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Working on a documentary about the New England Vampire Panic

Here’s a short summary, of the history, as all of the cemeteries are within close proximity to me:

The New England Vampire Panic and Mercy Brown: A Tale of Fear and Folklore**


The late 19th century in New England was a time of change, with the Industrial Revolution reshaping society. Amidst these transformations, a peculiar and chilling episode unfolded, known as the New England Vampire Panic. At the heart of this panic was a young woman named Mercy Brown, whose story reveals the intertwining of fear, disease, and folklore.


Tuberculosis, or "consumption" as it was often called, was a widespread and terrifying disease of the era. Its symptoms were ghastly; victims coughed up blood and grew gaunt, as if something was consuming them from the inside out. Medical science had not yet identified the bacterial cause, leaving a gap filled by superstition. In the face of the devastating disease, communities sought explanations, and some turned to ancient beliefs, reviving the idea that the deceased, or "vampires," were rising from their graves to prey on the living.


Mercy Brown's story is perhaps the most famous case from this period. In the 1890s, several members of the Brown family in Exeter, Rhode Island, tragically succumbed to tuberculosis. When Mercy died in 1892, aged 19, she became the focal point of local vampire lore. Distraught and desperate to save the remaining family, community members exhumed her body, along with others, to search for signs of vampirism. To their horror, Mercy's body was oddly preserved and showed little decomposition, which some took as a sign she was a vampire. Her heart was removed, burned, and the ashes were mixed into a tonic that was given to her sick brother, in the hope it would cure him. Unfortunately, he too passed away shortly after.


In reality, the cold winter weather likely preserved Mercy’s body, and the misunderstood nature of tuberculosis fueled these fears. Yet, the Mercy Brown incident illustrates the lengths to which humans will go when faced with the unknown. The New England Vampire Panic was not just a series of gruesome events, but a manifestation of a society grappling with disease, change, and the boundaries of rationality.


In retrospect, the panic serves as a powerful reminder. It cautions us against letting fear and superstition cloud our judgment and emphasizes the importance of understanding and education. As the mysteries of tuberculosis were eventually unraveled by science, the vampires of New England faded back into the realm of folklore, leaving behind tales of desperation, fear, and the enduring human spirit.

Working on a documentary about the New England Vampire Panic

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