Edward Tyng was born in was born in Dunstable, England, in 1610 and came to the American colonies in 1639. He purchased 3000 acres in Massachusetts, and named the area "Dunstable" after his birthplace. (Many years later Dunstable was divided into three towns: Dunstable and Tyngsboro, Massachusetts, and Nashua, New Hampshire.) Edward's grandson, Eleazar Tyng, was a colonel in the Colonial militia. Eleazar married Sarah Alford, and John Alford Tyng was among their five children. ![]() The trouble began when John Alford Tyng met Judith Thompson. Judith was the daughter of Ezra Thompson, who provided land for a church and the town meetinghouse.
Judith was known as one of the most beautiful women in New England. She sometimes worked at the Tyng Mansion, helping with their large parties, and soon caught the eye of John Alford Tyng. Tyng made advances towards Judith Thompson, but--being raised in a religious family--she insisted on marriage. Tyng felt that he couldn't marry a servant, and he was already engaged to an heiress in Boston anyway. Tyng solved the problem with a pretend marriage. "Dr. Blood" (no relation to the Blood family) was an itinerant physician in northern Colonial New England. He was also a drunkard, a thief and a con artist. Dr. Blood treated his patients, knocked them unconscious, and robbed them. Then, he left them by the side of the road. When they woke up, he was gone and so was their money. Tyng hired Dr. Blood to pretend to be a minister and marry the couple. Then, John Alford Tyng moved Judith into his new home in Dunstable (now Nashua, NH) a few miles from Tyng Mansion. Judith soon gave birth to a child, and then another, and finally a third child was on the way. Some say that John Alford Tyng had squandered his money and felt overburdened by his young family. Others suggest that Tyng was insanely jealous of others' attentions to Judith, who grew more beautiful each year. Tyng hired his old friend Dr. Blood to kill Judith and the children. Tyng waited in another room while the deed was done, and then buried his family under the hearth. That's when Tyng's problems really began. Next: Judith Thompson returned from the grave to claim the lives of both
Dr. Blood and her murdering husband, in
Judith Thompson - a vengeful ghost.
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