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The Millers of Tewkesbury


When the list of men hung by circumstantial evidence is complete, the name of Calvin Tyler, the miller of Tewkesbury, will be found thereon. One hundred and two years have passed since occurred the particulars we are about to relate, and the mill which achieved such a notoriety long ago has been swept from existence by the breath of the fiery demon.

On the night of October 20th, 1775, as several persons affirmed on solemn oath, Calvin Tyler entered his family circle and said that the faithful watch-dog of the mill had died in a fit, and was  buried in the cellar whose walls were washed on one side by the water of the race.

The miller furthermore said that the dog exhibited symptoms of having been poisoned, and when his daughter asked him if he suspected any one, he said “No!” and almost immediately went to bed.

This very simple occurrence—the death of a dog—was to be commented upon and very generally disbelieved by the highest in that portion of the realm. One month afterward, Mrs. Marble gave notice to the proper authorities that her husband, a prominent merchant, had been missing for six-and-twenty days, and that she feared that foul play had befallen him.

The lady said that on the 23d of October her husband had left home at eight o’clock in the evening, saying that he was going to Tyler’s mill, the owner of which, Calvin Tyler, was to pay him six hundred pounds of borrowed money, and the interest thereon. With the intention of collecting the debt… Read More