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Christian Shaw

Christian Shaw
Born Christian Shaw
1685
Renfrewshire, Scotland
Died September 8, 1737 (aged 51–52)
Bargarran, Scotland
Other names Christian Miller
Occupation Textile industrialist, industrial spy
Spouse(s) Rev John Millar (m. 1718; d. 1721)
William Gillespie (m. 1737)

Christian Shaw (1685 – 8 September 1737), was a Scottish industrialist regarded as the founder of the thread industry in Renfrewshire. As a child, she was instrumental in the Bargarran witch trials of 1697.

Christian Shaw was born in Renfrewshire, Scotland in 1685 the daughter of Christian McGilchrist and John Shaw, the Laird of Bargarran.

Little is known about Shaw's early life until the age of 11, when she becomes widely documented as a witness in the Bargarran witch trials.

Christian Shaw is most documented for her role in the Bargarran witch trials, which took place in 1697. Shaw, then aged 11, gave evidence that led to 8 people being accused of witchcraft, including Elizabeth Anderson, Katherine Campbell, James Lindsay, and Thomas Lindsay.

Accounts of the trials reported that Shaw had been "betwitched" by the suspects and was exhibiting behaviours including flying, and "vomiting coal and bent pins". During the investigations, which were led by Paisley Minister Mr Blackwood, the presbytery ordered prayer and fasting with the victim (Christian Shaw). Seven of those accused were hanged as a result of the trials, three men and four women. The eighth accused person was found dead in his cell.

An alternative account suggests that Shaw had taken a dislike to a servant, Katherine Campbell, and intentionally feigned bewitchment in order to bring about her death, and that her testimony led to the execution of 24 individuals in her home parish of Erskine.

Shaw founded the Renfrewshire thread industry, introducing the spinning of fine linen thread to Scotland and the development of her own "Bagarran Thread".

Shaw married Rev John Miller, the minister of Kilmaurs on 8 September 1718. After his death in 1721 she returned to the family thread business, travelling with her mother to Holland, where both women observed Dutch spinning techniques. Shaw sketched the thread production process that she saw, and is said to have smuggled some associated machinery back to Scotland in her luggage. The new production methods resulted in a more durable whiter thread, and Shaw established a small thread manufacturing company, "The Bargarran Thread Company", in Johnstone on her return.


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