Robert Latham & Susanna Winslow
Felonious Cruelty
In an incident that will shock
many, the Plymouth court records show that Robert Latham who married Susanna, the daughter
of John Winslow and his wife Mary Chilton, brutally and willfully mistreated his servant
boy, John Walker, thus causing his death. Equally as disturbing, Susanna was
found culpable as well--though not prosecuted.
(Stratton, Eugene Aubrey, FASG. Plymouth Colony: Its History
and People 1620-1691.)
" On 31 January 1654/55 a coroner's jury was called to view
the body of Latham's servant boy, John Walker." The jury found:
that the body of John Walker was blackish and blew, and the skine broken in divers places
from the middle to the haire of his head, viz, all his backe with stripes given him by his
master, Robert Latham, as Robert himselfe did testify; and also wee found a bruise of his
left arme, and one of his left hipp, and one great bruise of his brest; and there was the
knuckles of one hand and one of his fingers frozen, and alsoe both his heeles frozen, and
one of the heeles the flesh was much broken, and alsoe one of his little toes frozen and
very much perished, and one of his great toes frozen, and alsoe the side of his foot
frozen; and alsoe, upon the reviewing the body, wee found three gaules like holes in the
hames, which wee formerly, the body being frozen, thought they had been holes; and alsoe
wee find that the said John was forced to carry a logg which was beyond his strength,
which hee indeavoring to doe, the logg fell upon him, and hee, being downe, had a stripe
or two, as Joseph Beedle doth testify; and wee find that it was some few daies before his
death; and wee find, by the testimony of John Howland and John Adams, that heard Robert
Latham say that hee gave John Walker som stripes that morning before his death; and alsoe
wee find the flesh much broken of the knees of John Walker, and that he did want
sufficient food and clothing and lodging, and that the said John did constantly wett his
bedd and his cloathes, lying in them, and so suffered by it, his clothes being frozen
about him; and that the said John was put forth in the extremity of cold, though thuse
unabled by lamenes and sorenes to performe what was required; and therefore in respect of
crewelty and hard usage he died.
In the Latham-Walker case, the community view can can be seen in the aftermath, when on 4
March 1654/55 Latham was indicted for felonious cruelty to his servant John Walker, age
about fourteen, by unreasonable correction, by withholding necessary food and clothing,
and by exposing Walker to extremities of the seasons, whereby he died. The trial jury
found him guilty of "manslaughter by chaunce medley," and he was sentenced to be
burned in the hand and, having no lands, to have all his personal property confiscated.
Latham's wife, Susanna, as noted in chapter 9, was presented by the grand jury for being
in great measure guilty with her husband in exercising extreme cruelty toward their late
servant John Walker. In her case, however, the presentment continued without trial for
three years, until the court on 1 June 1658 ordered that she would be held for trial if
anyone wished to prosecute her for the offense, but no one came forth, and the court
ordered the presentment erased from the records."