headline
Full Text:
GENNEWS
HISTORICAL SOCIETY PROGRAM ON VAMPIRES
"I vant your blood," says the movie-screen vampire, but on Monday, February
10, the Newtown Historical Society will present a more rational look at the
existence of vampires, or at least the belief in them.
With a slide presentation offered by Connecticut State Archaeologist Nicholas
Bellantoni, based on his research and excavations at Griswold's Walton
Cemetery, the audience will get a look at the widespread New England fear of
vampirism in the 19th Century.
The effects of this fear led to ritual killing of the vampire spirit by
exhumation and reburial of bodies suspected to be vampires. The suspicions
were engendered by the widespread incidence of diseases such as consumption,
or tuberculosis. These diseases, by their wasting nature, seemed to indicate a
draining of the blood of a previously healthy person. The ritual "cures" have
left their mark in the physical evidence of the grave, which Dr Bellantoni
will discuss and illustrate.
In his capacity as state archaeologist, Dr Bellantoni has excavated many sites
across Connecticut, including several in the Newtown area. Most of these have
involved Native American remains, but his findings first at Walton and then at
several other cemeteries in the state have lead to one of his most interesting
presentations.
The program will take place at Newtown's Meeting House, Main Street (Route 25)
at the flagpole, beginning at 8 pm. The meeting is open to the public without
charge, and will be followed by refreshments.
