In 1778, sixteen-year-old Ezra Ross of Ipswichย was condemned to death for the murder of Joshua Spooner of Brookfield. Spooner's wife Bathsheba becameย the first woman executed in the newly-createdย United States of America. Ezra Ross is buried in an unmarked grave at the Leslie Road Cemetery.
Tag: women
Haselelponah Wood
Early American Gardens
Lucy Ardell Kimball
The Revolutionary War Letters of Joseph Hodgkins and Sarah Perkins
The “Kiss of Death” at New England Textile Mills
The Legend of Goody Cole
The Witchcraft Trial of Elizabeth Morse of Newbury, 1680
Her Name Was Patience
Lydia Wardwell on her Presentment for Coming Naked into Newbury Meeting House
Women in Ipswich History
Ipswich and the Salem Witchcraft Trials
The Witchcraft Trial of Elizabeth Howe, Hanged July 19, 1692
Ipswich Pillow Lace
The Ipswich Female Seminary
Born in a Refuge Camp
By Ingrid Miles, Ipswich I was born in a refugee camp, and I feel as if I am reliving my parents' nightmare after World War II, when my dad had to modify his name and identify himself as Christian; my mother was Catholic in order to come to this country as displaced persons aka DP's.… Continue reading Born in a Refuge Camp















