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This week on Champagne and Murder, Please... we’re heading back to the muddy marshes and whispered grudges of colonial Grace Sherwood.
A woman who knew herbs. A neighbor feud that spiraled like smoke through chimney cracks. A trial that involved ducking, gossip, livestock accusations, and an entire town practically foaming at the mouth over butter, curses, and bad luck. Because apparently in the early 1700s, if your crops died and your ale tasted weird, it was definitely your hot independent neighbor’s fault.
But beneath the legend of “The Witch of Pungo” is something far darker and far more human: fear, isolation, survival, and the terrifying power of being labeled different.
We’re unpacking the folklore, the facts, the petty colonial drama, and the story of the only woman in Virginia ever convicted of witchcraft. So pour yourself something bubbly, light a candle that smells vaguely haunted, and settle in... because this episode feels like wet moss, candle soot, and accusations whispered through crooked teeth.
Encyclopedia Virginia: Grace Sherwood
Virginia Museum of History & Culture: Grace Sherwood
City of Virginia Beach: Grace Sherwood History
Smithsonian Magazine: America’s Last Convicted Witch
By Brittany4
88 ratings
This week on Champagne and Murder, Please... we’re heading back to the muddy marshes and whispered grudges of colonial Grace Sherwood.
A woman who knew herbs. A neighbor feud that spiraled like smoke through chimney cracks. A trial that involved ducking, gossip, livestock accusations, and an entire town practically foaming at the mouth over butter, curses, and bad luck. Because apparently in the early 1700s, if your crops died and your ale tasted weird, it was definitely your hot independent neighbor’s fault.
But beneath the legend of “The Witch of Pungo” is something far darker and far more human: fear, isolation, survival, and the terrifying power of being labeled different.
We’re unpacking the folklore, the facts, the petty colonial drama, and the story of the only woman in Virginia ever convicted of witchcraft. So pour yourself something bubbly, light a candle that smells vaguely haunted, and settle in... because this episode feels like wet moss, candle soot, and accusations whispered through crooked teeth.
Encyclopedia Virginia: Grace Sherwood
Virginia Museum of History & Culture: Grace Sherwood
City of Virginia Beach: Grace Sherwood History
Smithsonian Magazine: America’s Last Convicted Witch

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