The case of John Gray, a resident of Stirling, appears within the judicial records of the late seventeenth century, specifically documented under the entry C/EGD/1757. On July 19, 1677, John was formally brought before the authorities to face an accusation of witchcraft, an event that situated him within the broader, ongoing history of Scottish judicial scrutiny during the post-Reformation period.
While the legal proceedings against John are noted in the register under reference T/JO/626, the surviving archives contain no further descriptive accounts or specific testimonies regarding the allegations leveled against him. Consequently, his experience remains a matter of administrative record, marking his place in the historical landscape of Stirling’s seventeenth-century legal history without the additional detail of the trial's specific narrative or outcome.