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Home > Folklore and Superstitions in Worcestershire
Folklore is the study of beliefs and practices once firmly held. Few now believe in charms in giants and fairies, but less than a century ago people in lonely places believed in them. In Worcestershire and it's borders, there are prehistoric remains though.
The Bewdley Witch. Kidderminster Witches 1660c. The Shrawley Witch. The Witches Sister. Edward .C.Corbett and the Telling of Folk Tales. Rebecca Swan, the Kidderminster Witch. The Salt Lane Witch. Trial by Water. Witchcraft in Worcestershire.

The Bewdley Witch
A witch at Bewdley named Susan Wowen gained great notoriety for it was said, she was so wicked that she grew horns on the back of her head three inches long. These were shed every three years, and it is recorded that a Mr.Soley of Sandbourne had one tipped more>>

Kidderminster Witches, 1660
Again at Worcester, shortly before the Ursula Corbett case, a woman and her daughter, and a man, all from Kidderminster, were put through the barbarous trial by water. They were flung into the Severn where 'they would not sink but soared aloft'. Townsend more>>

The Shrawley Witch
A notable witch case from Shrawley, on the west bank of the Severn, when Margaret Hill was the subject of many accusations. A child who refused her some oatmeal subsequently fell sick, and when she had been unable to obtain tobacco 'on trust', the shopkeeper's more>>

The Witch's Sister
Becky had a sister, Eliza Swan, noted for her charms, who kept a diary, and lived in Kidderminster, working as a hand weaver. She was often in great poverty and was sent to prison for debt. Her diary dates between 1797 and 1821, and is full of dreams, remedies more>>

Edward C. Corbett and the Telling of Folk Tales
Folklore is the study of beliefs and practises once firmly held. Few now believe in charms, in giants and fairies, but less than a century ago people in lonely places believed in them. In Worcestershire and its borders, there are prehistoric remains once more>>

Rebecca Swan, the Kidderminster Witch
In the 1850s, few people living within ten miles of Kidderminster doubted that Becky Swan was a witch. She won her reputation when, being found guilty of obtaining money by false pretences from a servant girl, she prophesied that the magistrate who convicted more>>

The Salt Lane Witches
The Power of a witch to bring wagons to a halt was told by Edward Corbett in one of his local fairy tales. Two old women, who lived in Salt Lane (Castle St), at Worcester, were known witches who cured ailments and gave medicines, and always had money to pay more>>

Trial by Water
It was usual for a witch to undergo 'trial by water', for it was believed that,as a form of baptism, the water would reject a disciple of the devil. The thumps were tied crosswise to the opposite big toes, and the woman thrown into the pool. If she floated more>>

Witchcraft in Worcestershire
Witchcraft in WorcestershireIn olden times every women - or for that matter, man- who led a solitary life was suspected by neighbours of practising the 'black art'. This was particularly the case if the recluse had knowledge of plants. People were willing more>>

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