For Immediate Release: June, 2019
Contact: Susan Strano, Director of Marketing
[email protected]
802-447-1571 ext. 204

Image:
David Redding’s Gravesite, Bennington, VT

David Redding, Hanged in Bennington

On Sunday, June 23 at 2:00 pm, Bennington Historical Society presents David Redding, Hanged in Bennington. This talk is given by historian Phil Holland and held in the Ada Paresky Education Center of the Bennington Museum. It is free and open to the public.

Background
On June 11, 1778, Loyalist David Redding was hanged on the Bennington town green for “inimical conduct.” Ethan Allen, having been recently released from a British prison, served as State’s prosecutor. It became Vermont’s first hanging. Holland tells the story of Redding’s trial and execution which was only the beginning of his odyssey through history. Denied burial in 1778, his bones were not interred until 1981. In the meantime, his case had caught the attention of the founding Director of the Bennington Museum, John Spargo. Spargo published a small book on the subject in which he accused the Vermont authorities of a miscarriage of justice. With the help of unpublished material prepared by Bennington historian Joe Parks, this talk sorts through the evidence and reflects on the passions aroused by the case.

Phil Holland has written about the Battle of Bennington, Robert Frost, and other subjects of historical and literary interest. He is currently touring the state lecturing about “The Black Presence at the Battle of Bennington” through the Vermont Council on the Humanities Speakers Bureau.
The Bennington Museum, located at 75 Main Street (Route 9), Bennington has the largest public collection of Grandma Moses paintings in the world as well as the largest collection of 19th century Bennington pottery. In its other galleries, the museum presents a 1924 Wasp Touring Car, one of only twenty produced, military artifacts, one of the earliest ‘stars and stripes’ in existence, fine and decorative arts, and more. The museum is open daily June through October from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Closed July 4. Admission is $10 for adults, $9 for seniors and students over 18. No admission is charged for younger students or to visit the museum shop. Visit the museum’s website www.benningtonmuseum.org or call 802-447-1571 for more information.