Mercy Brown has the distinction of being the last of the North American vampires -- at least in the traditional sense. Mercy Lena Brown was a farmer's daughter and an upstanding member of rural Exeter, Rhode Island. She was only 19 years old when she died of consumption on January 17, 1892. On March 17, 1892, Mercy's body would be exhumed from the cemetery because members of the community suspected the vampire Mercy Brown was attacking her dying brother, Edwin.
During the 1800s, consumption, or pulmonary tuberculosis, was credited with one out of four deaths. Consumption could kill you slowly over many years, or the disease could come quickly and end your life in a matter of weeks. The effects were devastating on families and communities. Dr. Bell explained that some of the symptoms of consumption are the gradual loss of strength and skin tone. The victim becomes pale, stops eating, and literally wastes away. At night, the condition worsens because the patient is lying on their back, and fluid and blood may collect in the lungs. During later stages, one might wake up to find blood on one's face, neck, and nightclothes, breathing is laborious, and the body is starved for oxygen.
Consumption took its first victim within the Brown family in December of 1883 when Mercy's mother, Mary Brown, died of the disease. Seven months later, the Browns' eldest daughter, Mary Olive, also died of consumption. The Browns' only son, Edwin, came down with consumption a few years after Mary Olive's death and was sent to live in the arid climate of Colorado to try and stop the disease. Late in 1891, Edwin returned home to Exeter because the disease was progressing -- he essentially came home to die. Mercy's battle with consumption was considerably shorter than her brother's. Mercy had the "galloping" variety of consumption -- her battle with the disease lasted only a few months. Mercy was laid to rest in Chestnut Hill Cemetery behind the Baptist church on Victory Highway.
After Mercy's funeral, her brother Edwin's condition worsened rapidly, and their father, George Brown, grew more frantic. Mr. Brown had lost his wife and two of his daughters, and now he was about to lose his only son. Science and medicine had no answers for George Brown, but folklore did. For centuries prior to Mercy Brown there have been vampires. The practice of slaying these "walking dead" began in Europe -- some of the ways people dealt with vampires was to exhume the body of the suspect, drive a stake through the heart, rearrange the skeletal remains, remove vital organs, or cremate the entire corpse. All of these rituals involve desecrating the mortal remains. The practice happened with enough regularity that the general population felt it could cure, or at the very least help, whatever evil was overwhelming them.
So much death had plagued the Brown family that poor George Brown probably felt he was cursed in some way. It wouldn't take too many chats with those empathizing with George's plight to come up with a radical idea to stop the death. Maybe the Brown family was under vampire attacks from beyond the grave. Was Mercy Brown the vampire, or was it Mercy's mother or sister? George Brown was willing to dig up the body of his recently deceased daughter, remove her heart, burn it, and feed the ashes to his son because he felt he had no other choice.
In the book, "Food for the Dead" the author Dr. Michael Bell he recounts an extensive interview he conducted with Everett Peck, a descendent of Mercy Brown and life-long resident of Exeter, Rhode Island. "Everett heard the story from people who had been there [at the exhumation of Mercy Brown] -- who were alive at the time," Dr. Bell said. "The newspaper [Providence Journal] says they exhumed all three bodies, that is, Mercy's mother, her sister who had died before her, and Mercy. Everett said they only dug up Mercy. He implied that there was some sign that Mercy was the one -- that's the supernatural creeping into his story. Everett said that after they had dug her up, [they saw that] she had turned over in the grave -- but there's no mention of that in the newspaper or the eyewitness accounts."
Mercy Brown died before embalming became a common practice. During decomposition, it is possible for bodies to sit up, jerk -- even sounds can emit from them because bloating can occur, and if wind escapes by passing over the vocal chords, there could be groans.
We don't know exactly what position her body was in on that day in March when George Brown, and some of his friends and family, came to examine Mercy's body. We do know that she looked "too well preserved."
"There's a suggestion in the newspaper that she wasn't actually interred in the ground," Dr. Bell said. "She was actually put in an above-ground crypt, because bodies were stored in the wintertime when the ground was frozen and they couldn't really dig. When the thaw came, they would bury them. So it's possible that she wasn't even really interred."
Her visual condition prompted the group to cut open her chest cavity and examine her innards. Dr. Bell said, "They examined her organs. The newspaper said her heart and liver had blood in it. It was liquid blood, which they interpreted as fresh blood." Bell explained how forensics can clarify how blood can coagulate and become liquid again, but at the time, the liquid was taken as evidence that Mercy was indeed a vampire and the one draining the life from Edwin and possibly other consumption victims in the community.
Dr. Bell said, "They cut her heart out, and as Everett said, they burned it on a nearby rock. Then according to the newspaper, they fed them [the ashes of the heart] to Edwin." The folklore said that destroying the heart of a vampire would kill it, and by consuming the remains of the vampire's heart -- the spell would be broken and the victim would get well.
The community's vampire slaying had failed to save Edwin -- he died two months later, but maybe it helped others in the community? Dr. Bell's view on Mercy Brown is that she was the scapegoat author Paul Barber discussed. Dr. Bell said, "She basically absorbs the ignorance, the fears, and in some cases the guilt that people have because their neighbors, friends, and family are dying, and they don't understand why and they can't stop it."
Mercy Brown is arguably North America's most famous vampire because she is also the most recent. The event caused such a stir in 1892 because newspapers like the Providence Journal editorialized that the idea of exhuming a body to burn the heart is completely barbaric in those modern times.
you can visit Dr. Bell's Web site at www.foodforthedead.com For more information, you can also visit Mike Shatzkin's Web site at: www.idealog.com/books/foodforthedead.html.
My question is this; after reading the above information and the websites listed.....do you feel that Mercy Brown was a Vampire or simply a victim of a misunderstood disease?
I have to agree with the others on this one. I always believed it to be simply a case of an illness ending her life just as it did her other family members, and nothing in the actual facts of the stories clearly points to her being a vampire.
I think it was just a simple case of a family's tragedy causing a grief stricken husband & father, and those of his community who were of a supersticious mind set, looking for a target for their frustration and grief and she just had the misfortune to be the one who became that target.
Disease and victim of superstition.
By the way, I find it kinda ironic her name was Mercy....
I vote disease as well. This is not the first time I have heard of similar things happening.
I vote disease too- there are some really disturbing illnesses out there, and this girl just happened to be afflicted by one of them.
Damn I haven't read about Mercy in ages.
It's a shame what people used to do to one another when one was suspected of being "a Vampire". Superstition has caused much in the way of dismemberment, disembowelment, and other atrocities to the deceased.
*Back on topic*
I'd have to say "Vampire" to them, victim by today’s medical standards.
Rowan: NIce piece of research, but did you write it? If not, please give credits to the author. Thankyou :)
I think this was just another disease that was credited with vampirism
Dr. Bell's book, "Food for the Dead" sites that there were 19 more Vampire incidents in New England starting in 1793 with the death of Rachel Harris in Manchester, Vermont.
Just speculate for a moment....What if illinesses like pulmonary tuberculosis (consumption)existed as far back as the time of christ, and people not recognizing it as an illness assumed as these people did that their loved one's had fallen victim to a vampire.......wouldn't this explain away a good deal of the vampire myths?
I read about here in a book. I found it in the back of the library...covererd in dust.
Kiara
I've never heard of this individual til just now.It's an interesting case for sure,it makes me wanna go find out more.... Shame back then ppl lived in such a society they did'nt know alot bout medical stuff and hence succumbed to ignorance,in a way it kinda reminds me of the salem witch hunt and trials.People not knowing as much as they do today just made an ignorant assumption and blamed it on vampirism...i will say though i vote for disease but the society back then would've said vampirism..still interesting stuff though :)
Probably the disease but its hard to say, very interestiong though
Since everyone has voted diseace I guesss I will go with it as well :P
IT seems like Disease to me, but I've heard of other strange things occuring around her gravesite is that just more myth?
I found out Mercy was a distant cousin of mine when I was 7, so I've been researching ever since then. At first I fell into depression because no matter how much I found, it still looked liked disease. Then I found info. on Mercy Lena Brown. Sorry, I can't remember, if i find it again, I'll tell you. It was many different whole journals of the people who went to the grave and pretty much fuckin desecrated my ancestors grave. but the journals had alot of info that led me to believe that my cousin was an actual vampire.
NenaSerene wrote: but I've heard of other strange things occuring around her gravesite is that just more myth?
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I would hazzard to guess that there is more truth to the rumors of strange lights , temp changes and sounds coming from her gravesite. I would imagine that her soul isn't all that happy with what has happen to her body. So much for the rest in peace thought.
Very true! If she wasnt a vampire to begin with you can bet she's one pissed spirit now.
From what I've read in this forum, I'd say disease - and torqued off spirit!!!
From what I've read in this forum, I'd say disease - and torqued off spirit!!!
lmao when i read the headline..i was thinking that mercy brown was some blues singer *giggles*
but as everyone seems to think, i do also think that is was a condition
I had a friend who was living in Pascoag, RI, who knew where the grave of Merci Brown was. I was supposed to get back up there for a visit but couldn't make it before she moved to Scottland. I should get her to tell me where it is anyway and go up on my own. I was very interested in exploring the place as it would just be interesting. I love going to places like that. Historical graves rock.