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1680 Devil Worship – Bottle Popping Blamed on Indians

"1680 Devil Worship - Bottle Popping Blamed on Indians" by W. M. Michelfelder, World Telegram Staff Writer The text reads: As police and electronics masterminds today sought the still-elusive answer to why bottles pop and sugar bowls fly in the Seaford ranch house of the James Herrmanns, some old-timers on Long Island came up with a new thought. Chroniclers of Indian lore in Seaford shook wise heads and saw it all in the light of history. The spruce and tidy six-room house at 1648 Redwood Path, where for more than three weeks exploding jugs and zooming bric-a-brac have tormented the Herrmanns and defied the probers, emerged today as "dead center" of the occult jumpings of Chief Tackapusha and his devil-worshiping Massapequas back in the 1680s. Solemned-toned historians recalled in nearby Hempstead: "In these areas, including the Seaford neighborhood of the Herrmanns, Indians led by Tackapusha held fantastic religious rites in the forest. Heard through the shadows of the forest and the Puritan settlements were VIBRATIONS (all caps) of unceasing and unearthly drum beats. "These drum beats, ECHOING ALONG THE GROUND (all caps), sent a shiver into every white man within miles. Finally, the Puritans sent out armed bands and warned the Indians that they must stop their powwow or worship of the devil so that it did not VIBRATE (all caps) into Seaford, or any other nearby town." The oldtimer scholars, never batting an eye, noted that the Herrmann household was only a few miles from Tackapusha Park, a state park named for the diabolic Sachem who specialized in "rolling thunder" along the ground, devilish sound waves created by weird drums and inhuman screams." Tackapusha's tribe, who lived and fought and celebrated sacred rituals in the Nassau County area now called Massapequa, was an offspring of the famed Algonquins. One branch of the tribe, according to the chroniclers, had a "devil worship and drum-rolling village" less than three miles from 1648 Redwood Path. But the Herrmanns, naturally, and the Nassau cops, were little interested in this satanic fragment of early Seaford history. On Sunday the flying objects were back at work. And the cops and the experts still had no answer today - Tackapusha or no Tackapusha.

Theories about the Seaford Poltergeist drew from beliefs and interests of the time period, some of which are recognized as especially offensive and incorrect today. This article details a history of the land around Seaford, promoting the colonialist narrative of Indigenous peoples as devil worshippers that need to be driven out. What colonists perceived as “devil worship” was shaped by their own belief systems, misunderstandings and misperceptions of Indigenous belief systems, and Eurocentrism and white supremacy – beliefs they used to justify the theft of land from and murder of Indigenous peoples. For more information about Tackapausha and the massacre of the Indigenous people of Long Island, click here.

“1680 Devil Worship – Bottle Popping Blamed on Indians” W. M. Michelfelder, World Telegram, Folder “Seaford Poltergeist,” Box D, Eileen J. Garrett Parapsychology Foundation Collection, Collection 331, Special Collections, University of Maryland, Baltimore County (Baltimore, MD).

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