Ruth Blay Explained

Ruth Blay
Birth Date:10 June 1737
Birth Place:Haverhill, Province of Massachusetts Bay
Death Place:Portsmouth, Province of New Hampshire
Conviction:Concealment of an illegitimate stillborn child
Conviction Penalty:Death by hanging
Conviction Status:Executed
Death Cause:Execution by hanging

Ruth Blay (June 10, 1737 – December 30, 1768) [1] was executed by hanging after being convicted of concealment of a stillborn illegitimate child, which was later found on the floor of the barn next to the house in which she was staying. She was not convicted of killing the baby. She was granted 3 reprieves before the execution. Blay was the last female executed by the state (then a colony) of New Hampshire. She was executed by Thomas Packer, Portsmouth’s High Sheriff,[2] who also oversaw the execution of Eliphaz Dow in 1755. [3]

Blay split her time between teaching in nearby towns and being a seamstress.

Ruth Blay's story is covered in an episode of the podcast Lore.

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://worldconnect.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=smith1940&id=I2384 Smith & Campbell "Ruth Blay" worldconnect
  2. Web site: Ruth Blay Hanged Here in 1768 . SeacoastNH.com.
  3. Web site: History of the Town of Hampton Falls, N. H.: From the Time of the first settlement within its borders 1640 until 1900 . Warren Brown. 1900 . 312.