The Devil’s Business:

The Ugly Consequences of Bestiality in Colonial America Resulted in the First Juvenile Execution

Dale M. Brumfield

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Dale M. Brumfield

“And if a man lie with a beast, he shall surely be put to death: and ye shall slay the beast.” -Leviticus 20:15

IN AUGUST, 1642, an oblivious Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts man walked into a barn to encounter a teenage boy engaged in a sexual act with a horse.

Thomas Granger, who was only 16 years of age at the time and obviously suffering from some form of mental illness, was eventually found guilty on September 7 after confessing to bestiality with a total of 12 animals, including “a mare, a cowe, two goats, diuers sheepe, two calues, and a turkey. [sic]” He was convicted and sentenced to death by hanging and was the first known juvenile to be sentenced and executed in what was to become today’s United States.

Wiki

Granger was the son of Thomas and Grace Granger. He had two sisters and a brother and worked as an indentured servant to Lord Brewster, of Duxbury. He apparently began to indulge his perverse sexual urges in his young teens. As objectionable as his acts are, however, they pale in comparison with the bizarre punishment this disturbed young man was…

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Dale M. Brumfield
Dale M. Brumfield

Written by Dale M. Brumfield

Anti-death penalty advocate, cultural archaeologist, “American Grotesk” historyteller and author of 12 books. More at www.dalebrumfield.net.