 Hello everybody, welcome back to Esoteric Atlanta and to our Mystery Monday, which we haven't really done in a hot second because we're doing the Emerald Tablets right now. And as you guys know, we're still working on that Fifth Tablet over on Aquarius Rising Africa. We've already done the Fifth Tablet here on my channel. So I am taking this awesome opportunity to give other people a chance to come on and present Mystery. Everybody loves a good Mystery. We all, hello, like there's a reason why like Murder She Wrote was a very famous television series. Like we all love a good Mystery. And so I'm joined here with my friend Tracy Woodman. And what's so exciting, you guys know Tracy, she's been on the channel lots now, but she actually, you guys, she just opened up her own, her very own YouTube channel, which I'm so, so, so excited about under her. Would you say this is your new Diplom? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So she's writing on, she's putting it under Lee Woods. I'm going to put all the links down in the description box below. I was about to call you Lee. I'm looking at Lee. That's my middle name, so you can. That's my dad's name too. So I'm like, I'm not. Tray Lee. Tray Lee. There you go. That's like a southern name. Tray Lee. So yeah, Tracy's also doing the S.C.A. journey, you guys. We were just talking about that before we started filming, which I know I'm going to put all that down in the description box so that you guys can see Tracy's journey through a sea and if you want to purchase through Tracy you can and Yeah, I mean quickly for like a couple minutes before we get into the story Tracy You were saying like people are actually noticing Things about you changing in your physical makeup from the a sea you think correct. Yes. Yeah, I just I've had a few people just You know say they notice changes Some have said I they think I've lost weight but again like I was saying to you I don't own a scale so I don't I can't confirm that but I do feel better. I feel I have more energy. I think my body feels more I don't even know how I want to put it Maybe younger. I feel like my muscles are more tone and again I've been doing the doing yoga for a while. So there's that but in addition to that I feel different In that sense. So yeah, my skin looks a little different. It's you know, I feels better. I'm just just some little things that I noticed about myself too. But yeah, others have said, What are you doing? So, so that's that's So, you're like myself can be a good advertisement for myself. My cells are communicating. It's so funny. I was laughing with my boyfriend this morning because fortunately I don't have Really an issue with cellulite which a lot of women do that's very normal And I think it's just because I've exercised for a majority of my adult life That's not a super big problem for me But when I was doing the video with dr. Silverman, which if you guys missed that I'll place that down in the description box below He talked about using the gel On places of your body where you have like cellulite or something and so I like lathered my legs up this morning I'm just gonna start just doing it because I am 40 now and I haven't struggled with this in really so I'm gonna try To prevent I don't know and I just thought isn't that interesting here We are we've accepted this narrative that this is just what happens I mean kids don't have cellulite little girls don't have cellulite We've just accepted that this is something that happens to us as we age But what is the aging process the aging process is literally not having the redox literally your Cells not even being able to communicate with each other And so if you're giving them that boost then yeah, you are gonna start to look younger again It's feel younger again and give your body and that's what I love about it so much as somebody who believes in the power of the body It's giving your body the support system for your body to be able to heal itself Which really is taking your sovereignty back and taking your power back. So yeah, you guys I will put all those links down in the description box below I wanted to just let you guys know that Tracy is very much a part of this now and I'm so excited I feel like all my friends are now doing a see-ya, which is so exciting. I just love seeing people Feel good feel better I love seeing other people succeed in that and if you don't have your help You don't have anything do you so you know it's it's that help that really gets us through But with that being said I am gonna turn the panel over to Tracy because boy and it's so hard I just dig these stories so much that you told me what you were gonna present And you already sent the pictures for me to put it in the editing process But I had to refrain myself for really looking into this too deeply because I wanted to enjoy hearing you tell the story So I'm sorry so much. So you guys with that being said I'm gonna I'm gonna pass it over to Tracy now Okay, so I was actually looking looking into a story that That's comes out of Hampton, which is a couple hours from where I live It's called Memorial Green Meeting House Green Memorial Park in Hampton And I just said that it is haunted by the ghost of Eunice Cole Eunice Cole is the only woman who they say was convicted of witchcraft in New Hampshire As I looked into the story, I did not find anything that actually said that she was convicted of Witchcraft so having said that and moving forward with the story. I Tried to go back a little bit further to see if I could learn a little bit about Eunice Prior to her moving to Hampton. So she was actually Married to William Cole who was a Sawyer They were married in England and and a medieval Anglican church in St. Dunstins Parish and Stephanie Middlesex England, which is just outside of London. So It looks like from the records that I've been able to found I found some conflicting information So I can't say 100% that every everything is accurate But we're just going to go with what I found. So because the records are sparse I had to kind of Match things up here and there and some things don't match up I see records where it says that William was 20 to 30 years older than Eunice, which is quite an age difference in marriage so That that could be a question to ask during this during this Deep dive into who she was So I would also be interesting to see how young she actually was when she got married. They were married. Sorry Brought shut my phone off Anyway, so They were married in the church in England, I'm just gonna shut this off so that doesn't do this again Well, it's interesting you're saying that at what year was this what was so Very good question She so it looks like they were married in 1634. So this is going back before way before it was going back before the witch trials in In England, I mean in Salem in Boston. So that's like the eve of that because that happened at the end of the 1600s This is what's interesting you guys and I it's interesting you say you're saying our husband was 20 to 30 years older than her according to some records I Was looking into Joseph Smith and polygamy and a lot of people because here He was this like 38 39 year old man marrying girls who are like 14 and of course, this was the 1800 so this was a couple of hundred years Post this story, but I was listening to his podcast They were talking about how we excuse that is that was normal back then But if you look at the statistics that was not normal back then to for a 14 year old girl to marry a 38 Oh man, they pulled up all the statistics that even at that time the average age for a woman to get married was 22 And the average age for a man was 24 So even in that that time period the marriages were close in age like like they most of the time they are now You know I have the perfensity of dating men 10 to 15 years older than me But I think 20 years is kind of pushing it a little bit because that's just a different generation at that point Right now, and I don't know that that's true because I found If you if you match up the time frames that are discussed And that are verifiable in the town records. I don't see that that was true So that was my first question when I looked at that was was she a child bride Yeah, yeah, but yeah Yeah, so buddy did I did actually go back and search the records the church records and what I found was there was a marriage of a William Cole and a Unica you is Would be Eunice with an A instead of an E so there's not much difference in the name. So her last name was guiles Same same that the St. Dunstan's Stephanie London Church and that was in 1634 That's the the record that I found and it appears to match up with What was going on at that time and where they came into the country here? So I was kind of hoping to find some Records back further that would show The date of her birth, but I I didn't have any luck with that So but moving forward They I just shut this off. I shut this phone off and just it turned back on What's going on here? Um It might be her spirit trying to come on through that's what I always be Shut off now. Okay. It's shutting off again Stop Okay. Um, anyway, so The spelling too like that if I if I for you you and I are both researchers I would assume that's the same person because even back in those days people didn't have set spellings for their names, you know Um, yeah, even in this country with research Um, I found it spelled Eunice with a U Eunice with an E and then the spelling with the A at the end Which again too, I've done a lot of research into genealogy that type of thing and you can never be a hundred percent sure because if you're looking at Records of people coming into the country ship manifests they hand write things you can't read so you don't know a hundred percent if the name is spelled this way or that way so So anyway, so they married in England and then the next record I have shows that they Were um indentured servants. They were indentured to a math Matthew Craddock and he was actually the first governor of the massachusetts bay company Tracy can you explain to our audience members who maybe I know that most american kids know what an indentured servant is But can you explain to those who are not americans what that would mean? Sure. So um and actually my My great great great great. I have one in my family back in this early 1600s. So, um, what happened was back Back when people started coming into this country um A lot of people wanted to leave england for various reasons a lot of them were religious persecution But so they wanted to leave the country, but they didn't have any money to do that. So what they would do is they would um, they would promise to serve Another that would pay their passage. So So in this case this uh, william craddock, he paid their passage to this country and in turn for that They had a contract that said they would they would work x amount of time for Um, the massachusetts bay colony to pay off that passage So in my case my my uh My relative he worked seven years In port smith and then he was actually given land In maine after he was done So so just because you are an indentured servant didn't mean there was um, you were a slave oftentimes that That process entailed you working through the period of time In that person actually handing over land to you so you could begin your new life So it was not always it wasn't always a bad thing to be In that position it was a way to start out in a new world without When you didn't have the money to do so so that that We would call it a live work program today, right, right, right. Yeah So but anyway, so he they they promised, uh The passage was ten dollars and they promised to work work that off basically and um They didn't do that so Um The couple left his service prematurely and they promised that eventually they would pay the ten pounds if he released them Which they did not do so to me that That's the beginning of okay Apparently william wasn't too on the up and up either So I'm I'm I just have questions about that whole thing so Um, so needless to say so they they moved to new england They lived in a town village called Mount wallston, which is now brain tree. I've also heard it referred to as quincy. So i'm not sure if they Both had that name if they were both I've seen it referred to as both Quincy has In the past had a wallston. So so to his brain tree. So and that's just south of boston So and back then townships At least in new england townships would provide land grants to people who Wanted to homestead the land Wanted to to farm the land and get ahead so Most people that came into those townships were were granted x amount of acres to farm and produce and sell and live off of So the town of boston who knew of the deal That william and munus had with cradon were only given two acres for their own planting They weren't given the opportunity to farm the land and and And sell they were only given given what they needed to survive because they probably didn't trust them So they lived in boston in this area from 1637 through part of 1638 At that time they moved to exeter or what would become exeter in hampshire Now they followed a reverend john wheelwright To what became exeter wheelwright was a A minister who he was actually banned. He was banished from boston in 1637 for sedition He had some pretty shady practices With his preaching apparently so he was he was banished from boston so he and I think there were 33 other people at the time Moved to what became exeter. He started exeter. He started a church in exeter and among those 33 were william and and munus Just a on a side note to this john wheelwright. He actually was a classmate of oliver cromwell at cambridge So they were friends. So that brings up a little leather red flag for me. Yeah, I've covered. I've covered That's on my channel before and so it's so interesting like like when you're reading this as an american Thinking about our history and these are stories that we're used to hearing But now that we know a little bit more about the other side of the story You do start to question some of these connections. You do start to question What really is the right side of history? I know when you were talking about the uh the preacher man not being So so glorious. I was like, well something's never Yeah, I was thinking that throughout this whole process that this is just another control thing all the way back, you know We see you preachers. We see you I know there's a great hillfong documentary out right now you guys like Some things just never change in humanity That is so true So anyway, they they moved to exeter and They didn't stay there very long So in 16 In 1638 So i'm trying to trying to create a timeline too just to give us an idea of how what their ages were And and I what I did was I went back from when they died and where they were living to back to try to come up with A better timeline of their ages So in 1638 william would have been 64 years old so He was a carpenter And he which he didn't prosper at that. So i'm not sure what the deal was with that I'm not sure if he was lazy or or just as he got older. He didn't prosper. I don't know There's no documentation to indicate why he was not successful She would have been 48 years old according to the information if I go if I moved backward from when she died So she's 48 at this point. So if they got married in 1634 she was not young when they got married Back, you know for for that That time frame anyway, so So anyway, so they they they lived in they lived in boston For about a year they moved to exeter It was said that she wasn't very likable, but there was no not no trouble with the law or anything So in 1640 They were granted 40 acres of land in the town of hampton new hampshire They didn't move to hampton until 1644 so they lived In exeter for a while what six years And nothing no trouble No, nothing happened with her they lived in boston for you. No trouble. Nothing nothing came up about about unis They just lived there somewhat peacefully I guess so They weren't in hampton long before she started getting into trouble before her legal problems began She was fine. She was setting stocks. She was admonished. She was whipped For different infractions of law in 1645 she She was brought before the court for slander speech against her neighbors So she she was talking bad about her neighbors or whatever the case was but Um And then in so six that 1645 and then in 1647 Both unis and william were charged with biting the constable William fuller was the constable biting his hand, which I don't that doesn't mean officially Actually biting his hand. It was stealing food from his hand stealing food from him. So they were both charged with with with this Stealing this biting of the hand bit so But you don't hear anything about william Getting into trouble or causing trouble beyond that that you don't see anything in In writing anywhere. So next unis appears in court in 1648 1651 and 1654 and they don't state what the charges are They don't state why she was why why she had to appear in court. I couldn't find that information And throughout the the whole time that she was in Hampton Which would be from 16? Well 1656 to through 1680 is when the trouble began. She was charged for witchcraft Three times. So that's 24 years. She was tried three times According to records. She wasn't very neighborly of course we and we did hear that And she did have a temper so Again, anything is possible. So From 1656 to 1680 she spent about half her time in prison And through that over the years through that in that period of time she was She was whipped twice She was brought before the court on at least eight occasions. She was fined She was admonished once they probably slap on the hand whatever Um put under bond twice and I don't know the bond piece that could be the $10 Front cratic that could be they they tried to collect. I don't know but they don't mention him. They only mentioned her So she was set in stocks She was searched for witch marks. She was tried for witchcraft twice and ultimately three times She was watched for diabolical imps. That was one of the things that they said that So locked in leg irons And she was in prison that one final time before her death In which at which time they Tried to charge her with witchcraft again. So We we mentioned that she's charged twice for witchcraft. The first time was in 1560 1656 And the trial was held in boston There were 26 witnesses who testified in the trial. So that must have been everybody in town. I mean um, the main evidence in the trial she gossiped about I'm thinking because I watched all these reality tv shows. I'm like damn She would make an awesome reality tv like real housewives of new hampshire Yes, all in a sedition like she would be a producer's dream That's true. She probably would have So the main evidence in the trial Um, was the witch marks that they found on her when they whipped her before She was brought in um So they would have removed her clothes to whip her. So she's you know, she's not So that was what prompted them. They said she had witch marks on the body. So But the main evidence in the trial outside of that she was they said that she was And some of this information just doesn't make sense to me. It says that she was involved in the death of a child Um, and there's some speculation as to whether the child was deformed But they don't say who the child belonged to they don't there's none of that information They don't say who accused her or why why I don't know. Um, she was blamed for the death of a bedridden man, which again, I Um, she they and They said that she killed their cattle the townspeople cattle through demonic agency um They said that she brought sickness to people that she feuded with and she killed their animals Um, and that she had knowledge of conversations that were private that nobody nobody would know So, um, those were those were the charges that were brought Brought up in court and outside of the the witch marks And that's why they charged her with witchcraft was was the marks not these other things Well, the court did not convict her of witchcraft. They convicted convicted her of the lesser charge Of being of they called it being it's familiarity with the devil is what they called it So she was kept in boston prison until 1660 and they released her Because her husband pleaded with the court to release her because he needed her at home Made it her at home to work So she spent four years in prison for the familiarity of a dealt with the devil not for witchcraft and they let her go So my thought is is if she murdered a child and was responsible for the death of a bedridden man And was killing animals. Why would they release her? so um, but while she was in prison her husband put her put her name on The deed of their property took his off put hers on So that he could Ask the town people for help Basically take care of him and help him work his land without having to give the town anything So if he didn't own the property she did he wouldn't be responsible to pay the town They would just be he would be a charity case, you know what I mean So at that point he would have been 86 years old So he probably would have needed help, but um, obviously his mind was still there If he was shady enough to You know put his property in someone else's name so he wouldn't have to give him give the town people towns people anything so she didn't petition the court and she was released and went home to her husband, although um Also during the time that That she was in in prison once he had done this um Pratic who was who was the indentured Servant they were indentured to excuse me He was trying to collect the ten dollar bond from them the 10 that 10 pound bond from William and I think that was in 1657 and William pleaded with the court for relief He didn't want to have to pay it probably because of his age and he whatever his reasons are but um The court demanded that the town take over his property because He owed this debt So the town had to take over his property take over his estate and they had to support him. So whatever whatever um Was whatever work was done on the land whatever was farmed whatever Monetary value came out of that the town took and used to support him And newness because she was in jail and they had to you had to pay if you were in prison You had to your family had to pay for you to be in prison at that time. So There's a little confusion on that because There's another story that says that the town actually gave him his land back but I I don't know that that's true because I see more evidence for the for the To explain the the first to back up the first explanation so So unis comes home. He dies. William dies in 1662 and When he dies is discovered that he had he had written a will Which left his property to a neighbor the neighbor's name was thomas webster and He he put him in his will because he was supposed to be taking care of him While he was sick or infirm or whatever the case was or taking care of his property. So anyway, that was His way of thanking him by giving him his property So he left unis her clothes and that was it This thomas webster got all the property and tools and animals and and whatever so um but Because of the 10 pound the whole the whole deal unis um The town disputed disputed this will because they didn't think that it was right. So Because it invalidated unis's share of the property So even though she she did get in trouble that was still half her so The court ordered the town to take the property and use it to pay for unis's Care prison whatever and williams care Had he survived so that was done through the norfolk county court. They're the ones that stepped in And what what they did was they they took and they They set aside the will they paid All the debt williams debts and then they took Half of what was left and gave that to Thomas webster who he had willed the property to and the other went to support unis. So the town kept that to support her So what but she wasn't free long and They blamed her again for calling neighbors despicable names. So um, I think in addition to um I think part of the reason she was put back in in prison too was because she did not Uh maintain the terms of her release And I think that was supposed to be that she left hampton what she didn't do she stayed there So she ended up going back to prison And the third time she went back they The neighbors or townspeople somebody Observed her talking to the devil at her house. So they whipped her before they took her back to prison So I don't you never see evidence of any of this. It's all hearsay So she spent the next 10 years in and out of prison. So when she was released at the age of 70 she was homeless She didn't have a place to live So when she returned home the town put her in a little hut Near the meeting house, which is where the meeting house ghost story comes into play. Um so The town Ordered the townspeople To take care of her so everybody had to contribute They had to bring her food and wood and if they didn't they would be fine So there's a little animosity there with the townspeople having to Be responsible for her In addition to that the young people that lived in the town they liked to antagonize her They would play tricks on her and get and basically bait her so so now she's 70 at this point And um They tried her for witchcraft again so This time when they they tried her they're blaming her They're saying that she um Made threats to the night watchman. She um She was blamed for a puppy whining and barking in the meeting house, which I don't And now they're saying that she's taking various animal shapes they blamed her for A neighbor's oven producing foul tasting bread And then the the the piece that Caused her to be Charged with witchcraft is that they said that she enticed a nine-year-old girl to to live with her And they don't there's no history or information about What that was did they want did she want her to live with her to take care of her? Did was she trying to trap her or whatever there's no no indication of that story so um So amazingly even though she was prosecuted for this um, and again, this is in 16 73 Again she went to court and she wasn't convicted they didn't find her guilty again So the court this is again the court does not find her guilty of witchcraft. So she goes home So here's the thing so she goes home in 16 73 her husband's dead And it's quiet until 1680 so for that period of time Seven years she lives quietly with no incident Her husband is dead. She lives quietly And then in 1680 they accused her of being a witch again They there's no documentation that says why um And this time she was just held in a local prison She never even got to boston they held her in leg irons But again the jury did not find her guilty So she was sent home and she died a month later in her bed in the little hut so She she the towns people didn't see her for a few days So I guess they might have thought that was odd, which maybe it was So they actually broke into her hut to see and they found her dead um They the story is that they buried her right away in an unmarked grave And that they drove a stake through the ground with a horseshoe in it Attached to it to prevent her from rising from her earthly grave Um, I I think that some of that's probably folklore the unmarked grave piece yes because There is no grave She wasn't buried with next to her husband or anything. So that piece true. I suppose so the whole story Comes to an end in 1930 1937 all these years later There's a a goodie coal society was was formed goodie coal goodie coming from um the story from john green leaf Whittier who he was a poet and he wrote a couple of poems one was called the wreck of the wreck of river mouth and The changeling in those poems were about her and that was how he referred to her In in the poem so in 1937 the goodie coal society was formed And they did that to restore her citizenship that had been stripped away from her because of Because of her being in jail and because of what they said and in 1938 the residents voted to return her rightful citizenship And they did this dramatic Presentation over the radio and made a big thing of it to restore her citizenship so, um, that's really the story of The haunting of um meeting house green memorial park and it's just um, I think it's there there are some things that I don't That don't settle well with me Um, of course we talked about her married being married and obviously she wasn't that young when she got married So she must have been in her 40s when she married. What was the reason for that? Was it just because They were going to the new world together um I don't know the answer to that. I my heart breaks for this woman. Yeah, I think she was a target pretty much I kept he escaped goat skate goat skate goat skate goat Which we know that if we're looking at this with our conspiracy hats on we know that the controllers are often going to find Scapegoats and I was left. I refreshed. I had to refresh my memory with the Salem So this is like about 10 years By her death Yeah, there was about 10 years before Salem started Yeah, 1692 And and I know when I was researching Salem There were all these laws when you wanted to When you wanted to accuse someone of witchcraft Then Salem broke all these laws You had to put money up Yourself And if the court found the person innocent you would lose that I mean it was it was just this hoops You had to jump through to try to ensure that there weren't false accusations because we can see in this time period You can just make up any rumor about anyone and if enough people believed it I mean we see that today even today, right? Like if enough people believe it Then that was really they'd already been they've already they'd already been primed even before coming to this country They'd already been primed with that with that mentality of which which which which which and if you do one thing That's not normal in your eyes. Then they're a witch. So I think that Because they're already they already have that mindset That's the first thing that comes to their mind when they think of someone as being mean or Not or an ounce someone that's just I mean, I'm sure I'm sure I've been accused of witchcraft multiple multiple lives I'm sure I've burned at the stakes in multiple lives and it's funny you talk about the witch's markings Y'all that's anything from like a birthmark to a mole Right and so if they are if they're dead set on like trying to prove you guilty they could take any type of mole or birthmark on your body and claim that that's a witch's mark and I think a lot of people, you know and bless her heart like I would get I would be probably a pretty mean nasty person too of my whole life I had people doing things to me behind my back Like her husband like holy crap, you know and it and I mean you you figure He was supposed to pay the 10 doll 10 pounds. I keep saying dollars 10 pounds, you know He was involved in the the biting of the hand piece and nothing he gets no reprimand no there's nothing You know and obviously he made her do all the work She's a lot younger than he was so in the property it was You know he had her they asked he asked the court to release her so she could go home and work the property So he didn't ask out of the kindness of his heart because he loved her and needed her he asked because he needed somebody to go work the farm So So what is that all about? So I just put it into the converter the historical conversion of currency Which who knows if this is even correct or not, but just to give us an idea. So I entered 16 38 Enter target year 2023 enter old value in pounds 10 Value of beginning of target year in dollars. So that would be so for us if we're looking at that dollars and what that would be now That's about 2266 dollars That's a lot of money Yeah to pay for a voyage over from you know, that's definitely way more expensive than an airline ticket. We pay today You know so and yeah in this point if we're looking at the historical information at this point too a woman A wife is not really Considered to be a full citizen. Anyway, she's considered property of her husband And so in any type of legal matters like this it would default to the husband anyway Because the wife has no ability. I mean, I've said that about the southeast at the southeast here I live you know say what you want about the southeast But this was the one of the first areas in our modern world to give women the right to inherit their father's estate so She's in a lose lose situation as a woman anyway right Yeah, and if you stop and think about um, I mean you think about the whole If you think about william and his Throughout his life in in their marriage at least I mean he doesn't pay the the debt he He you know, he he steals. He's manipulative. He obviously I shouldn't say obviously it's my opinion that that he wasn't very motivated if he was a carpenter And he didn't do well. How can you not do well in the new world with building? You know Yeah So and then there's also the piece that their their connection to john wheelwright. So Obviously he had issues. He was banished for sedition. He um, he had He is just he was just It was odd so And when you look at his relationship to and i'm not saying that this is actually a thing but He knew cromwell. They were they were they were schoolmates at Um Cambridge they went to school together. They were classmates. They were friends And from what I from what I have seen and again, I can't say this is true But I know that there there is a book that was written in the 1700s It was written it was a an anonymous book it was written in 1745 and it was written by um Abby laura den I think is how you say it was a french person and that in that book He says that he she whoever says um That Cromwell was One who actually started Freemasonry So again And there's no there's weird stories around Cromwell's head which again, I'll put that his skull has been passed around so Right. Um, I will put those links down in the description box when I cover that and it's there's so and that's what I I You know, it's so funny Tracy because we know Cromwell took down The royal family in the uk for Right. Yeah, and had had them hadn't be headed and then it they brought them back and So and I've been talking about this idea of junk conspiracy And so it's almost like you have to be very careful when you're navigating what the truth is because the bad guy We'll say for lack of a better word since we're on youtube the bad guys Are gonna put people in place To look like good guys that are actually working for the bad guys, right? Right We see that the political system all the time and that's that just to me screams Oliver Cromwell because I don't when I covered our Oliver Cromwell. I was like this douchebag. I was like Yeah, he took he sucked talk about sucking all the joy out of life like It was so bad that the angles people were like, can we have the kings back? You know and so and yeah, and we see it's all it's all yeah I mean and here's this woman and good. I know goodie the name goodie is was a nickname I wonder if it was a nickname for Eunice was that how that was her birthday? I think yeah, it's it's it's a name that was It was actually created by Um The poet wittier he the poems that he wrote that's how he referred to him and the poems The changeling wittier john green leaf wittier. He that's how he referred to her in his poems the wreck of the river mouth and But yeah, so because there are a few goodies in Salem as well that were accused Yeah And so with the hauntings people just see her spirit in the meeting house and have experiences with her Yeah, yeah, so there's never been any Any foul play or anyone Die or there's never been anything really negative. It's just that she's there which I suppose that Why wouldn't that be true? She was buried in an unmarked grave, you know And if there's a karmic, you know, that's the thing about this That was the one thing when I first went to india because I you know Tracy's up in new england. I'm down in the southeast both new england in the southeast if we're looking at the History books of what they tell us were the original 13 colonies There's a lot of ghosts on the southeast or up down the east coast new england and the southeast like both both I mean I grew up with ghost stories. I mean When I first went to india and I lived in england for a while. There are a lot of ghost stories That was one thing I noticed was I didn't feel the presence of a lot of ghosts So I know there are ghosts there, but it's not as overwhelming as it is here in in the united states and I I always just kind of Figured and my my own assumption that was because in a hindu-based religion they accept reincarnation So once death comes there's an easier release Then maybe for us in a world in a world where we didn't we really thought this was it And so that made sense to me that karmically ghosts would kind of hang around because they want vindication They can't release the story of of of their lives and they're hoping for some sort of vindication And I also think there's a this kind of trapped in this as the same. Yes a fam scarced cycle and it kind of like I don't know. It just it's it's so freaking When we go through trauma and I think you know looking at this story and all these other stories like this from the eyes of 2023 We understand more about how the human brain works too with like trauma When somebody repeatedly goes through trauma they do something called disassociation And I can imagine that I know I've done it I think probably everybody at some point has disassociated. So what that means in layman's term Basically, it's a little bit deeper than this is that when you're in it's kind of that freeze response But you actually kind of leave the situation like your mind kind of leaves the situation in order to process through the situation that you're in if that makes sense and so Yeah, you just associate yourself so you can do what needs to be done and you just set that piece of the emotional traumatic piece aside just to get through And that I think sometimes is where where it gets lost Are buried and we have to address it later because you you set it aside because you need to focus on what you're doing And it gets bad Yeah, it's um and so I can imagine with someone like goodie coal Her life was just abuse after abuse after abuse after abuse after abuse and she had no one In her corner to help her right? I mean talk about a sole contract. Holy shit, you know Yeah, they did she had no family on this continent. She she came here Yeah, maybe maybe she was left alone in england and that was why she came this way because she didn't have any Um family. I don't I don't know. I couldn't I did try to find But that we kind of decided to do this at the last not last minute, but I didn't have a whole lot of time to Had more time. I probably would have gone back for them I'm feeling like I mean I know that sarah that my tea leaf reader friend is a psychic medium as well And so I'm wondering if maybe I could even contact her to see if there's Something to be done to release goodie from her samscaric chain. So it's almost like she's in and there's different kinds of hauntings there's like an imprint haunting which What's an imprint haunting isn't necessarily an intelligent haunting? It's like something so dramatic happened that It's like taking a photograph of that moment. So the spirit you're seeing isn't really there It's like a photograph like in savannah for example savannah, georgia. There's a story of uh every Anniversary of when the stock market crashed there's a guy that jumped out of a window and every year they see it the same thing So it's like a photograph of an imprint of this really traumatic event. So the spirit's not there It's just the photograph but with an intelligent haunting the spirit is there And can communicate and there's something going on and it's either that she's so traumatized That she's still stuck in the cycle of goodie coal and she can't release that In order to move into the next incarnation or She's choosing to stay behind in order to find some sort of Vendication and whether the two whichever two are correct They're both very very very sad and and something that I think we do have the responsibility Due to to free a soul so that they can go Hopefully make the choice the free will choice. She has to make that choice to move into the next into the next round But I can't I can't imagine how it makes me emotional like how hopeless Yeah Yeah, and I think too one of the things that That surprises me um about Her her second trial is that If you if anybody that knows anything about law You can't I mean granted. It's a second accusation But you can't be tried for the same crime twice, but they took they took evidence from the first And for a trial to use to try to convict her the second time so to me that which maybe that's why the jury didn't convict her I don't know but Jeopardy you can't right Right, so so there so there's that too. I just But I think the thing that that surprises me most about it is that whole that that seven year period of time Where everything seemed to be quiet after he died. So what does that tell? What is that that to be that That they go I think so and at this point divorce wasn't readily available She wasn't wealthy, you know again as a woman you're at the mercy even the wealthy no family So family no friends, you know, it's so easy for people, you know So if they're trying to set her up as a scapegoat, of course, they're going to go around and whisper in someone's ears about this woman Maybe she was Maybe she was a fiercer woman Maybe she was a little bit more Maybe she fought back a little bit more than other more demure submissive women did at that time and maybe that was why some of the Some of the townsfolk was able we're able to readily believe maybe rumors that were possibly started by her own husband I don't know, you know, and so this is this is just it's heartbreaking as a female I mean, I cannot even imagine because at this point as females we have We have rights, right? Like we have and I want to remind people like we've been looking at the Protestant Reformation everybody's like Oh, the Protestants are amazing. They're not satanic. Only the Catholics are Listen, if you go and read some of the things that these at Martin Luther John Wellesley that all these people have said Especially about I mean the owner the person who started the Methodist Church, which I always thought the Methodist was like The most relaxed The person who started the Methodist Church literally believed that women did not have souls And that once they were done with their birthing years should be taken out back and put down So this is the this is the culture that women are up against at this time period now We're coming into obviously towards the 1700s. We're getting into a little bit more We're starting to see some shift happening, but this woman had nothing And especially when she became a widow and my my research into to witches and the label of witches that Most widows were labeled that because they were seen as hacks They had no value left for society anymore. Their husband was dead. They couldn't bear children anymore So they had no value to society. So that's how they kind of carry the label of witch at that time Well, well and also too in her case her husband died the town had to be responsible for her So of course they're going to say, oh, she's a witch take her away So we don't have to deal with her which is what they did or they tried to do But their jury wouldn't convict so they had to send her home But so they did try to do that to her. Oh, we'll just get rid of her. So I don't I don't know I don't see I know that Anytime you you look up You know goody coal it says the first witch of she wasn't convicted of being a witch. So Um, so there is that um, yeah, she was convicted of a lower charge, but even that I think I don't know. I feel that maybe she was Escaped out like you said There's more to this story. I actually want to come up there and see the meeting house and yeah Hampshire, so Hampshire, oh, and there's so many different there are so many places to to look at so up here that Yeah I mean the the mount washington hotel has a room that's haunted um Yeah I mean just putting myself in those shoes. I mean I think about that down here in the southeast. It's different weather down here Like I think about okay, you the story they tell us like you got on a boat You left northern europe or england. You're in this new world You don't know anyone The weather is different. You're having to and up in new hampshire in that area. You've got very cold winters very harsh winters They that can kill you if you don't know how to survive You know down here in the south there was malaria yellow fever all these other swamp-based sicknesses that people had to learn how to work with And you've got all of these these the nature stacked against you and then you don't have a friend in the town You have no one that's taking your side and you're at the mercy of You know if her husband was alive today We would probably label him a narcissist and are a psychotic a psycho What they call it a narcopath a site a psychopath that with narcissistic abuse and And so bless her heart like I mean I just can't imagine and so I hope that anybody in that area if you see your spirit like don't be afraid just talk to her That's maybe what she's I can't maybe emotional. Maybe what she's looking for a friend So and I think too that maybe when in 1937 and 38 when they Restated her citizenship part of me thinks maybe someone at that point was was maybe trying to do do that to a certain degree trying to Maybe provide some healing in there for I mean The obviously the people that did that to her are are gone. I mean you can't there is no retribution because They're not even her haunting isn't going to You know, it's not going to affect the people that did her harm so Sometimes I I guess I think that maybe in 1938 They were trying to heal that and restate you know restate her citizenship and Tell her that we believe her we we we see the truth at this point We see the truth for what it is I'm wondering now I'm starting to think is she hanging around so she sees the fall of the controllers because we know the Controllers know how to reincarnate they know how to jump into other bodies So part of me is like that's my conspiracy hat again Is she hanging around to see their fall? Just to be like Basically give you the middle middle finger because in my opinion the real witches and warlocks were the ones doing this to the to the people Right as to the people in Salem doing this to the people all over Europe Those were the real witches in warlocks not people like goodie coal or though all the people that lost their lives in Salem are all the People who lost I mean we know from my study of king James who was like one the most horrific human beings that ever lived and you know the one that basically corrupted the bible He was so deviant There was a case in scott I think it was scotland where somebody a woman was accused of witchcraft and she was found innocent And he went back and over Because he was the king and he said no no no she's guilty and he watched her Be tortured to death because he enjoyed that He loved seeing that pain And to I just can't imagine whipping a groan. I can't I mean Listen any any man who raises his hand to a woman is Disgusting to me anyway and and is is not a man in my opinion But to actually whip a woman To whip a woman like I just I don't know and then you're right like if she literally was participating in the death of a child Or of another human being why would they release her from jail? These are all in my opinion Yeah, they didn't they must not have had evidence because they didn't even convict her They didn't even convict her of that. They didn't convict her of killing a child or our bedridden man they convicted her of Being familiar with the devil so We're all familiar with the devil. It's doesn't mean we agree with them, right? We all we all know it's like that the Rolling Stone song 70 for the devil Pleased to meet you So anyway, yeah, so Did they put her in jail for four years for her own protection? I don't know but And how long would she have been there if he didn't plead with them to let her free So she could go back and work. She was probably like, don't let me That's a way worse jail and how much it's crazy that he he has somebody who Also was kind of scandalous and was it obviously he's the mastermind in our opinion That the fact that the court would sway with him in his opinion. I mean it just it just Yeah, it's awful. So thank you so much Tracy for presenting this story I'm gonna see if I can reach out to sara. Maybe we can do a part two and see if we can and if she could channel Um, she did a channeling session with me and she does pick up on and so Um, because I feel so bad for I mean, this is a human being even though You know, they say that what's that I'm paraphrasing the quote about history It's history is like a foreign country. They do things differently there Even though the life was different in the historical periods that we're talking about now It's a different culture. None of us would probably survive it if we got thrown back in that time We'd all be hanging listen Listen, if if all of us just got thrown back into that time period We all be hangable for witchcraft because they would be like what the hell are you, you know, so but but beyond that We are all human beings and in regardless of what time period we're talking about We all understand pain and we all understand Betrayal and betrayal trauma and sabotage and all that kind of stuff. And so I it's heartbreaking to hear these stories that these these people went through and so So let us know you guys down in the Comment section below if you're if you're from New Hampshire, like Tracy, let us know if you uh, if you're You recognize this story and your thoughts and your opinions. What what did you hear? I mean, I'm assuming growing up in that area. You heard the story kind of being told The legends. Yeah, I actually I was born here, but I didn't grow up here. So I came back here later in life. I actually grew up in Alaska. So and I did do the the roughing it thing. So That's right. It's not fun. But hey, you do what you do you do what you do. Yeah Yeah, so I didn't I didn't hear a lot of You know while I was growing up that that type of thing but later as I came back You do hear these stories and you know, they do they sometimes they do little Well, I say this I don't know for sure because I haven't watched the tv and By 20 years But I I do remember years ago that they would do little Local programs on things that happen on the at the end of the news. They would do, you know This is going on or do you remember this? Listen goodie coal if your spirit is listening right now honey You are way more famous and those who persecuted you now and you you have I think a lot of people understand what happened So but I would love to hear from our viewers like what do you know about this story? What did you what were you told growing up? I mean there's countless stories down here in the southeast that we just kind of You're growing up And um, have you experienced if anybody is listening? Have you experienced the ghost of goodie coal? Did you ever see her let us know your experience? And I think too. I'm sorry. I think too. There's a it's it's a little misleading because the plaque that's on the ground by the rock that Uh, they have uh displayed in the park. It says that she was convicted of witchcraft. She wasn't she was not So there's a little bit of uh, I think that's just a way to get keep draw people and I think so She's getting more and more more people are using her. Yeah Yeah, so but anyway, so that that was just the final little thing that I wanted to add is that she really wasn't convicted of witchcraft so Well bless her heart. She deserves to have a good life next life. So Her her soul picked a crazy existence for it to know it's so yeah, she did So hats off to her mad respect But um, but I know tracy. I want you to come back and present some more findings Will you be willing to see that and you guys make sure again you go and you subscribe to tracy because we want to get as many People who are looking seekers. I hate calling us truthers seekers out there To to try to figure out and rewrite some of these wrongs that have been put upon us as as as a people and The goody-cold story isn't just about the americans. It's you know, this is a human story This this reaches all the corners of the earth because this is a human story And we can all relate to that feeling of fear loneliness betrayal abandonment Fortunately for me through my trials and tribulations in my life. I've always had So many people behind me and on my side and hearing me but to be that alone god I can't even imagine I can't I'm I'm proud of her for not ending her own life Let's just put it that way That took courage and strength and so so thank you for presenting this tracy No problem. I actually had fun doing this It's fun. It's so fun, isn't it? I like to do all that. Oh, oh, oh wait. I found this now. Let's go over here Yeah, it's so fun. I lost in it It's me too and and that is why I'm so grateful for a CEO Which tracy is now doing as well because that is what is affording me The ability to go back and start doing more research at the other stories because it takes a lot of time But it's so fun. It's such it's just fun thing to like Snoop around and see what you can find about your own history and humanity's history and the story of us as people Goodie goodie Cole story is our story. It is the story of it's part of humanity story her life mattered Her story her pain matters You know, it's that emotional center as the law one says it's the emotional center Us being able to connect and have that empathy that helps us recognize our own soul And so her story matters You know even to us in 2023 and so I hope that even in her death that she understands her life was not lived in vain It matters so All right you guys. Well, I hope you're having a happy happy monday as this is mystery monday I obviously today i'm on with aquarius rising africa I will be on with aquarius our solutions with aquarius rising africa tuesday tomorrow for the cfo code because wednesday I will be traveling. I have a few videos scheduled to drop while i'm away But I should once I get back from traveling. We'll have even more videos up and of course i'm can't wait to have tracy come back on Um back on the show and do even more stuff And i'm gonna put the links to all the other videos that tracy's done on this show as well before if you guys are just now Tuning in to esoteric atlanta. You can look and find all of tracy's other work on esoteric atlanta as well I can make sure you guys you go and subscribe to our channel The more it's I think i'm I think I can say this with tracy like I don't care I really don't care how many numbers Subscribers I I have or anyone halves, but it does help put our work out there the more you subscribe I know i'm heavily shadow banned. So if you're watching this, please make sure you share it because that helps kind of Break through the algorithms and get the work out there you guys So thank you so much everybody. Have a wonderful wonderful rest of your week if I Don't see you guys before on a live show or anything happy easter happy ish star so So be subtle celebrating this a little bit differently this year So all right you guys we love you all and we'll talk you soon. Bye everybody