The Ipswich Flyer IpswichFlyer_Sep2018_For_Web | Page 5
Witches in The
Suffolk
Flyer
Witches in and around Suffolk
The talk will be held at the United
Church, High Street, Leiston, IP16 4EL,
and will start at 7.30 p.m. Everyone
is welcome; admission costs £1 for
members and £3 for non-members,
including coffee/tea and biscuits. Parking
is available in the adjacent Co-op car
park, but you will need to register your
car number in-store or face the risk of a
£100 fi ne.
After a pause
for the peak
summer holiday
period in
August, the next
meeting of the
Alde Valley Suffolk Family History Group
will be on Monday, 17th September,
when Pip Wright will give a talk entitled
‘Witches in and around Suffolk’.
For as long as history itself, we’ve
been a superstitious lot in East
Anglia. It is nearly 300 years since our
elected representatives told us to stop
persecuting witches, but old habits
die hard. After all, if the Bible and
Shakespeare recognised witches, who
are we to disagree? The trouble is, in
a confusing world, it is comforting in
a way to have an explanation for the
inexplicable. Be it sickness or infestation,
storm, blight or sudden death, then
sorcery could just be the answer. A whole
folk-lore has grown up around the ‘wise
ones’ of Suffolk, so that in most of our
towns and villages, you can still fi nd
someone who will tell you tales of their
local ‘witch’. But truth to tell, the history
of witchcraft in and around Suffolk is an
altogether darker story, about suffering,
persecution and death. It reached into
the hearts of families and communities
and created a fear and a hysteria that
lasted until recent times.
Pip is a retired primary school teacher,
living in Stowmarket, who writes local
history books and gives talks to groups
of all kinds and all ages across East
Anglia. Together with his late wife Joy,
who died in July 2005, he has spent a
number of years gathering information
on Suffolk’s social history.
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P le a s e m e n t i o n ‘ T h e F l yer ’ wh en r esp o n d in g t o ad ver t isements
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