Davy was sick, she asked for Kemp's help. Davy temporarily
recovered from his illness and Thurlow believed that Kemp had cured
him. Some time later, Thurlow and Kemp argued over the care of
Thurlow's baby daughter Joan. At a few months old, Joan fell from
her
cradle and died of a broken neck. When
Thurlow became
lame, she again asked
for Kemp's help. Kemp agreed to heal her for 12 pence. Thurlow got
better but then refused to pay Kemp her fee, saying she could not
afford it. The two women argued again and Kemp threatened to get
even with Thurlow, who became lame again. Thurlow testified that
since that quarrel, either she or her son had suffered. She blamed
Kemp for her son's illness, her own lameness, and the death of her
baby. Thurlow complained to the magistrate and an investigation
followed.
Alice Letherdale testified that Kemp had asked her for some
scouring sand (an abrasive cleaner) and that she had refused her,
knowing Kemp to be a "naughty beast". Letherdale's daughter
Elizabeth later saw Kemp, who "murmured" at her. When Elizabeth
fell ill and died, Letherdale blamed Kemp for bewitching the girl
to death. Kemp's eight year-old son Thomas testified that his
mother kept four spirits, or
familiars. He described them as a grey
cat called Tyffin, a white
lamb called Tyttey, a black
toad called Pygine and a black cat called Jacke. He
said that he had seen his mother give her familiars
beer and cake, and let them suck blood from her body.
Thomas said that he had been present when Alice Newman had visited
his mother. He said that his mother had given Newman an
earthenware pot, which he believed to contain
the familiars. Days later, he saw Newman return telling Kemp that
she had sent spirits to kill a local man and his wife.
Justice Brian Darcy said that Kemp made a full confession to him in
private. Kemp told him that approximately ten years previously, she
had experienced a "lameness in her bones". She had gone to a local
cunning woman who had told Kemp that she had been bewitched and
that she should "unwitch" herself. She recommended a
ritual to Kemp using
hog's
dung, charnell,
sage and
St John's wort. Kemp performed the
ritual and recovered. Two women that she knew requested her help
for lameness. She helped them in the same way that she had helped
herself, and they apparently recovered. Since then she had
performed healing services for her neighbours. She admitted to the
four familiars her son had mentioned. She said that they were two
male spirits, that killed people, and two female spirits, that
brought sickness to people, and destroyed
cattle. Kemp went on to confess to sending her
familiars to make Grace Thurlow lame and to kill Joan Thurlow,
Elizabeth Letherdale and Kemp's sister-in-law. She named twelve
other women as witches six of who were hanged including Kemp in
1582. Many of the accused freely confessed to witchcraft despite
knowing they faced death by the confession.
Ursula Kemp was hanged in Chelmsford in 1582. In 1921, the
skeletons of two women were found in a St
Osyth garden by Mr Charles Brooker, one of which was believed to be
that of Kemp.The ‘witches skeletons’ became a local tourist
attraction with an admission charge to view them. In 2007,
historian
Alison Rowlands said that
according to her research, the skeletons could belong to any of ten
women that were executed for witchcraft in the 16th and 17th
centuries.
Footnotes
References