fbpx
Wikipedia

Salem witch trials

The Salem witch trials were a series of hearings and prosecutions of people accused of witchcraft in colonial Massachusetts between February 1692 and May 1693. More than 200 people were accused. Thirty people were found guilty, 19 of whom were executed by hanging (14 women and five men). One other man, Giles Corey, died under torture after refusing to enter a plea, and at least five people died in jail.[1]

The central figure in this 1876 illustration of the courtroom is usually identified as Mary Walcott.

Arrests were made in numerous towns beyond Salem and Salem Village (known today as Danvers), notably Andover and Topsfield. The grand juries and trials for this capital crime were conducted by a Court of Oyer and Terminer in 1692 and by a Superior Court of Judicature in 1693, both held in Salem Town, where the hangings also took place. It was the deadliest witch hunt in the history of colonial North America. Fourteen other women and two men had been executed in Massachusetts and Connecticut during the 17th century.[2]

The episode is one of colonial America's most notorious cases of mass hysteria. It was not unique, but a colonial manifestation of the much broader phenomenon of witch trials in the early modern period, which took the lives of tens of thousands, mainly in Protestant Europe and the Americas. In America, Salem's events have been used in political rhetoric and popular literature as a vivid cautionary tale about the dangers of isolation, religious extremism, false accusations, and lapses in due process.[3] Many historians consider the lasting effects of the trials to have been highly influential in the history of the United States. According to historian George Lincoln Burr, "the Salem witchcraft was the rock on which the theocracy shattered."[4]

At the 300th anniversary events in 1992 to commemorate the victims of the trials, a park was dedicated in Salem and a memorial in Danvers. In 1957, an act passed by the Massachusetts legislature absolved six people,[5] while another one, passed in 2001, absolved five other victims.[6] As of 2004, there was still talk about exonerating all of the victims,[7] though some think that happened in the 18th century as the Massachusetts colonial legislature was asked to reverse the attainders of "George Burroughs and others".[8] In January 2016, the University of Virginia announced its Gallows Hill Project team had determined the execution site in Salem, where the 19 "witches" had been hanged. The city dedicated the Proctor's Ledge Memorial to the victims there in 2017.[9][10]

Background

While witch trials had begun to fade out across much of Europe by the mid-17th century, they continued on the fringes of Europe and in the American Colonies. The events in 1692–1693 in Salem became a brief outburst of a sort of hysteria in the New World, while the practice was already waning in most of Europe.

In 1668, in Against Modern Sadducism,[11] Joseph Glanvill claimed that he could prove the existence of witches and ghosts of the supernatural realm. Glanvill wrote about the "denial of the bodily resurrection, and the [supernatural] spirits."[12]

In his treatise, Glanvill claimed that ingenious men should believe in witches and apparitions; if they doubted the reality of spirits, they not only denied demons but also the almighty God. Glanvill wanted to prove that the supernatural could not be denied; those who did deny apparitions were considered heretics, for it also disproved their beliefs in angels.[12] Works by men such as Glanvill and Cotton Mather tried to prove that "demons were alive."[13]

Accusations

The trials were started after people had been accused of witchcraft, primarily by teenage girls such as Elizabeth Hubbard, 17, as well as some who were younger.[14] Dorothy Good was four or five years old when she was accused of witchcraft.[15]

Recorded witchcraft executions in New England

The earliest recorded witchcraft execution was that of Alse Young in 1647 in Hartford, Connecticut, the start of the Connecticut Witch Trials which lasted until 1663. Historian Clarence F. Jewett included a list of other people executed in New England in his 1881 book.[16]

Political context

New England had been settled by religious dissenters seeking to build a Bible-based society according to their own chosen discipline.[17] The original 1629 Royal Charter of the Massachusetts Bay Colony was vacated in 1684,[18] after which King James II installed Sir Edmund Andros as the governor of the Dominion of New England. Andros was ousted in 1689 after the "Glorious Revolution" in England replaced the Catholic James II with the Protestant co-rulers William and Mary.

Simon Bradstreet and Thomas Danforth, the colony's last leaders under the old charter, resumed their posts as governor and deputy governor, but lacked constitutional authority to rule because the old charter had been vacated. At the same time, tensions erupted between English colonists settling in "the Eastward" (the present-day coast of Maine) and French-supported Wabanaki people of that territory in what came to be known as King William's War. This was 13 years after the devastating King Philip's War with the Wampanoag and other indigenous tribes in southern and western New England. In October 1690, Sir William Phips led an unsuccessful attack on French-held Quebec. Between 1689 and 1692, Native Americans continued to attack many English settlements along the Maine coast, leading to the abandonment of some of the settlements and resulting in a flood of refugees into areas like Essex County.[19]

A new charter for the enlarged Province of Massachusetts Bay was given final approval in England on October 16, 1691. Increase Mather had been working on obtaining the charter for four years, with William Phips often joining him in London and helping him gain entry to Whitehall.[20] Increase Mather had published a book on witchcraft in 1684 and his son Cotton Mather published one in 1689. Increase Mather brought out a London edition of his son's book in 1690. Increase Mather claimed to have picked all the men to be included in the new government. News of Mather's charter and the appointment of Phips as the new governor had reached Boston by late January,[21] and a copy of the new charter reached Boston on February 8, 1692.[22] Phips arrived in Boston on May 14[23] and was sworn in as governor two days later, along with Lieutenant Governor William Stoughton.[24] One of the first orders of business for the new governor and council on May 27, 1692, was the formal nomination of county justices of the peace, sheriffs, and the commission of a Special Court of Oyer and Terminer to handle the large numbers of people who were "thronging" the jails.[25]

Local context

 
A map of Salem Village, 1692

Salem Village (present-day Danvers, Massachusetts) was known for its fractious population, who had many disputes internally and with Salem Town (present-day Salem). Arguments about property lines, grazing rights, and church privileges were rife, and neighbors considered the population as "quarrelsome." In 1672, the villagers had voted to hire a minister of their own, apart from Salem Town. The first two ministers, James Bayley (1673–1679) and George Burroughs (1680–1683), stayed only a few years each, departing after the congregation failed to pay their full rate. (Burroughs was subsequently arrested at the height of the witchcraft hysteria and was hanged as a witch in August 1692.)

Despite the ministers' rights being upheld by the General Court and the parish being admonished, each of the two ministers still chose to leave. The third minister, Deodat Lawson (1684–1688), stayed for a short time, leaving after the church in Salem refused to ordain him—and therefore not over issues with the congregation. The parish disagreed about Salem Village's choice of Samuel Parris as its first ordained minister. On June 18, 1689, the villagers agreed to hire Parris for £66 annually, "one third part in money and the other two third parts in provisions," and use of the parsonage.[26]

On October 10, 1689, however, they raised his benefits, voting to grant him the deed to the parsonage and two acres (0.8 hectares) of land.[27] This conflicted with a 1681 village resolution which stated that "it shall not be lawful for the inhabitants of this village to convey the houses or lands or any other concerns belonging to the Ministry to any particular persons or person: not for any cause by vote or other ways".[28]

Though the prior ministers' fates and the level of contention in Salem Village were valid reasons for caution in accepting the position, Rev. Parris increased the village's divisions by delaying his acceptance. He did not seem able to settle his new parishioners' disputes: by deliberately seeking out "iniquitous behavior" in his congregation and making church members in good standing suffer public penance for small infractions, he contributed significantly to the tension within the village. Its bickering increased unabated. Historian Marion Starkey suggests that, in this atmosphere, serious conflict may have been inevitable.[29]

Religious context

 
Reverend Cotton Mather

Prior to the constitutional turmoil of the 1680s, the Massachusetts government had been dominated by conservative Puritan secular leaders. While Puritans and the Church of England both shared a common influence in Calvinism, Puritans had opposed many of the traditions of the Church of England, including use of the Book of Common Prayer, the use of clergy vestments during services, the use of the sign of the cross at baptism, and kneeling to receive communion, all of which they believed constituted popery. King Charles I was hostile to this viewpoint, and Anglican church officials tried to repress these dissenting views during the 1620s and 1630s. Some Puritans and other religious minorities had sought refuge in the Netherlands but ultimately many made a major migration to colonial North America to establish their own society.[30]

These immigrants, who were mostly constituted of families, established several of the earliest colonies in New England, of which the Massachusetts Bay Colony was the largest and most economically important. They intended to build a society based on their religious beliefs.[31] Colonial leaders were elected by the freemen of the colony, those individuals who had had their religious experiences formally examined and had been admitted to one of the colony's Puritan congregations. The colonial leadership were prominent members of their congregations and regularly consulted with the local ministers on issues facing the colony.[32]

In the early 1640s, England erupted in civil war. The Puritan-dominated Parliamentarians emerged victorious, and the Crown was supplanted by the Protectorate of Oliver Cromwell in 1653. Its failure led to restoration of the old order under Charles II. Emigration to New England slowed significantly in these years. In Massachusetts, a successful merchant class began to develop that was less religiously motivated than the colony's early settlers.[33]

Gender context

A majority of people accused and convicted of witchcraft were women (about 78%).[34] Overall, the Puritan belief and prevailing New England culture was that women were inherently sinful and more susceptible to damnation than men were.[35] Throughout their daily lives, Puritans, especially Puritan women, actively attempted to thwart attempts by the Devil to overtake them and their souls. Indeed, Puritans held the belief that men and women were equal in the eyes of God, but not in the eyes of the Devil. Women's souls were seen as unprotected in their so-called "weak and vulnerable bodies". Several factors may explain why women were more likely to admit guilt of witchcraft than men. Historian Elizabeth Reis asserts that some likely believed they had truly given in to the Devil, and others might have believed they had done so temporarily. However, because those who confessed were reintegrated into society, some women might have confessed in order to spare their own lives.[35]

Quarrels with neighbors often incited witchcraft allegations. One example of this is Abigail Faulkner, who was accused in 1692. Faulkner admitted she was "angry at what folk said," and the Devil may have temporarily overtaken her, causing harm to her neighbors.[36] Women who did not conform to the norms of Puritan society were more likely to be the target of an accusation, especially those who were unmarried or did not have children.[37]

Publicising witchcraft

Cotton Mather, a minister of Boston's North Church, was a prolific publisher of pamphlets, including some that expressed his belief in witchcraft. In his book Memorable Providences Relating to Witchcrafts and Possessions (1689), Mather describes his "oracular observations" and how "stupendous witchcraft" had affected the children of Boston mason John Goodwin.[38]

Mather illustrates how the Goodwins' eldest child had been tempted by the devil and had stolen linen from the washerwoman Goody Glover.[39] Glover, of Irish Catholic descent, was characterized as a disagreeable old woman and described by her husband as a witch; this may have been why she was accused of casting spells on the Goodwin children. After the event, four out of six Goodwin children began to have strange fits, or what some people referred to as "the disease of astonishment." The manifestations attributed to the disease quickly became associated with witchcraft. Symptoms included neck and back pains, tongues being drawn from their throats, and loud random outcries; other symptoms included having no control over their bodies such as becoming limber, flapping their arms like birds, or trying to harm others as well as themselves. These symptoms fueled the craze of 1692.[38]

Timeline

Initial events

 
The parsonage in Salem Village, as photographed in the late 19th century
 
The present-day archaeological site of the Salem Village parsonage

In Salem Village in February 1692, Betty Parris (age 9) and her cousin Abigail Williams (age 11), the daughter and the niece, respectively, of Reverend Samuel Parris, began to have fits described as "beyond the power of epileptic fits or natural disease to effect" by John Hale, the minister of the nearby town of Beverly.[40] The girls screamed, threw things about the room, uttered strange sounds, crawled under furniture, and contorted themselves into peculiar positions, according to the eyewitness account of Reverend Deodat Lawson, a former minister in Salem Village.[41]

The girls complained of being pinched and pricked with pins. A doctor, historically assumed to be William Griggs,[14] could find no physical evidence of any ailment. Other young women in the village began to exhibit similar behaviors. When Lawson preached as a guest in the Salem Village meetinghouse, he was interrupted several times by the outbursts of the afflicted.[42]

The first three people accused and arrested for allegedly afflicting Betty Parris, Abigail Williams, 12-year-old Ann Putnam, Jr., and Elizabeth Hubbard,[14] were Sarah Good, Sarah Osborne, and Tituba.[43] Some historians believe that the accusation by Ann Putnam Jr. suggests that a family feud may have been a major cause of the witch trials. At the time, a vicious rivalry was underway between the Putnam and Porter families, one which deeply polarized the people of Salem. Citizens would often have heated debates, which escalated into full-fledged fighting, based solely on their opinion of the feud.[44] Some of the physical symptoms resembled convulsive ergot poisoning, proposed 284 years later.[45]

Sarah Good was a destitute woman accused of witchcraft because of her reputation. At her trial, she was accused of rejecting Puritan ideals of self-control and discipline when she chose to torment and "scorn [children] instead of leading them towards the path of salvation".[46]

Sarah Osborne rarely attended church meetings. She was accused of witchcraft because the Puritans believed that Osborne had her own self-interests in mind following her remarriage to an indentured servant. The citizens of the town disapproved of her trying to control her son's inheritance from her previous marriage.[47]

Tituba, an enslaved South American Kalina woman from the West Indies, likely became a target because of her ethnic differences from most of the other villagers. She was accused of attracting girls like Abigail Williams and Betty Parris with stories of enchantment from Malleus Maleficarum. These tales about sexual encounters with demons, swaying the minds of men, and fortune-telling were said to stimulate the imaginations of girls and made Tituba an obvious target of accusations.[48][better source needed] Each of these women was a kind of outcast and exhibited many of the character traits typical of the "usual suspects" for witchcraft accusations; they were left to defend themselves. Brought before the local magistrates on the complaint of witchcraft, they were interrogated for several days, starting on March 1, 1692, then sent to jail.[49]

In March, others were accused of witchcraft: Martha Corey, child Dorothy Good, and Rebecca Nurse in Salem Village, and Rachel Clinton in nearby Ipswich. Martha Corey had expressed skepticism about the credibility of the girls' accusations and thus drawn attention. The charges against her and Rebecca Nurse deeply troubled the community because Martha Corey was a full covenanted member of the Church in Salem Village, as was Rebecca Nurse in the Church in Salem Town. If such upstanding people could be witches, the townspeople thought, then anybody could be a witch, and church membership was no protection from accusation. Dorothy Good, the daughter of Sarah Good, was only four years old but was not exempted from questioning by the magistrates; her answers were construed as a confession that implicated her mother. In Ipswich, Rachel Clinton was arrested for witchcraft at the end of March on independent charges unrelated to the afflictions of the girls in Salem Village.[50]

The initial examinations included physical exams where the accused were examined for unique markings such as moles, birth marks that were commonly believed to be associated with the Devil's influence. It was thought that those markings represented the Devil drinking the accused women's blood.[51]

Accusations and examinations before local magistrates

 
Magistrate Samuel Sewall
 
The deposition of Abigail Williams v. George Jacobs, Sr.

When Sarah Cloyce (Nurse's sister) and Elizabeth (Bassett) Proctor were arrested in April, they were brought before John Hathorne and Jonathan Corwin at a meeting in Salem Town. The men were both local magistrates and also members of the Governor's Council. Present for the examination were Deputy Governor Thomas Danforth, and Assistants Samuel Sewall, Samuel Appleton, James Russell and Isaac Addington. During the proceedings, objections by Elizabeth's husband, John Proctor, resulted in his arrest that day.[52]

Within a week, Giles Corey (Martha's husband and a covenanted church member in Salem Town), Abigail Hobbs, Bridget Bishop, Mary Warren (a servant in the Proctor household and sometime accuser), and Deliverance Hobbs (stepmother of Abigail Hobbs), were arrested and examined. Abigail Hobbs, Mary Warren, and Deliverance Hobbs all confessed and began naming additional people as accomplices. More arrests followed: Sarah Wildes, William Hobbs (husband of Deliverance and father of Abigail), Nehemiah Abbott Jr., Mary Eastey (sister of Cloyce and Nurse), Edward Bishop Jr. and his wife Sarah Bishop, and Mary English.

On April 30, Reverend George Burroughs, Lydia Dustin, Susannah Martin, Dorcas Hoar, Sarah Morey, and Philip English (Mary's husband) were arrested. Nehemiah Abbott Jr. was released because the accusers agreed he was not the person whose specter had afflicted them. Mary Eastey was released for a few days after her initial arrest because the accusers failed to confirm that it was she who had afflicted them; she was arrested again when the accusers reconsidered. In May, accusations continued to pour in, but some of the suspects began to evade apprehension. Multiple warrants were issued before John Willard and Elizabeth Colson were apprehended; George Jacobs Jr. and Daniel Andrews were not caught. Until this point, all the proceedings were investigative, but on May 27, 1692, William Phips ordered the establishment of a Special Court of Oyer and Terminer for Suffolk, Essex and Middlesex counties to prosecute the cases of those in jail. Warrants were issued for more people. Sarah Osborne, one of the first three persons accused, died in jail on May 10, 1692.

Warrants were issued for 36 more people, with examinations continuing to take place in Salem Village: Sarah Dustin (daughter of Lydia Dustin), Ann Sears, Bethiah Carter Sr. and her daughter Bethiah Carter Jr., George Jacobs Sr. and his granddaughter Margaret Jacobs, John Willard, Alice Parker, Ann Pudeator, Abigail Soames, George Jacobs Jr. (son of George Jacobs Sr. and father of Margaret Jacobs), Daniel Andrew, Rebecca Jacobs (wife of George Jacobs Jr. and sister of Daniel Andrew), Sarah Buckley and her daughter Mary Witheridge.[53]

Also included were Elizabeth Colson, Elizabeth Hart, Thomas Farrar Sr. Roger Toothaker, Sarah Proctor (daughter of John and Elizabeth Proctor), Sarah Bassett (sister-in-law of Elizabeth Proctor), Susannah Roots, Mary DeRich (another sister-in-law of Elizabeth Proctor), Sarah Pease, Elizabeth Cary, Martha Carrier, Elizabeth Fosdick, Wilmot Redd, Sarah Rice, Elizabeth Howe, Capt. John Alden (son of John Alden and Priscilla Mullins), William Proctor (son of John and Elizabeth Proctor), John Flood, Mary Toothaker (wife of Roger Toothaker and sister of Martha Carrier) and her daughter Margaret Toothaker, and Arthur Abbott. When the Court of Oyer and Terminer convened at the end of May, the total number of people in custody was 62.[53]

Cotton Mather wrote to one of the judges, John Richards, a member of his congregation, on May 31, 1692,[54] expressing his support of the prosecutions, but cautioning him:

 
Statements of innocence, Part of the memorial for the victims of the 1692 witchcraft trials, Danvers, Massachusetts

[D]o not lay more stress on pure spectral evidence than it will bear ... It is very certain that the Devils have sometimes represented the Shapes of persons not only innocent, but also very virtuous. Though I believe that the just God then ordinarily provides a way for the speedy vindication of the persons thus abused.[55]

Formal prosecution: The Court of Oyer and Terminer

 
Chief Magistrate William Stoughton

The Court of Oyer and Terminer convened in Salem Town on June 2, 1692, with William Stoughton, the new Lieutenant Governor, as Chief Magistrate, Thomas Newton as the Crown's Attorney prosecuting the cases, and Stephen Sewall as clerk. Bridget Bishop's case was the first brought to the grand jury, who endorsed all the indictments against her. Bishop was described as not living a Puritan lifestyle, for she wore black clothing and odd costumes, which was against the Puritan code. When she was examined before her trial, Bishop was asked about her coat, which had been awkwardly "cut or torn in two ways".[56]

This, along with her "immoral" lifestyle, affirmed to the jury that Bishop was a witch. She went to trial the same day and was convicted. On June 3, the grand jury endorsed indictments against Rebecca Nurse and John Willard, but they did not go to trial immediately, for reasons which are unclear. Bishop was executed by hanging on June 10, 1692.

Immediately following this execution, the court adjourned for 20 days (until June 30) while it sought advice from New England's most influential ministers "upon the state of things as they then stood."[57][58] Their collective response came back dated June 15 and composed by Cotton Mather:

  1. The afflicted state of our poor neighbours, that are now suffering by molestations from the invisible world, we apprehend so deplorable, that we think their condition calls for the utmost help of all persons in their several capacities.
  2. We cannot but, with all thankfulness, acknowledge the success which the merciful God has given unto the sedulous and assiduous endeavours of our honourable rulers, to detect the abominable witchcrafts which have been committed in the country, humbly praying, that the discovery of those mysterious and mischievous wickednesses may be perfected.
  3. We judge that, in the prosecution of these and all such witchcrafts, there is need of a very critical and exquisite caution, lest by too much credulity for things received only upon the Devil's authority, there be a door opened for a long train of miserable consequences, and Satan get an advantage over us; for we should not be ignorant of his devices.
  4. As in complaints upon witchcrafts, there may be matters of inquiry which do not amount unto matters of presumption, and there may be matters of presumption which yet may not be matters of conviction, so it is necessary, that all proceedings thereabout be managed with an exceeding tenderness towards those that may be complained of, especially if they have been persons formerly of an unblemished reputation.
  5. When the first inquiry is made into the circumstances of such as may lie under the just suspicion of witchcrafts, we could wish that there may be admitted as little as is possible of such noise, company and openness as may too hastily expose them that are examined, and that there may no thing be used as a test for the trial of the suspected, the lawfulness whereof may be doubted among the people of God; but that the directions given by such judicious writers as Perkins and Bernard [be consulted in such a case].
  6. Presumptions whereupon persons may be committed, and, much more, convictions whereupon persons may be condemned as guilty of witchcrafts, ought certainly to be more considerable than barely the accused person's being represented by a specter unto the afflicted; inasmuch as it is an undoubted and notorious thing, that a demon may, by God's permission, appear, even to ill purposes, in the shape of an innocent, yea, and a virtuous man. Nor can we esteem alterations made in the sufferers, by a look or touch of the accused, to be an infallible evidence of guilt, but frequently liable to be abused by the Devil's legerdemains.
  7. We know not whether some remarkable affronts given to the Devils by our disbelieving those testimonies whose whole force and strength is from them alone, may not put a period unto the progress of the dreadful calamity begun upon us, in the accusations of so many persons, whereof some, we hope, are yet clear from the great transgression laid unto their charge.
  8. Nevertheless, we cannot but humbly recommend unto the government, the speedy and vigorous prosecution of such as have rendered themselves obnoxious, according to the direction given in the laws of God, and the wholesome statutes of the English nation, for the detection of witchcrafts.

Hutchinson sums the letter, "The two first and the last sections of this advice took away the force of all the others, and the prosecutions went on with more vigor than before." (Reprinting the letter years later in Magnalia, Cotton Mather left out these "two first and the last" sections.) Major Nathaniel Saltonstall, Esq., resigned from the court on or about June 16, presumably dissatisfied with the letter and that it had not outright barred the admission of spectral evidence. According to Upham, Saltonstall deserves the credit for "being the only public man of his day who had the sense or courage to condemn the proceedings, at the start." (chapt. VII) More people were accused, arrested and examined, but now in Salem Town, by former local magistrates John Hathorne, Jonathan Corwin, and Bartholomew Gedney, who had become judges of the Court of Oyer and Terminer. Suspect Roger Toothaker died in prison on June 16, 1692.

From June 30 through early July, grand juries endorsed indictments against Sarah Good, Elizabeth Howe, Susannah Martin, Elizabeth Proctor, John Proctor, Martha Carrier, Sarah Wildes and Dorcas Hoar. Sarah Good, Elizabeth Howe, Susannah Martin and Sarah Wildes, along with Rebecca Nurse, went to trial at this time, where they were found guilty. All five women were executed by hanging on July 19, 1692. In mid-July, the constable in Andover invited the afflicted girls from Salem Village to visit with his wife to try to determine who was causing her afflictions. Ann Foster, her daughter Mary Lacey Sr., and granddaughter Mary Lacey Jr. all confessed to being witches. Anthony Checkley was appointed by Governor Phips to replace Thomas Newton as the Crown's Attorney when Newton took an appointment in New Hampshire.

In August, grand juries indicted George Burroughs, Mary Eastey, Martha Corey and George Jacobs Sr. Trial juries convicted Martha Carrier, George Jacobs Sr., George Burroughs, John Willard, Elizabeth Proctor, and John Proctor. Elizabeth Proctor was given a temporary stay of execution because she was pregnant. On August 19, 1692, Martha Carrier, George Jacobs Sr., George Burroughs, John Willard, and John Proctor were executed:[citation needed]

Mr. Burroughs was carried in a Cart with others, through the streets of Salem, to Execution. When he was upon the Ladder, he made a speech for the clearing of his Innocency, with such Solemn and Serious Expressions as were to the Admiration of all present; his Prayer (which he concluded by repeating the Lord's Prayer) [as witches were not supposed to be able to recite] was so well worded, and uttered with such composedness as such fervency of spirit, as was very Affecting, and drew Tears from many, so that if seemed to some that the spectators would hinder the execution. The accusers said the black Man [Devil] stood and dictated to him. As soon as he was turned off [hanged], Mr. Cotton Mather, being mounted upon a Horse, addressed himself to the People, partly to declare that he [Mr. Burroughs] was no ordained Minister, partly to possess the People of his guilt, saying that the devil often had been transformed into the Angel of Light. And this did somewhat appease the People, and the Executions went on; when he [Mr. Burroughs] was cut down, he was dragged by a Halter to a Hole, or Grave, between the Rocks, about two feet deep; his Shirt and Breeches being pulled off, and an old pair of Trousers of one Executed put on his lower parts: he was so put in, together with Willard and Carrier, that one of his Hands, and his Chin, and a Foot of one of them, was left uncovered.

— Robert Calef, More Wonders of the Invisible World.[59]

September 1692

 
Petition for bail of eleven accused people from Ipswich, 1692
 
The personal seal of William Stoughton on the warrant for the execution of Bridget Bishop
 
Examination of a Witch (1853) by T. H. Matteson, inspired by the Salem trials

In September, grand juries indicted 18 more people. The grand jury failed to indict William Proctor, who was re-arrested on new charges. On September 19, 1692, Giles Corey refused to plead at trial, and was killed by peine forte et dure, a form of torture in which the subject is pressed beneath an increasingly heavy load of stones, in an attempt to make him enter a plea. Four pleaded guilty and 11 others were tried and found guilty.[citation needed]

On September 20, Cotton Mather wrote to Stephen Sewall: "That I may be the more capable to assist in lifting up a standard against the infernal enemy", requesting "a narrative of the evidence given in at the trials of half a dozen, or if you please, a dozen, of the principal witches that have been condemned." On September 22, 1692, eight more persons were executed, "After Execution Mr. Noyes turning him to the Bodies, said, what a sad thing it is to see Eight Firebrands of Hell hanging there."[60]

Dorcas Hoar was given a temporary reprieve, with the support of several ministers, to make a confession of being a witch. Mary Bradbury (aged 77) managed to escape with the help of family and friends. Abigail Faulkner Sr. was pregnant and given a temporary reprieve (some reports from that era say that Abigail's reprieve later became a stay of charges).[citation needed]

Mather quickly completed his account of the trials, Wonders of the Invisible World[61] and it was given to Phips when he returned from the fighting in Maine in early October. Burr says both Phips' letter and Mather's manuscript "must have gone to London by the same ship" in mid-October:[62]

I hereby declare that as soon as I came from fighting ... and understood what danger some of their innocent subjects might be exposed to, if the evidence of the afflicted persons only did prevaile either to the committing or trying any of them, I did before any application was made unto me about it put a stop to the proceedings of the Court and they are now stopt till their Majesties pleasure be known.

— Governor Phips, Boston, October 12, 1692

On October 29, Judge Sewall wrote, "the Court of Oyer and Terminer count themselves thereby dismissed ... asked whether the Court of Oyer and Terminer should sit, expressing some fear of Inconvenience by its fall, [the] Governour said it must fall".[63] Perhaps by coincidence, Governor Phips' own wife, Lady Mary Phips, was among those who had been "called out upon" around this time. After Phips' order, there were no more executions.

Superior Court of Judicature, 1693

In January 1693, the new Superior Court of Judicature, Court of Assize and General Gaol [Jail] Delivery convened in Salem, Essex County, again headed by William Stoughton, as Chief Justice, with Anthony Checkley continuing as the Attorney General, and Jonathan Elatson as Clerk of the Court. The first five cases tried in January 1693 were of the five people who had been indicted but not tried in September: Sarah Buckley, Margaret Jacobs, Rebecca Jacobs, Mary Whittredge (or Witheridge) and Job Tookey. All were found not guilty. Grand juries were held for many of those remaining in jail. Charges were dismissed against many, but 16 more people were indicted and tried, three of whom were found guilty: Elizabeth Johnson Jr.,[64] Sarah Wardwell, and Mary Post.[65]

When Stoughton wrote the warrants for the execution of these three and others remaining from the previous court, Governor Phips issued pardons, sparing their lives. In late January/early February, the Court sat again in Charlestown, Middlesex County, and held grand juries and tried five people: Sarah Cole (of Lynn), Lydia Dustin and Sarah Dustin, Mary Taylor and Mary Toothaker. All were found not guilty but were not released until they paid their jail fees. Lydia Dustin died in jail on March 10, 1693.

At the end of April, the Court convened in Boston, Suffolk County, and cleared Capt. John Alden by proclamation. It heard charges against a servant girl, Mary Watkins, for falsely accusing her mistress of witchcraft. In May, the Court convened in Ipswich, Essex County, and held a variety of grand juries. They dismissed charges against all but five people. Susannah Post, Eunice Frye, Mary Bridges Jr., Mary Barker and William Barker Jr. were all found not guilty at trial, finally putting an end to the series of trials and executions.

Legal procedures

Overview

After someone concluded that a loss, illness, or death had been caused by witchcraft, the accuser entered a complaint against the alleged witch with the local magistrates.[66] If the complaint was deemed credible, the magistrates had the person arrested[67] and brought in for a public examination—essentially an interrogation where the magistrates pressed the accused to confess.[68]

If the magistrates at this local level were satisfied that the complaint was well-founded, the prisoner was handed over to be dealt with by a superior court. In 1692, the magistrates opted to wait for the arrival of the new charter and governor, who would establish a Court of Oyer and Terminer to handle these cases. The next step, at the superior court level, was to summon witnesses before a grand jury.[69]

A person could be indicted on charges of afflicting with witchcraft,[70] or for making an unlawful covenant with the Devil.[71] Once indicted, the defendant went to trial, sometimes on the same day, as in the case of the first person indicted and tried on June 2, Bridget Bishop, who was executed eight days later, on June 10, 1692.

There were four execution dates, with one person executed on June 10, 1692,[72] five executed on July 19, 1692 (Sarah Good, Rebecca Nurse, Susannah Martin, Elizabeth Howe and Sarah Wildes),[73] another five executed on August 19, 1692 (Martha Carrier, John Willard, George Burroughs, George Jacobs Sr., and John Proctor), and eight on September 22, 1692 (Mary Eastey, Martha Corey, Ann Pudeator, Samuel Wardwell, Mary Parker, Alice Parker, Wilmot Redd and Margaret Scott).

Several others, including Elizabeth (Bassett) Proctor and Abigail Faulkner, were convicted but given temporary reprieves because they were pregnant. Five other women were convicted in 1692, but the death sentence was never carried out: Mary Bradbury (in absentia), Ann Foster (who later died in prison), Mary Lacey Sr. (Foster's daughter), Dorcas Hoar and Abigail Hobbs.

 
Giles Corey was pressed to death during the Salem witch trials in the 1690s

Giles Corey, an 81-year-old farmer from the southeast end of Salem (called Salem Farms), refused to enter a plea when he came to trial in September. The judges applied an archaic form of punishment called peine forte et dure, in which stones were piled on his chest until he could no longer breathe. After two days of peine fort et dure, Corey died without entering a plea.[74] His refusal to plead is usually explained as a way of preventing his estate from being confiscated by the Crown, but, according to historian Chadwick Hansen, much of Corey's property had already been seized, and he had made a will in prison: "His death was a protest ... against the methods of the court".[75] A contemporary critic of the trials, Robert Calef, wrote, "Giles Corey pleaded not Guilty to his Indictment, but would not put himself upon Tryal by the Jury (they having cleared none upon Tryal) and knowing there would be the same Witnesses against him, rather chose to undergo what Death they would put him to."[76]

As convicted witches, Rebecca Nurse and Martha Corey had been excommunicated from their churches and denied proper burials. As soon as the bodies of the accused were cut down from the trees, they were thrown into a shallow grave, and the crowd dispersed. Oral history claims that the families of the dead reclaimed their bodies after dark and buried them in unmarked graves on family property. The record books of the time do not note the deaths of any of those executed.[citation needed]

Spectral evidence

 
Title page of Cases of Conscience (Boston, 1693) by Increase Mather

Much, but not all, of the evidence used against the accused was spectral evidence, or the testimony of the afflicted who claimed to see the apparition or the shape of the person who was allegedly afflicting them.[77] The theological dispute that ensued about the use of this evidence was based on whether a person had to give permission to the Devil for his/her shape to be used to afflict. Opponents claimed that the Devil was able to use anyone's shape to afflict people, but the Court contended that the Devil could not use a person's shape without that person's permission; therefore, when the afflicted claimed to see the apparition of a specific person, that was accepted as evidence that the accused had been complicit with the Devil.[78][79]

Cotton Mather's The Wonders of the Invisible World was written with the purpose to show how careful the court was in managing the trials. Unfortunately the work did not get released until after the trials had already ended.[80] In his book, Mather explained how he felt spectral evidence was presumptive and that it alone was not enough to warrant a conviction.[81] Robert Calef, a strong critic of Cotton Mather, stated in his own book titled More Wonders of the Invisible World that by confessing, an accused would not be brought to trial, such as in the cases of Tituba and Dorcas Good.[82][83]

Increase Mather and other ministers sent a letter to the Court, "The Return of Several Ministers Consulted", urging the magistrates not to convict on spectral evidence alone.[84] (The court later ruled that spectral evidence was inadmissible, which caused a dramatic reduction in the rate of convictions and may have hastened the end of the trials.) A copy of this letter was printed in Increase Mather's Cases of Conscience, published in 1693. The publication A Tryal of Witches, related to the 1662 Bury St Edmunds witch trial, was used by the magistrates at Salem when looking for a precedent in allowing spectral evidence. Since the jurist Sir Matthew Hale had permitted this evidence, supported by the eminent philosopher, physician and author Thomas Browne, to be used in the Bury St Edmunds witch trial and the accusations against two Lowestoft women, the colonial magistrates also accepted its validity and their trials proceeded.[85]

Witch cake

 
Reverend Samuel Parris

According to a March 27, 1692 entry by Parris in the Records of the Salem-Village Church, a church member and close neighbor of Rev. Parris, Mary Sibley (aunt of Mary Walcott), directed John Indian, a man enslaved by Parris, to make a witch cake.[86] This may have been a superstitious attempt to ward off evil spirits. According to an account attributed to Deodat Lawson ("collected by Deodat Lawson") this happened around March 8, over a week after the first complaints had gone out and three women were arrested. Lawson's account describes this cake "a means to discover witchcraft" and provides other details such as that it was made from rye meal and urine from the afflicted girls and was fed to a dog.[87][88]

In the Church Records, Parris describes speaking with Sibley privately on March 25, 1692, about her "grand error" and accepted her "sorrowful confession." After the main sermon on March 27, and the wider congregation was dismissed, Parris addressed covenanted church-members about it and admonished all the congregation against "going to the Devil for help against the Devil." He stated that while "calamities" that had begun in his own household "it never brake forth to any considerable light, until diabolical means were used, by the making of a cake by my Indian man, who had his direction from this our sister, Mary Sibley." This doesn't seem to square with Lawson's account dating it around March 8. The first complaints were February 29 and the first arrests were March 1.[86]

 
This 19th-century representation of "Tituba and the Children" by Alfred Fredericks, originally appeared in A Popular History of the United States, Vol. 2, by William Cullen Bryant (1878)

Traditionally, the allegedly afflicted girls are said to have been entertained by Parris' slave, Tituba.[89] A variety of secondary sources, starting with Charles W. Upham in the 19th century, typically relate that a circle of the girls, with Tituba's help, tried their hands at fortune telling. They used the white of an egg and a mirror to create a primitive crystal ball to divine the professions of their future spouses and scared one another when one supposedly saw the shape of a coffin instead. The story is drawn from John Hale's book about the trials,[90] but in his account, only one of the girls, not a group of them, had confessed to him afterward that she had once tried this. Hale did not mention Tituba as having any part of it, nor did he identify when the incident took place. But the record of Tituba's pre-trial examination holds her giving an energetic confession, speaking before the court of "creatures who inhabit the invisible world," and "the dark rituals which bind them together in service of Satan", implicating both Good and Osborne while asserting that "many other people in the colony were engaged in the devil's conspiracy against the Bay."[91]

Tituba's race has often been described in later accounts as of Carib-Indian or African descent, but contemporary sources describe her only as an "Indian". Research by Elaine Breslaw has suggested that Tituba may have been captured in what is now Venezuela and brought to Barbados, and so may have been an Arawak Indian.[92] Other slightly later descriptions of her, by Gov. Thomas Hutchinson writing his history of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the 18th century, describe her as a "Spanish Indian."[93] In that day, that typically meant a Native American from the Carolinas/Georgia/Florida.[citation needed]

Touch test

The most infamous application of the belief in effluvia was the touch test used in Andover during preliminary examinations in September 1692. Parris had explicitly warned his congregation against such examinations. If the accused witch touched the victim while the victim was having a fit, and the fit stopped, observers believed that meant the accused was the person who had afflicted the victim. As several of those accused later recounted:

...we were blindfolded, and our hands were laid upon the afflicted persons, they being in their fits and falling into their fits at our coming into their presence, as they said. Some led us and laid our hands upon them, and then they said they were well and that we were guilty of afflicting them; whereupon we were all seized, as prisoners, by a warrant from the justice of the peace and forthwith carried to Salem.[94]

The Rev. John Hale explained how this supposedly worked: "the Witch by the cast of her eye sends forth a Malefick Venome into the Bewitched to cast him into a fit, and therefore the touch of the hand doth by sympathy cause that venome to return into the Body of the Witch again".[95]

Other evidence

Other evidence included the confessions of the accused; testimony by a confessed witch who identified others as witches; the discovery of poppits (poppets), books of palmistry and horoscopes, or pots of ointments in the possession or home of the accused; and observation of what were called witch's teats on the body of the accused. A witch's teat was said to be a mole or blemish somewhere on the body that was insensitive to touch; discovery of such insensitive areas was considered de facto evidence of witchcraft.[96]

Primary sources and early discussion

 
Reverend Increase Mather

Puritan ministers throughout the Massachusetts Bay Colony were exceedingly interested in the trial. Several traveled to Salem in order to gather information about the trial. After witnessing the trials first-hand and gathering accounts, these ministers presented various opinions about the trial starting in 1692.

Deodat Lawson, a former minister in Salem Village, visited Salem Village in March and April 1692. The resulting publication, entitled A Brief and True Narrative of Some Remarkable Passages Relating to Sundry Persons Afflicted by Witchcraft, at Salem Village: Which happened from the Nineteenth of March, to the Fifth of April 1692, was published while the trials were ongoing and relates evidence meant to convict the accused.[41] Simultaneous with Lawson, William Milbourne, a Baptist minister in Boston, publicly petitioned the General Assembly in early June 1692, challenging the use of spectral evidence by the Court. Milbourne had to post £200 bond (equal to £33,310, or about US$42,000 today) or be arrested for "contriving, writing and publishing the said scandalous Papers".[97]

 
First page of "Some Miscellany Observations On our present Debates respecting Witchcrafts, in a Dialogue Between S. & B.", attributed to Samuel Willard

The most famous primary source about the trials is Cotton Mather's Wonders of the Invisible World: Being an Account of the Tryals of Several Witches, Lately Executed in New-England, printed in October 1692. This text had a tortured path to publication. Initially conceived as a promotion of the trials and a triumphant celebration of Mather's leadership, Mather had to rewrite the text and disclaim personal involvement as suspicion about spectral evidence started to build.[98] Regardless, it was published in both Boston and London, with an introductory letter of endorsement by William Stoughton, the Chief Magistrate. The book included accounts of five trials, with much of the material copied directly from the court records, which were supplied to Mather by Stephen Sewall, a clerk in the court.[99]

 
Title page of Wonders of the Invisible World (London, 1693) by Cotton Mather

Cotton Mather's father, Increase Mather, completed Cases of Conscience Concerning Evil Spirits at the same time as Wonders and published it in November 1692. This book was intended to judiciously acknowledge the growing doubts about spectral evidence, while still maintaining the accuracy of Cotton's rewritten, whitewashed text. Like his son, Increase minimized his personal involvement, although he included the full text of his August petition to the Salem court in support of spectral evidence.[100] Judging from the apologetic tone of Cases of Conscience that the moral panic had subsided, Thomas Brattle directly ridiculed the "superstitions" of Salem and Increase's defense of his son in an open letter notable for its openly sarcastic tone.[101]

Samuel Willard, minister of the Third Church in Boston[102] was a onetime strong supporter of the trials and of spectral evidence but became increasingly concerned as the Mathers crushed dissent.[103] Writing anonymously to conceal his dissent, he published a short tract entitled "Some Miscellany Observations On our present Debates respecting Witchcrafts, in a Dialogue Between S. & B." The authors were listed as "P. E. and J. A." (Philip English and John Alden), but the work is generally attributed to Willard. In it, two characters, S (Salem) and B (Boston), discuss the way the proceedings were being conducted, with "B" urging caution about the use of testimony from the afflicted and the confessors, stating, "whatever comes from them is to be suspected; and it is dangerous using or crediting them too far".[104] This book lists its place of publication as Philadelphia, but it is believed to have been secretly printed in Boston.[105]

Aftermath and closure

Although the last trial was held in May 1693, public response to the events continued. In the decades following the trials, survivors and family members (and their supporters) sought to establish the innocence of the individuals who were convicted and to gain compensation. In the following centuries, the descendants of those unjustly accused and condemned have sought to honor their memories. Events in Salem and Danvers in 1992 were used to commemorate the trials. In November 2001, years after the celebration of the 300th anniversary of the trials, the Massachusetts legislature passed an act exonerating all who had been convicted and naming each of the innocent,[106] with the exception of Elizabeth Johnson, who was cleared by the Massachusetts Senate on 26 May 2022, the last conviction to be reversed, after pressure from schoolchildren who discovered the anomaly.[107] The trials have figured in American culture and been explored in numerous works of art, literature and film.

Reversals of attainder and compensation to the survivors

 
Title page of A Modest Enquiry Into the Nature of Witchcraft by John Hale (Boston, 1702)

The first indication that public calls for justice were not over occurred in 1695 when Thomas Maule, a noted Quaker, publicly criticized the handling of the trials by the Puritan leaders in Chapter 29 of his book Truth Held Forth and Maintained, expanding on Increase Mather by stating, "it were better that one hundred Witches should live, than that one person be put to death for a witch, which is not a Witch".[108] For publishing this book, Maule was imprisoned twelve months before he was tried and found not guilty.[109]

 
Reverend Samuel Willard

On December 17, 1696, the General Court ruled that there would be a fast day on January 14, 1697, "referring to the late Tragedy, raised among us by Satan and his Instruments."[110] On that day, Samuel Sewall asked Rev. Samuel Willard to read aloud his apology to the congregation of Boston's South Church, "to take the Blame & Shame" of the "late Commission of Oyer & Terminer at Salem".[111] Thomas Fiske and eleven other trial jurors also asked forgiveness.[112]

From 1693 to 1697, Robert Calef, a "weaver" and a cloth merchant in Boston, collected correspondence, court records and petitions, and other accounts of the trials, and placed them, for contrast, alongside portions of Cotton Mather's Wonders of the Invisible World, under the title More Wonders of the Invisible World,[59]

Calef could not get it published in Boston and he had to take it to London, where it was published in 1700. Scholars of the trials—Hutchinson, Upham, Burr, and even Poole—have relied on Calef's compilation of documents. John Hale, a minister in Beverly who was present at many of the proceedings, had completed his book, A Modest Enquiry into the Nature of Witchcraft in 1697, which was not published until 1702, after his death, and perhaps in response to Calef's book. Expressing regret over the actions taken, Hale admitted, "Such was the darkness of that day, the tortures and lamentations of the afflicted, and the power of former presidents, that we walked in the clouds, and could not see our way."[113]

Various petitions were filed between 1700 and 1703 with the Massachusetts government, demanding that the convictions be formally reversed. Those tried and found guilty were considered dead in the eyes of the law, and with convictions still on the books, those not executed were vulnerable to further accusations. The General Court initially reversed the attainder only for those who had filed petitions,[114] only three people who had been convicted but not executed: Abigail Faulkner Sr., Elizabeth Proctor and Sarah Wardwell.[115][full citation needed] In 1703, another petition was filed,[116] requesting a more equitable settlement for those wrongly accused, but it was not until 1709, when the General Court received a further request, that it took action on this proposal. In May 1709, 22 people who had been convicted of witchcraft, or whose relatives had been convicted of witchcraft, presented the government with a petition in which they demanded both a reversal of attainder and compensation for financial losses.[117]

 
Governor of Massachusetts Joseph Dudley

Repentance was evident within the Salem Village church. Rev. Joseph Green and the members of the church voted on February 14, 1703, after nearly two months of consideration, to reverse the excommunication of Martha Corey.[118] On August 25, 1706, when Ann Putnam Jr., one of the most active accusers, joined the Salem Village church, she publicly asked forgiveness. She claimed that she had not acted out of malice, but had been deluded by Satan into denouncing innocent people, mentioning Rebecca Nurse, in particular,[119] and was accepted for full membership.

On October 17, 1711, the General Court passed a bill reversing the judgment against the twenty-two people listed in the 1709 petition (there were seven additional people who had been convicted but had not signed the petition, but there was no reversal of attainder for them). Two months later, on December 17, 1711, Governor Joseph Dudley authorized monetary compensation to the 22 people in the 1709 petition. The amount of £578 12s was authorized to be divided among the survivors and relatives of those accused, and most of the accounts were settled within a year,[120] but Phillip English's extensive claims were not settled until 1718.[121] Finally, on March 6, 1712, Rev. Nicholas Noyes and members of the Salem church reversed Noyes' earlier excommunications of Rebecca Nurse and Giles Corey.[122]

Memorials

Rebecca Nurse's descendants erected an obelisk-shaped granite memorial in her memory in 1885 on the grounds of the Nurse Homestead in Danvers, with an inscription from John Greenleaf Whittier. In 1892, an additional monument was erected in honor of forty neighbors who signed a petition in support of Nurse.[123]

 
Memorial to the Victims of the Witch Trials, Principal Inscription, Danvers, Massachusetts

Not all the condemned had been exonerated in the early 18th century. In 1957, descendants of the six people who had been wrongly convicted and executed but who had not been included in the bill for a reversal of attainder in 1711, or added to it in 1712, demanded that the General Court formally clear the names of their ancestral family members. An act was passed pronouncing the innocence of those accused, although it listed only Ann Pudeator by name. The others were listed only as "certain other persons", phrasing which failed specifically to name Bridget Bishop, Susannah Martin, Alice Parker, Wilmot Redd and Margaret Scott.[124]

 
The Salem Witch Trials Memorial Park in Salem
 
Fanciful representation of the Salem witch trials, lithograph from 1892

The 300th anniversary of the trials was marked in 1992 in Salem and Danvers by a variety of events. A memorial park was dedicated in Salem which included stone slab benches inserted in the stone wall of the park for each of those executed in 1692. Speakers at the ceremony in August included playwright Arthur Miller and Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel.[125] Danvers erected its own new memorial,[126] and reinterred bones unearthed in the 1950s, assumed to be those of George Jacobs Sr., in a new resting place at the Rebecca Nurse Homestead.[123]

In 1992, The Danvers Tercentennial Committee also persuaded the Massachusetts House of Representatives to issue a resolution honoring those who had died. After extensive efforts by Paula Keene, a Salem schoolteacher, state representatives J. Michael Ruane and Paul Tirone, along with others, issued a bill whereby the names of all those not previously listed were to be added to this resolution. When it was finally signed on October 31, 2001, by Governor Jane Swift, more than 300 years later, all were finally proclaimed innocent.[106][127]

 
Part of the memorial for the victims of the 1692 withcraft trials, Danvers, Massachusetts

Land in the area was purchased by the city of Salem in 1936 and renamed "Witch Memorial Land" but no memorial was constructed on the site, and popular misconception persisted that the executions had occurred at the top of Gallows Hill.[128] Rebecca Eames of Boxford, who was brought to Salem for questioning, stated that she was held at "the house below the hill" where she could see people attending executions. This helped researchers rule out the summit as the execution site.[129] In January 2016, the University of Virginia announced its project team had determined the execution site on Gallows Hill in Salem, where nineteen "witches" had been hanged in public.[10] Members of the Gallows Hill Project had worked with the city of Salem using old maps and documentation, as well as sophisticated GIS and ground-penetrating radar technology, to survey the area of what became known as Proctor's Ledge, located at the base of the hill, which they say was easier for spectators to reach than the top of Gallows Hill. The city owns the property and dedicated the Proctor's Ledge Memorial to the victims there in 2017.[9][10] A documentary, Gallows Hill – Nineteen, is in production about these events.[10][129]

In literature, media and popular culture

The story of the witchcraft accusations, trials and executions has captured the imagination of writers and artists in the centuries since the event took place. Their earliest impactful use as the basis for an item of popular fiction is the 1828 novel Rachel Dyer by John Neal.[130]

Many interpretations have taken liberties with the facts of the historical episode in the name of literary and/or artistic license—including the popular but false idea that witches in America were burned.[131] As the trials took place at the intersection between a gradually disappearing medieval past and an emerging enlightenment, and dealt with torture and confession, some interpretations draw attention to the boundaries between the medieval and the post-medieval as cultural constructions.[132]

Most recently, the events of the Salem witch trials were interpreted in the 2018 exploitation-teen comedy film Assassination Nation, which changed the setting to the present United States and added thick social commentary in order to underline the absurdity of the actual events.[133]

Medical theories about the reported afflictions

The cause of the symptoms of those who claimed affliction continues to be a subject of interest. Various medical and psychological explanations for the observed symptoms have been explored by researchers, including psychological hysteria in response to Indian attacks, convulsive ergotism caused by eating rye bread made from grain infected by the fungus Claviceps purpurea (a natural substance from which LSD is derived),[134] an epidemic of bird-borne encephalitis lethargica, and sleep paralysis to explain the nocturnal attacks alleged by some of the accusers.[135] Some modern historians are less inclined to focus on biological explanations, preferring instead to explore motivations such as jealousy, spite, and a need for attention to explain the behavior.[136]

See also

References

  1. ^ Snyder, Heather. "Giles Corey". Salem Witch Trials. from the original on November 22, 2019. Retrieved December 3, 2019.
  2. ^ Demos, John (1983). Entertaining Satan : Witchcraft and the Culture of Early New England. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 11, 401-409. ISBN 9780195033786.
  3. ^ Adams 2008
  4. ^ Burr, George Lincoln, ed. (1914). Narratives of the Witchcraft Cases, 1648–1706. C. Scribner's Sons. p. 195n1.
  5. ^ "Six Victims of 1692 Salem Witch Trials "Cleared" by Massachusetts..." December 2, 2015. from the original on January 18, 2018. Retrieved January 17, 2018.
  6. ^ "Massachusetts Clears 5 From Salem Witch Trials". The New York Times. November 2, 2001. from the original on January 30, 2018. Retrieved January 29, 2018.
  7. ^ "Salem may pardon accused witches of 1692". archive.boston.com. The Boston Globe. from the original on January 17, 2018. Retrieved January 17, 2018.
  8. ^ Vaughan, Alden (1997). The Puritan Tradition in America. UP of New England. p. 283. ISBN 978-0874518528. from the original on September 19, 2023. Retrieved November 13, 2020.
  9. ^ a b Writer, Dustin Luca Staff (July 19, 2017). "On 325th anniversary, city dedicates Proctor's Ledge memorial to Salem Witch Trials victims". Salem News. from the original on November 1, 2019. Retrieved November 1, 2019.
  10. ^ a b c d Caroline Newman, "X Marks the Spot" April 29, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, UVA Today, 16 January 2016, accessed 28 April 2016
  11. ^ Full title: A blow at modern Sadducism in some philosophical considerations about witchcraft. To which is added, the relation of the fam'd disturbance by the drummer, in the house of Mr. John Mompesson, with some reflections on drollery and atheisme
  12. ^ a b Glanvill, Joseph. "Essay IV Against modern Sadducism in the matter of Witches and Apparitions", Essay on Several Important Subjects in Philosophy and Religion, 2nd ed., London; printed by Jd for John Baker and H. Mortlock, 1676, pp. 1–4 (in the history 201 course-pack compiled by S. McSheffrey & T. McCormick), p. 26
  13. ^ 3 Mather, Cotton."Memorable Providence, Relating to Witchcraft and Possessions" 2008-12-19 at the Wayback Machine, law.umkc.edu; accessed June 5, 2010.
  14. ^ a b c Nichols, Amy. "Salem Witch Trials: Elizabeth Hubbard". University of Virginia. from the original on April 6, 2018. Retrieved April 8, 2018.
  15. ^ "SWP No. 062: Dorothy Good - New Salem - Pelican". salem.lib.virginia.edu. from the original on May 11, 2023. Retrieved May 11, 2023.
  16. ^ The Memorial History of Boston: Including Suffolk County, Massachusetts. 1630–1880 (Ticknor and Company (1881), pp. 133–137
  17. ^ —— (2009). Puritanism: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199740871.
  18. ^ The Glorious Revolution in Massachusetts: Selected Documents, 1689–1692 (henceforth cited as Glorious Revolution), Robert Earle Moody and Richard Clive Simmons (eds.), Colonial Society of Massachusetts: Boston, MA, 1988, p. 2.[ISBN missing]
  19. ^ Pulsipher, Jenny Hale (December 2007). "Dark Cloud Rising from the East". The New England Quarterly. 80 (4): 588–613. doi:10.1162/tneq.2007.80.4.588. JSTOR 20474581. S2CID 57560166.
  20. ^ "Letter of Increase Mather to John Richards, 26 October 1691, Glorious Revolution p. 621.
  21. ^ The Diary of Samuel Sewall, Vol. 1: 1674–1708 (henceforth cited as Sewall Diary), ed. M. Halsey Thomas, Farrar, Straus & Giroux: New York, 1973, p. 287.
  22. ^ Sewall Diary, p. 288.
  23. ^ Sewall Diary, p. 291.
  24. ^ Massachusetts Archives Collections, Governor's Council Executive Records, Vol. 2, 1692, p. 165. Certified copy from the original records at Her Majestie's State Paper Office, London, September 16, 1846.
  25. ^ Governor's Council Executive Records, Vol. 2, 1692, pp. 174–177.
  26. ^ Salem Village Record Book (June 18, 1689) July 20, 2011, at the Wayback Machine; accessed January 9, 2019.
  27. ^ Salem Village Record Book, October 10, 1689 July 20, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, etext.virginia.edu; accessed January 9, 2019.
  28. ^ Salem Village Record Book, December 27, 1681 July 20, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, etext.virginia.edu; accessed January 9, 2019.
  29. ^ Starkey 1949, pp. 26–28
  30. ^ Francis J. Bremer and Tom Webster, eds. Puritans and Puritanism in Europe and America: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia (ABC-CLIO, 2006)[ISBN missing]
  31. ^ King, Ernest W.; Mixon, Franklin G. (September 1, 2010). "Religiosity and the political economy of the Salem witch trials". The Social Science Journal. 47 (3): 678–688. doi:10.1016/j.soscij.2010.01.008. ISSN 0362-3319. S2CID 143898352. from the original on September 24, 2021. Retrieved September 24, 2021.
  32. ^ Francis J. Bremer, The Puritan Experiment: New England Society from Bradford to Edwards (UP New England, 2013)
  33. ^ Bremer, The Puritan Experiment: New England society from Bradford to Edwards (2013)
  34. ^ Reis 1997, p. xvi.
  35. ^ a b Reis 1997, p. 2.
  36. ^ Karlsen, Carol F. (1998). The Devil in the Shape of a Woman: Witchcraft in Colonial New England. New York: W.W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0393317596.
  37. ^ Roach, Marilynne K. (2013). Six Women of Salem: The Untold Story of the Accused and Their Accusers in the Salem Witch Trials. New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0306821202.
  38. ^ a b Mather, Cotton. Memorable Providences, Relating to Witchcraft and Possessions. 1689 law.umkc.edu 2008-12-19 at the Wayback Machine; accessed January 18, 2019.
  39. ^ Records of the Salem Witch-Hunt, Rosenthal, et al., 2009, p. 15, n2
  40. ^ John Hale (1697). A Modest Enquiry Into the Nature of Witchcraft. Benjamin Elliot. from the original on January 21, 2013. Retrieved January 9, 2019.
  41. ^ a b Deodat Lawson (1692). A Brief and True Narrative of Some Remarkable Passages Relating to Sundry Persons Afflicted by Witchcraft, at Salem Village: Which happened from the Nineteenth of March, to the Fifth of April, 1692. Benjamin Harris. from the original on April 15, 2019. Retrieved October 31, 2017.
  42. ^ Deodat Lawson (1692). A Brief and True Narrative of Some Remarkable Passages Relating to Sundry Persons Afflicted by Witchcraft, at Salem Village: Which happened from the Nineteenth of March, to the Fifth of April, 1692. Benjamin Harris. p. 3. from the original on April 15, 2019. Retrieved October 31, 2017.
  43. ^ Breslaw 1996, p. 103.
  44. ^ See the warrants for their arrests at the University of Virginia archives: 004 0001 August 12, 2008, at the Wayback Machine and 033 0001 September 18, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  45. ^ Caporael, Linnda R. (1976). "Ergotism: The Satan Loosed in Salem?". Science. 192 (4234): 21–26. Bibcode:1976Sci...192...21C. doi:10.1126/science.769159. JSTOR 1741715. PMID 769159. from the original on June 27, 2022. Retrieved June 27, 2022.
  46. ^ Linder, Douglas O. "The Examination of Sarah Good". Famous Trials. UMKC School of Law. from the original on October 31, 2019. Retrieved November 21, 2019.
  47. ^ "Sarah Osborne House". Salem Witch Museum. from the original on August 12, 2020. Retrieved August 20, 2020.
  48. ^ 7 trans. Montague Summer. Questions VII & XI. "Malleus Maleficarum Part I." sacred-texts.com February 23, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, June 9, 2010; accessed December 24, 2014.
  49. ^ Boyer 3
  50. ^ Virginia.edu Salem witch trials (archives) September 18, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, etext.virginia.edu; accessed January 9, 2019.
  51. ^ Locke, Joseph L.; Wright, Ben (2019). The American Yawp. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-1503608146.
  52. ^ . Salem Witch Trial-Documentary Archive and Transcription Project. Archived from the original on December 10, 2017. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  53. ^ a b For more information about family relationships, see Enders A. Robinson (1991). The Devil Discovered: Salem Witchcraft 1692. Hippocrene: New York. ISBN 978-1-57766-176-4., Enders A. Robinson (1992). Salem Witchcraft and Hawthorne's House of the Seven Gables. Heritage Books: Bowie, MD. ISBN 978-1-55613-515-6., and Marilynne K. Roach (2002). The Salem Witch Trials: A Day-To-Day Chronicle of a Community Under Siege. Cooper Square Press, New York. ISBN 978-1-58979-132-9.
  54. ^ Charles W. Upham, Salem Witchcraft and Cotton Mather. A Reply. June 30, 2019, at the Wayback Machine Morrisania, NY, 1869, Project Gutenberg, gutenberg.org; accessed December 24, 2014.
  55. ^ Silverman, Kenneth, ed. (1971). Selected Letters of Cotton Mather. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. pp. 35–40. ISBN 978-0-8071-0920-5.
  56. ^ 1 The Examination of Bridget Bishop, April 19, 1692. "Examination and Evidence of Some Accused Witches in Salem, 1692. law.umkc.edu 2010-12-31 at the Wayback Machine (accessed June 5, 2010)
  57. ^ Hutchinson, Thomas. "The Witchcraft Delusion of 1692", New England Historical Genealogical Historical Register, Vol. 24, pp. 381–414 (381) October 1870.
  58. ^ . May 17, 2008. Archived from the original on May 17, 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  59. ^ a b Calef, Robert (1823). . Salem: Cushing & Appleton. OCLC 80040152. Archived from the original on February 5, 2012. Retrieved December 24, 2014. Alt URL
  60. ^ Burr, George Lincoln, ed. (1914). Narratives of the Witchcraft Cases, 1648–1706. C. Scribner's Sons. p. 369.
  61. ^ Mather, Cotton (1914). "The Wonders of the Invisible World". In Burr, George Lincoln (ed.). Narratives of the Witchcraft Cases, 1648–1706. C. Scribner's Sons. pp. 203–.
  62. ^ Letters of Governor Phips to the Home Government, 1692–1693, etext.virginia.edu; accessed January 9, 2019.
  63. ^ Judge Sewall's Diary, I. p. 368.
  64. ^ "Woman condemned in Salem witch trials on verge of pardon 328 years later". The Guardian. August 19, 2021. from the original on August 19, 2021. Retrieved August 19, 2021.
  65. ^ . Archived from the original on December 15, 2015. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  66. ^ See The Complaint v. Elizabeth Proctor & Sarah Cloyce September 9, 2006, at the Wayback Machine for an example of one of the primary sources of this type.
  67. ^ The Arrest Warrant of Rebecca Nurse September 9, 2006, at the Wayback Machine, etext.lib.virginia.edu; accessed December 24, 2014.
  68. ^ "The Examination of Martha Corey" August 21, 2006, at the Wayback Machine, etext.lib.virginia.edu; accessed January 9, 2019.
  69. ^ For example: "Summons for Witnesses v. Rebecca Nurse" September 9, 2006, at the Wayback Machine, etext.lib.virginia.edu; accessed January 9, 2019.
  70. ^ "Indictment of Sarah Good for Afflicting Sarah Vibber" September 29, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, etext.lib.virginia.edu; accessed January 9, 2019.
  71. ^ "Indictment of Abigail Hobbs for Covenanting" September 29, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, etext.lib.virginia.edu; accessed January 9, 2019.
  72. ^ The Death Warrant of Bridget Bishop September 29, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, etext.lib.virginia.edu; accessed January 9, 2019.
  73. ^ "Salem Witch Trials". etext.virginia.edu. from the original on September 18, 2012. Retrieved August 17, 2006.
  74. ^ Boyer, p. 8.
  75. ^ Hansen 1969, p. 154
  76. ^ Robert Calef, More Wonders of the Invisible World. 1700, p. 106.
  77. ^ Kreutter, Sarah (April 2013). "The Devil's Specter: Spectral Evidence and the Salem Witchcraft Crisis". The Spectrum: A Scholars Day Journal. 2: Article 8. from the original on November 16, 2017. Retrieved November 15, 2017 – via Digital Commons.
  78. ^ Craker, Wendel D. (1997). "Spectral Evidence, Non-Spectral Acts of Witchcraft, and Confession at Salem in 1692". The Historical Journal. 40 (2): 332. doi:10.1017/S0018246X9700719X. S2CID 159913824.
  79. ^ Kennedy, Rick (2015). The first American evangelical : a short life of Cotton Mather / Rick Kennedy. Grand Rapids, Michigan: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company. ISBN 978-1467443104. ch.6
  80. ^ Craker, Wendel D. (1997). "Spectral Evidence, Non-Spectral Acts of Witchcraft, and Confession at Salem in 1692". The Historical Journal. 40 (2): 335. doi:10.1017/S0018246X9700719X. S2CID 159913824.
  81. ^ Craker, Wendel D. (1997). "Spectral Evidence, Non-Spectral Acts of Witchcraft, and Confession at Salem in 1692". The Historical Journal. 40 (2): 336. doi:10.1017/S0018246X9700719X. S2CID 159913824.
  82. ^ Craker, Wendel D. (1997). "Spectral Evidence, Non-Spectral Acts of Witchcraft, and Confession at Salem in 1692". The Historical Journal. 40 (2): 345–346. doi:10.1017/S0018246X9700719X. S2CID 159913824.
  83. ^ Walker, Rachel (Spring 2001). "Cotton Mather". Salem Witch Trial-Document Archive. from the original on November 9, 2017. Retrieved November 15, 2017 – via Documentary Archive and Transcription Project.
  84. ^ Mather, Cotton (1681–1724). Diary of Cotton Mather. Boston: The Society.
  85. ^ Bunn & Geiss 1997, p. 7
  86. ^ a b Salem Village Church Records, pp. 10–12. October 11, 2020, at the Wayback Machine
  87. ^ GL Burr, Narratives of the Witchcraft Trials, p. 342 January 23, 2022, at the Wayback Machine.
  88. ^ Burr, George Lincoln, ed. (1914). Narratives of the Witchcraft Cases, 1648–1706. C. Scribner's Sons. pp. 169–190.
  89. ^ Reis 1997, p. 56
  90. ^ John Hale (1697). . Benjamin Elliot, Boston. Archived from the original on January 20, 2013. Retrieved August 26, 2007. facsimile of document at the Salem witch trials documentary archive at the University of Virginia.
  91. ^ Erikson 2005
  92. ^ Breslaw 1996, p. 13
  93. ^ Thomas Hutchinson, The History of the Province of Massachusetts-Bay, from the Charter of King William and Queen Mary, in 1691, Until the Year 1750, vol. 2, ed. Lawrence Shaw Mayo. (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1936); accessed December 24, 2014.
  94. ^ Boyer & Nissenbaum 1972, p. 971
  95. ^ John Hale, A Modest Enquiry into the Nature of Witchcraft, 1696. p. 59. See: [1] 2013-01-20 at the Wayback Machine, etext.lib.virginia.edu; accessed December 24, 2014.
  96. ^ Flotte, T. J.; Bell, D. A. (December 1989). "Role of skin lesions in the Salem witchcraft trials". The American Journal of Dermatopathology. 11 (6): 582–587. doi:10.1097/00000372-198912000-00014. ISSN 0193-1091. PMID 2690652. from the original on November 11, 2020. Retrieved August 20, 2020.
  97. ^ National Archives (Great Britain), CO5/785, pp. 336–337.
  98. ^ Holmes, Clive (December 2016). "The Opinion of the Cambridge Association, 1 August 1692: A Neglected Text of the Salem Witch Trials". The New England Quarterly. 89 (4): 663. doi:10.1162/TNEQ_a_00567. S2CID 57558631.
  99. ^ The Witchcraft Delusion in New England: The wonders of the invisible world, by C. Mather. W. Elliot Woodward. 1866. from the original on February 25, 2021. Retrieved November 9, 2019.
  100. ^ Holmes, Clive (December 2016). "The Opinion of the Cambridge Association, 1 August 1692: A Neglected Text of the Salem Witch Trials". The New England Quarterly. 89 (4): 646. doi:10.1162/TNEQ_a_00567. S2CID 57558631.
  101. ^ Miller, Perry (1982). The New England mind, from colony to province. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. p. 196. ISBN 9780674613010.
  102. ^ History: Old South Church September 29, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, oldsouth.org; accessed December 24, 2014.
  103. ^ Holmes, Clive (December 2016). "The Opinion of the Cambridge Association, 1 August 1692: A Neglected Text of the Salem Witch Trials". The New England Quarterly. 89 (4): 665. doi:10.1162/TNEQ_a_00567. S2CID 57558631.
  104. ^ Some Miscellany 2012-09-29 at the Wayback Machine, etext.lib.virginia.edu; accessed December 24, 2014.
  105. ^ Moore, George (1888). "Notes on the Bibliography of Witchcraft in Massachusetts". Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society. n.s. 5: 248.
  106. ^ a b The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts · 31 newspapers.com November 14, 2018, at the Wayback Machine; "New Law Exonerates", Boston Globe, 1 November 2001.
  107. ^ Kole, William J. (May 26, 2022). "329 years later, last Salem 'witch' who wasn't is pardoned". Associated Press. from the original on May 27, 2022. Retrieved May 27, 2022.
  108. ^ Virginia.edu December 12, 2007, at the Wayback Machine p. 185.
  109. ^ , dlxs2.library.cornell.edu; accessed December 24, 2014.
  110. ^ Robert Calef, More Wonders of the Invisible World Part 5, p. 143.
  111. ^ Francis 2005, pp. 181–182
  112. ^ Robert Calef, More Wonders of the Invisible World Part 5, pp. 144–145.
  113. ^ As published in George Lincoln Burr's Narratives, p. 525.
  114. ^ Boyer, P., & Nissenbaum, S. (Eds.). (1977). The Salem witchcraft papers: Verbatim transcripts of the legal documents of the Salem witchcraft outbreak of 1692. New York: Da Capo Press.
  115. ^ Robinson 2001, pp. xvi–xvii
  116. ^ Massachusetts Archives Collection, vol. 135, no. 121, p. 108. Massachusetts State Archives. Boston, MA.
  117. ^ Massachusetts Archives, Vol. 135, p. 112, No. 126.
  118. ^ Roach 2002, p. 567
  119. ^ Upham 2000, p. 510
  120. ^ Essex County Court Archives, vol. 2, no. 136, Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, MA.
  121. ^ Acts and Resolves, Public and Private, of the Province of Massachusetts Bay, vol. 9, 1718–1718, Chap. 82 (Boston: Wright and Potter, 1902), pp. 618–619.
  122. ^ Roach 2002, p. 571
  123. ^ a b Rebecca Nurse Homestead 2007-12-19 at the Wayback Machine, rebeccanurse.org; accessed December 24, 2014.
  124. ^ Chapter 145 of the resolves of 1957, Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
  125. ^ Salem Massachusetts – Salem Witch Trials The Stones: July 10 and July 19, 1692 November 20, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, salemweb.com; accessed December 24, 2014.
  126. ^ Salem Village Witchcraft Victims' Memorial, etext.virginia.edu November 12, 2007, at the Wayback Machine; accessed December 24, 2014.
  127. ^ "Chapter 122 of the Acts of 2001, Commonwealth of Massachusetts". from the original on December 2, 2021. Retrieved September 13, 2021.
  128. ^ "Actual Site Of Salem Witch Hangings Discovered". CBS news. January 13, 2016. from the original on January 22, 2021. Retrieved March 30, 2021.
  129. ^ a b "The Real Salem Witch Hanging Site Was Located". Boston Magazine. January 1, 2016. from the original on July 27, 2021. Retrieved March 30, 2021.
  130. ^ Sears 1978, p. 82.
  131. ^ Purkiss, Diane (June 27, 2023). "Witchcraft: Eight Myths and Misconceptions". English Heritage. from the original on June 24, 2023. Retrieved June 27, 2023.
  132. ^ Bernard Rosenthal, "Medievalism and the Salem Witch Trials," in: Medievalism in the Modern World. Essays in Honour of Leslie J. Workman (eds. Richard Utz and Tom Shippey), Turnhout: Brepols, 1998, pp. 61–68.[ISBN missing]
  133. ^ Assassination Nation (2018) – IMDb, from the original on July 23, 2020, retrieved July 21, 2020
  134. ^ Secrets of the Dead: The Witches Curse June 23, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, pbs.org; accessed December 24, 2014.
  135. ^ Justice at Salem June 13, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, justiceatsalem.com; accessed December 24, 2014.
  136. ^ Ana Kucić, Salem Witchcraft Trials: The Perception Of Women In History, Literature And Culture December 25, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, University of Niš, Serbia, 2010, pp. 2–4.

Bibliography

  • Adams, Gretchen A. (2008), The Specter of Salem: Remembering the Witch Trials in Nineteenth-Century America, University of Chicago Press, ISBN 978-0226005430
  • Boyer, Paul S.; Nissenbaum, Stephen, eds. (1972), Salem-Village Witchcraft: A Documentary Record of Local Conflict in Colonial New England, Northeastern University Press, ISBN 978-1-55553-165-2
  • Breslaw, Elaine G. (1996), Tituba, Reluctant Witch of Salem: Devilish Indians and Puritan Fantasies, NYU Press, ISBN 978-0-8147-1307-5
  • Bunn, Ivan; Geiss, Gilbert (1997), Trial of Witches: A Seventeenth-Century Witchcraft Prosecution, Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-17109-0
  • Cooke, William H. (2009), Justice at Salem: Reexamining the Witch Trials, Undertaker Press, ISBN 978-1-59594-322-4, from the original on June 13, 2009, retrieved October 23, 2009
  • Erikson, Kai T. (2005), Wayward Puritans: A Study in the Sociology of Deviance, Allyn & Bacon, ISBN 978-0-205-42403-0
  • Francis, Richard (2005), Judge Sewall's Apology, Harper-Collins
  • Glanvill, Joseph. "Essay IV Against modern Sadducism in the matter of Witches and Apparitions" in Essay on several important subjects in philosophy and religion, 2nd Ed, London; printed for John Baker and H. Mortlock, 1676, pp. 1–4 (in the history 201 course-pack compiled by S. McSheffrey & T. McCormick)
  • Hansen, Chadwick (1969), Witchcraft at Salem, Brazillier, ISBN 978-0-8076-1137-1
  • Mather, Cotton. Memorable Providence, Relating to Witchcraft and Possessions. (accessed June 5, 2010)
  • Trans. Montague Summer. Questions VII & XI. "Maleus Maleficarum Part I." sacred-texts.com February 23, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, June 9, 2010.
  • Reis, Elizabeth (1997), Damned Women: Sinners and Witches in Puritan New England, Cornell University Press, ISBN 978-0-8014-8611-1
  • Roach, Marilynne K. (2002), The Salem Witch Trials: A Day-To-Day Chronicle of a Community Under Siege, Cooper Square Press, ISBN 978-1-58979-132-9
  • Robinson, Enders A. (2001) [1990], The Devil Discovered: Salem Witchcraft 1692, Hippocrene, ISBN 978-1-57766-176-4
  • Sears, Donald A. (1978), John Neal, Twayne Publishers, ISBN 080-5-7723-08
  • Silverman, Kenneth, ed. (1971), "Letter of Cotton Mather to Stephen Sewall, September 20, 1692", Selected Letters of Cotton Mather, University of Louisiana Press, ISBN 978-0-8071-0920-5
  • Starkey, Marion L. (1949), The Devil in Massachusetts, Alfred A. Knopf, ISBN 978-0-385-03509-5
  • Upham, Charles W. (2000) [1867], Salem Witchcraft, vol. 2, Dover Publications, ISBN 978-0-486-40899-6
  • The Examination of Bridget Bishop, April 19, 1692. "Examination and Evidence of Some Accused Witches in Salem, 1692. (accessed June 5, 2010)
  • The Examination of Sarah Good, March 1, 1692. "Examination and Evidence of Some the Accused Witches in Salem, 1692. law.umkc.edu January 20, 2011, at the Wayback Machine (accessed June 6, 2010)

Further reading

  • Aronson, Marc. Witch-Hunt: Mysteries of the Salem Witch Trials. Atheneum: New York. 2003. ISBN 1-4169-0315-1
  • Baker, Emerson W. A Storm of Witchcraft: The Salem Trials and the American Experience (2014), Emphasis on the causes
  • Boyer, Paul & Nissenbaum, Stephen. Salem Possessed: The Social Origins of Witchcraft. Harvard University Press: Cambridge, MA. 1974. ISBN 0-674-78526-6
  • Brown, David C.. A Guide to the Salem Witchcraft Hysteria of 1692. David C. Brown: Washington Crossing, PA. 1984. ISBN 0-9613415-0-5
  • Burns, Margo & Rosenthal, Bernard. "Examination of the Records of the Salem Witch Trials". William and Mary Quarterly, 2008, Vol. 65, No. 3, pp. 401–422.
  • Demos, John. Entertaining Satan: Witchcraft and the Culture of Early New England. New York: Oxford University Press, 1982. ISBN 0-19-517483-6
  • Fels, Tony. Switching sides : how a generation of historians lost sympathy for the victims of the Salem witch hunt. Baltimore. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2018 ISBN 1421424371
  • Foulds, Diane E. (2010). Death in Salem: The Private Lives Behind the 1692 Witch Hunt.
  • Godbeer, Richard. The Devil's Dominion: Magic and Religion in Early New England. Cambridge University Press: New York. 1992. ISBN 0-521-46670-9
  • Goss, K. David (2007). The Salem Witch Trials: A Reference Guide. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-32095-8.
  • Hale, Rev. John. (1702). A Modest Enquiry into the Nature of Witchcraft.
  • Hill, Frances. A Delusion of Satan: The Full Story of the Salem Witch Trials. Doubleday: New York. 1995. ISBN 0-306-81159-6
  • Hoffer, Peter Charles. "The Salem Witchcraft Trials: A Legal History". (University of Kansas, 1997). ISBN 0-7006-0859-1
  • Karlsen, Carol F. The Devil in the Shape of a Woman: Witchcraft in Colonial New England. New York: Vintage, 1987. [This work provides essential background on other witchcraft accusations in 17th century New England.] ISBN 0-393-31759-5
  • Lasky, Kathryn. Beyond the Burning Time. Point: New York, 1994 ISBN 0-590-47332-8
  • Le Beau, Bryan, F. The Story of the Salem Witch Trials: `We Walked in Clouds and Could Not See Our Way`. Prentice-Hall: Upper Saddle River, NJ. 1998. ISBN 0-13-442542-1
  • Levack, Brian P. ed. The Oxford Handbook of Witchcraft in Early Modern Europe and Colonial America (2013) excerpt and text search March 20, 2021, at the Wayback Machine
  • Mappen, Marc, ed. Witches & Historians: Interpretations of Salem. 2nd Edition. Keiger: Malabar, FL. 1996. ISBN 0-88275-653-2
  • Miller, Arthur. The Crucible – a play which compares McCarthyism to a witch-hunt. ISBN 0-14-243733-6
  • Norton, Mary Beth. In the Devil's Snare: The Salem Witchcraft Crisis of 1692. New York: Random House, 2002. ISBN 0-375-70690-9
  • Ray, Benjamin C. Satan and Salem: The Witch-Hunt Crisis of 1692. The University of Virginia Press, 2015. ISBN 9780813937076
  • Robbins, Rossell Hope. The Encyclopedia of Witchcraft and Demonology. Crown Publishers Inc., 1959. ISBN 0-600-01183-6
  • Robinson, Enders A. Salem Witchcraft and Hawthorne's House of the Seven Gables. Heritage Books: Bowie, MD. 1992. ISBN 1-55613-515-7
  • Rosenthal, Bernard. Salem Story: Reading the Witch Trials of 1692. Cambridge University Press: New York. 1993. ISBN 0-521-55820-4
  • Rosenthal, Bernard, ed., et al. Records of the Salem Witch-Hunt. Cambridge University Press: New York. 2009. ISBN 0-521-66166-8
  • Sologuk, Sally. Diseases Can Bewitch Durum Millers. Milling Journal. Second quarter 2005.
  • Spanos, N.P., J. Gottlieb. "Ergots and Salem village witchcraft: A critical appraisal". Science: 194. 1390–1394:1976.
  • Trask, Richard B. `The Devil hath been raised`: A Documentary History of the Salem Village Witchcraft Outbreak of March 1692. Revised edition. Yeoman Press: Danvers, MA. 1997. ISBN 0-9638595-1-X
  • Weisman, Richard. Witchcraft, Magic, and Religion in 17th-Century Massachusetts. University of Massachusetts Press: Amherst, MA. 1984. ISBN 0-87023-494-3
  • Wilson, Jennifer M. Witch. Authorhouse, 2005. ISBN 1-4208-2109-1
  • Wilson, Lori Lee. The Salem Witch Trials. How History Is Invented series. Lerner: Minneapolis. 1997. ISBN 0-8225-4889-5
  • Woolf, Alex. Investigating History Mysteries. Heinemann Library: 2004. ISBN 0-431-16022-8
  • Wright, John Hardy. Sorcery in Salem. Arcadia: Portsmouth, NH. 1999. ISBN 0-7385-0084-4
  • Preston, VK. "Reproducing Witchcraft: Thou Shalt Not Suffer a Witch to Live". TDR / The Drama Review, 2018, Vol. 62, No. 1, pp. 143–159
  • Gagnon, Daniel A., A Salem Witch: The Trial, Execution, and Exoneration of Rebecca Nurse. Yardley, PA: Westholme, 2021.ISBN 978-1594163678

External links

  • , University of Missouri-Kansas City Law School
  • Salem Witch Trials Documentary Archive and Transcription Project, University of Virginia, archive of extensive primary sources, including court papers, maps, interactive maps, and biographies (includes former "Massachusetts Historical Society" link)
  • Salem Witchcraft, Volumes I and II, by Charles Upham, 1867, Project Gutenberg
  • SalemWitchTrials.com Essays, biographies of the accused and afflicted, Salem Witch Trials website
  • Cotton Mather, The Wonders of the Invisible World. Observations as Well Historical as Theological, upon the Nature, the Number, and the Operations of the Devils (1693) (online pdf edition), at Digital Commons
  • Salem Witch Trials June 6, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, Salem website.

42°31′20″N 70°53′46″W / 42.52222°N 70.89611°W / 42.52222; -70.89611

salem, witch, trials, other, uses, disambiguation, salem, witches, redirects, here, minor, league, baseball, team, salem, witches, baseball, were, series, hearings, prosecutions, people, accused, witchcraft, colonial, massachusetts, between, february, 1692, 16. For other uses see Salem witch trials disambiguation Salem Witches redirects here For the minor league baseball team see Salem Witches baseball The Salem witch trials were a series of hearings and prosecutions of people accused of witchcraft in colonial Massachusetts between February 1692 and May 1693 More than 200 people were accused Thirty people were found guilty 19 of whom were executed by hanging 14 women and five men One other man Giles Corey died under torture after refusing to enter a plea and at least five people died in jail 1 The central figure in this 1876 illustration of the courtroom is usually identified as Mary Walcott Arrests were made in numerous towns beyond Salem and Salem Village known today as Danvers notably Andover and Topsfield The grand juries and trials for this capital crime were conducted by a Court of Oyer and Terminer in 1692 and by a Superior Court of Judicature in 1693 both held in Salem Town where the hangings also took place It was the deadliest witch hunt in the history of colonial North America Fourteen other women and two men had been executed in Massachusetts and Connecticut during the 17th century 2 The episode is one of colonial America s most notorious cases of mass hysteria It was not unique but a colonial manifestation of the much broader phenomenon of witch trials in the early modern period which took the lives of tens of thousands mainly in Protestant Europe and the Americas In America Salem s events have been used in political rhetoric and popular literature as a vivid cautionary tale about the dangers of isolation religious extremism false accusations and lapses in due process 3 Many historians consider the lasting effects of the trials to have been highly influential in the history of the United States According to historian George Lincoln Burr the Salem witchcraft was the rock on which the theocracy shattered 4 At the 300th anniversary events in 1992 to commemorate the victims of the trials a park was dedicated in Salem and a memorial in Danvers In 1957 an act passed by the Massachusetts legislature absolved six people 5 while another one passed in 2001 absolved five other victims 6 As of 2004 there was still talk about exonerating all of the victims 7 though some think that happened in the 18th century as the Massachusetts colonial legislature was asked to reverse the attainders of George Burroughs and others 8 In January 2016 the University of Virginia announced its Gallows Hill Project team had determined the execution site in Salem where the 19 witches had been hanged The city dedicated the Proctor s Ledge Memorial to the victims there in 2017 9 10 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Accusations 1 2 Recorded witchcraft executions in New England 1 3 Political context 1 4 Local context 1 5 Religious context 1 6 Gender context 1 7 Publicising witchcraft 2 Timeline 2 1 Initial events 2 2 Accusations and examinations before local magistrates 2 3 Formal prosecution The Court of Oyer and Terminer 2 4 September 1692 2 5 Superior Court of Judicature 1693 3 Legal procedures 3 1 Overview 3 2 Spectral evidence 3 3 Witch cake 3 4 Touch test 3 5 Other evidence 4 Primary sources and early discussion 5 Aftermath and closure 5 1 Reversals of attainder and compensation to the survivors 5 2 Memorials 6 In literature media and popular culture 7 Medical theories about the reported afflictions 8 See also 8 1 General 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 External linksBackgroundFurther information Protests against early modern witch trials While witch trials had begun to fade out across much of Europe by the mid 17th century they continued on the fringes of Europe and in the American Colonies The events in 1692 1693 in Salem became a brief outburst of a sort of hysteria in the New World while the practice was already waning in most of Europe In 1668 in Against Modern Sadducism 11 Joseph Glanvill claimed that he could prove the existence of witches and ghosts of the supernatural realm Glanvill wrote about the denial of the bodily resurrection and the supernatural spirits 12 In his treatise Glanvill claimed that ingenious men should believe in witches and apparitions if they doubted the reality of spirits they not only denied demons but also the almighty God Glanvill wanted to prove that the supernatural could not be denied those who did deny apparitions were considered heretics for it also disproved their beliefs in angels 12 Works by men such as Glanvill and Cotton Mather tried to prove that demons were alive 13 Accusations The trials were started after people had been accused of witchcraft primarily by teenage girls such as Elizabeth Hubbard 17 as well as some who were younger 14 Dorothy Good was four or five years old when she was accused of witchcraft 15 Recorded witchcraft executions in New England The earliest recorded witchcraft execution was that of Alse Young in 1647 in Hartford Connecticut the start of the Connecticut Witch Trials which lasted until 1663 Historian Clarence F Jewett included a list of other people executed in New England in his 1881 book 16 Political context New England had been settled by religious dissenters seeking to build a Bible based society according to their own chosen discipline 17 The original 1629 Royal Charter of the Massachusetts Bay Colony was vacated in 1684 18 after which King James II installed Sir Edmund Andros as the governor of the Dominion of New England Andros was ousted in 1689 after the Glorious Revolution in England replaced the Catholic James II with the Protestant co rulers William and Mary Simon Bradstreet and Thomas Danforth the colony s last leaders under the old charter resumed their posts as governor and deputy governor but lacked constitutional authority to rule because the old charter had been vacated At the same time tensions erupted between English colonists settling in the Eastward the present day coast of Maine and French supported Wabanaki people of that territory in what came to be known as King William s War This was 13 years after the devastating King Philip s War with the Wampanoag and other indigenous tribes in southern and western New England In October 1690 Sir William Phips led an unsuccessful attack on French held Quebec Between 1689 and 1692 Native Americans continued to attack many English settlements along the Maine coast leading to the abandonment of some of the settlements and resulting in a flood of refugees into areas like Essex County 19 A new charter for the enlarged Province of Massachusetts Bay was given final approval in England on October 16 1691 Increase Mather had been working on obtaining the charter for four years with William Phips often joining him in London and helping him gain entry to Whitehall 20 Increase Mather had published a book on witchcraft in 1684 and his son Cotton Mather published one in 1689 Increase Mather brought out a London edition of his son s book in 1690 Increase Mather claimed to have picked all the men to be included in the new government News of Mather s charter and the appointment of Phips as the new governor had reached Boston by late January 21 and a copy of the new charter reached Boston on February 8 1692 22 Phips arrived in Boston on May 14 23 and was sworn in as governor two days later along with Lieutenant Governor William Stoughton 24 One of the first orders of business for the new governor and council on May 27 1692 was the formal nomination of county justices of the peace sheriffs and the commission of a Special Court of Oyer and Terminer to handle the large numbers of people who were thronging the jails 25 Local context nbsp A map of Salem Village 1692Salem Village present day Danvers Massachusetts was known for its fractious population who had many disputes internally and with Salem Town present day Salem Arguments about property lines grazing rights and church privileges were rife and neighbors considered the population as quarrelsome In 1672 the villagers had voted to hire a minister of their own apart from Salem Town The first two ministers James Bayley 1673 1679 and George Burroughs 1680 1683 stayed only a few years each departing after the congregation failed to pay their full rate Burroughs was subsequently arrested at the height of the witchcraft hysteria and was hanged as a witch in August 1692 Despite the ministers rights being upheld by the General Court and the parish being admonished each of the two ministers still chose to leave The third minister Deodat Lawson 1684 1688 stayed for a short time leaving after the church in Salem refused to ordain him and therefore not over issues with the congregation The parish disagreed about Salem Village s choice of Samuel Parris as its first ordained minister On June 18 1689 the villagers agreed to hire Parris for 66 annually one third part in money and the other two third parts in provisions and use of the parsonage 26 On October 10 1689 however they raised his benefits voting to grant him the deed to the parsonage and two acres 0 8 hectares of land 27 This conflicted with a 1681 village resolution which stated that it shall not be lawful for the inhabitants of this village to convey the houses or lands or any other concerns belonging to the Ministry to any particular persons or person not for any cause by vote or other ways 28 Though the prior ministers fates and the level of contention in Salem Village were valid reasons for caution in accepting the position Rev Parris increased the village s divisions by delaying his acceptance He did not seem able to settle his new parishioners disputes by deliberately seeking out iniquitous behavior in his congregation and making church members in good standing suffer public penance for small infractions he contributed significantly to the tension within the village Its bickering increased unabated Historian Marion Starkey suggests that in this atmosphere serious conflict may have been inevitable 29 Religious context See also History of the Puritans in North America nbsp Reverend Cotton MatherPrior to the constitutional turmoil of the 1680s the Massachusetts government had been dominated by conservative Puritan secular leaders While Puritans and the Church of England both shared a common influence in Calvinism Puritans had opposed many of the traditions of the Church of England including use of the Book of Common Prayer the use of clergy vestments during services the use of the sign of the cross at baptism and kneeling to receive communion all of which they believed constituted popery King Charles I was hostile to this viewpoint and Anglican church officials tried to repress these dissenting views during the 1620s and 1630s Some Puritans and other religious minorities had sought refuge in the Netherlands but ultimately many made a major migration to colonial North America to establish their own society 30 These immigrants who were mostly constituted of families established several of the earliest colonies in New England of which the Massachusetts Bay Colony was the largest and most economically important They intended to build a society based on their religious beliefs 31 Colonial leaders were elected by the freemen of the colony those individuals who had had their religious experiences formally examined and had been admitted to one of the colony s Puritan congregations The colonial leadership were prominent members of their congregations and regularly consulted with the local ministers on issues facing the colony 32 In the early 1640s England erupted in civil war The Puritan dominated Parliamentarians emerged victorious and the Crown was supplanted by the Protectorate of Oliver Cromwell in 1653 Its failure led to restoration of the old order under Charles II Emigration to New England slowed significantly in these years In Massachusetts a successful merchant class began to develop that was less religiously motivated than the colony s early settlers 33 Gender context A majority of people accused and convicted of witchcraft were women about 78 34 Overall the Puritan belief and prevailing New England culture was that women were inherently sinful and more susceptible to damnation than men were 35 Throughout their daily lives Puritans especially Puritan women actively attempted to thwart attempts by the Devil to overtake them and their souls Indeed Puritans held the belief that men and women were equal in the eyes of God but not in the eyes of the Devil Women s souls were seen as unprotected in their so called weak and vulnerable bodies Several factors may explain why women were more likely to admit guilt of witchcraft than men Historian Elizabeth Reis asserts that some likely believed they had truly given in to the Devil and others might have believed they had done so temporarily However because those who confessed were reintegrated into society some women might have confessed in order to spare their own lives 35 Quarrels with neighbors often incited witchcraft allegations One example of this is Abigail Faulkner who was accused in 1692 Faulkner admitted she was angry at what folk said and the Devil may have temporarily overtaken her causing harm to her neighbors 36 Women who did not conform to the norms of Puritan society were more likely to be the target of an accusation especially those who were unmarried or did not have children 37 Publicising witchcraft Cotton Mather a minister of Boston s North Church was a prolific publisher of pamphlets including some that expressed his belief in witchcraft In his book Memorable Providences Relating to Witchcrafts and Possessions 1689 Mather describes his oracular observations and how stupendous witchcraft had affected the children of Boston mason John Goodwin 38 Mather illustrates how the Goodwins eldest child had been tempted by the devil and had stolen linen from the washerwoman Goody Glover 39 Glover of Irish Catholic descent was characterized as a disagreeable old woman and described by her husband as a witch this may have been why she was accused of casting spells on the Goodwin children After the event four out of six Goodwin children began to have strange fits or what some people referred to as the disease of astonishment The manifestations attributed to the disease quickly became associated with witchcraft Symptoms included neck and back pains tongues being drawn from their throats and loud random outcries other symptoms included having no control over their bodies such as becoming limber flapping their arms like birds or trying to harm others as well as themselves These symptoms fueled the craze of 1692 38 TimelineMain article Timeline of the Salem witch trials Initial events nbsp The parsonage in Salem Village as photographed in the late 19th century nbsp The present day archaeological site of the Salem Village parsonageIn Salem Village in February 1692 Betty Parris age 9 and her cousin Abigail Williams age 11 the daughter and the niece respectively of Reverend Samuel Parris began to have fits described as beyond the power of epileptic fits or natural disease to effect by John Hale the minister of the nearby town of Beverly 40 The girls screamed threw things about the room uttered strange sounds crawled under furniture and contorted themselves into peculiar positions according to the eyewitness account of Reverend Deodat Lawson a former minister in Salem Village 41 The girls complained of being pinched and pricked with pins A doctor historically assumed to be William Griggs 14 could find no physical evidence of any ailment Other young women in the village began to exhibit similar behaviors When Lawson preached as a guest in the Salem Village meetinghouse he was interrupted several times by the outbursts of the afflicted 42 The first three people accused and arrested for allegedly afflicting Betty Parris Abigail Williams 12 year old Ann Putnam Jr and Elizabeth Hubbard 14 were Sarah Good Sarah Osborne and Tituba 43 Some historians believe that the accusation by Ann Putnam Jr suggests that a family feud may have been a major cause of the witch trials At the time a vicious rivalry was underway between the Putnam and Porter families one which deeply polarized the people of Salem Citizens would often have heated debates which escalated into full fledged fighting based solely on their opinion of the feud 44 Some of the physical symptoms resembled convulsive ergot poisoning proposed 284 years later 45 Sarah Good was a destitute woman accused of witchcraft because of her reputation At her trial she was accused of rejecting Puritan ideals of self control and discipline when she chose to torment and scorn children instead of leading them towards the path of salvation 46 Sarah Osborne rarely attended church meetings She was accused of witchcraft because the Puritans believed that Osborne had her own self interests in mind following her remarriage to an indentured servant The citizens of the town disapproved of her trying to control her son s inheritance from her previous marriage 47 Tituba an enslaved South American Kalina woman from the West Indies likely became a target because of her ethnic differences from most of the other villagers She was accused of attracting girls like Abigail Williams and Betty Parris with stories of enchantment from Malleus Maleficarum These tales about sexual encounters with demons swaying the minds of men and fortune telling were said to stimulate the imaginations of girls and made Tituba an obvious target of accusations 48 better source needed Each of these women was a kind of outcast and exhibited many of the character traits typical of the usual suspects for witchcraft accusations they were left to defend themselves Brought before the local magistrates on the complaint of witchcraft they were interrogated for several days starting on March 1 1692 then sent to jail 49 In March others were accused of witchcraft Martha Corey child Dorothy Good and Rebecca Nurse in Salem Village and Rachel Clinton in nearby Ipswich Martha Corey had expressed skepticism about the credibility of the girls accusations and thus drawn attention The charges against her and Rebecca Nurse deeply troubled the community because Martha Corey was a full covenanted member of the Church in Salem Village as was Rebecca Nurse in the Church in Salem Town If such upstanding people could be witches the townspeople thought then anybody could be a witch and church membership was no protection from accusation Dorothy Good the daughter of Sarah Good was only four years old but was not exempted from questioning by the magistrates her answers were construed as a confession that implicated her mother In Ipswich Rachel Clinton was arrested for witchcraft at the end of March on independent charges unrelated to the afflictions of the girls in Salem Village 50 The initial examinations included physical exams where the accused were examined for unique markings such as moles birth marks that were commonly believed to be associated with the Devil s influence It was thought that those markings represented the Devil drinking the accused women s blood 51 Accusations and examinations before local magistrates nbsp Magistrate Samuel Sewall nbsp The deposition of Abigail Williams v George Jacobs Sr When Sarah Cloyce Nurse s sister and Elizabeth Bassett Proctor were arrested in April they were brought before John Hathorne and Jonathan Corwin at a meeting in Salem Town The men were both local magistrates and also members of the Governor s Council Present for the examination were Deputy Governor Thomas Danforth and Assistants Samuel Sewall Samuel Appleton James Russell and Isaac Addington During the proceedings objections by Elizabeth s husband John Proctor resulted in his arrest that day 52 Within a week Giles Corey Martha s husband and a covenanted church member in Salem Town Abigail Hobbs Bridget Bishop Mary Warren a servant in the Proctor household and sometime accuser and Deliverance Hobbs stepmother of Abigail Hobbs were arrested and examined Abigail Hobbs Mary Warren and Deliverance Hobbs all confessed and began naming additional people as accomplices More arrests followed Sarah Wildes William Hobbs husband of Deliverance and father of Abigail Nehemiah Abbott Jr Mary Eastey sister of Cloyce and Nurse Edward Bishop Jr and his wife Sarah Bishop and Mary English On April 30 Reverend George Burroughs Lydia Dustin Susannah Martin Dorcas Hoar Sarah Morey and Philip English Mary s husband were arrested Nehemiah Abbott Jr was released because the accusers agreed he was not the person whose specter had afflicted them Mary Eastey was released for a few days after her initial arrest because the accusers failed to confirm that it was she who had afflicted them she was arrested again when the accusers reconsidered In May accusations continued to pour in but some of the suspects began to evade apprehension Multiple warrants were issued before John Willard and Elizabeth Colson were apprehended George Jacobs Jr and Daniel Andrews were not caught Until this point all the proceedings were investigative but on May 27 1692 William Phips ordered the establishment of a Special Court of Oyer and Terminer for Suffolk Essex and Middlesex counties to prosecute the cases of those in jail Warrants were issued for more people Sarah Osborne one of the first three persons accused died in jail on May 10 1692 Warrants were issued for 36 more people with examinations continuing to take place in Salem Village Sarah Dustin daughter of Lydia Dustin Ann Sears Bethiah Carter Sr and her daughter Bethiah Carter Jr George Jacobs Sr and his granddaughter Margaret Jacobs John Willard Alice Parker Ann Pudeator Abigail Soames George Jacobs Jr son of George Jacobs Sr and father of Margaret Jacobs Daniel Andrew Rebecca Jacobs wife of George Jacobs Jr and sister of Daniel Andrew Sarah Buckley and her daughter Mary Witheridge 53 Also included were Elizabeth Colson Elizabeth Hart Thomas Farrar Sr Roger Toothaker Sarah Proctor daughter of John and Elizabeth Proctor Sarah Bassett sister in law of Elizabeth Proctor Susannah Roots Mary DeRich another sister in law of Elizabeth Proctor Sarah Pease Elizabeth Cary Martha Carrier Elizabeth Fosdick Wilmot Redd Sarah Rice Elizabeth Howe Capt John Alden son of John Alden and Priscilla Mullins William Proctor son of John and Elizabeth Proctor John Flood Mary Toothaker wife of Roger Toothaker and sister of Martha Carrier and her daughter Margaret Toothaker and Arthur Abbott When the Court of Oyer and Terminer convened at the end of May the total number of people in custody was 62 53 Cotton Mather wrote to one of the judges John Richards a member of his congregation on May 31 1692 54 expressing his support of the prosecutions but cautioning him nbsp Statements of innocence Part of the memorial for the victims of the 1692 witchcraft trials Danvers Massachusetts D o not lay more stress on pure spectral evidence than it will bear It is very certain that the Devils have sometimes represented the Shapes of persons not only innocent but also very virtuous Though I believe that the just God then ordinarily provides a way for the speedy vindication of the persons thus abused 55 Formal prosecution The Court of Oyer and Terminer nbsp Chief Magistrate William StoughtonThe Court of Oyer and Terminer convened in Salem Town on June 2 1692 with William Stoughton the new Lieutenant Governor as Chief Magistrate Thomas Newton as the Crown s Attorney prosecuting the cases and Stephen Sewall as clerk Bridget Bishop s case was the first brought to the grand jury who endorsed all the indictments against her Bishop was described as not living a Puritan lifestyle for she wore black clothing and odd costumes which was against the Puritan code When she was examined before her trial Bishop was asked about her coat which had been awkwardly cut or torn in two ways 56 This along with her immoral lifestyle affirmed to the jury that Bishop was a witch She went to trial the same day and was convicted On June 3 the grand jury endorsed indictments against Rebecca Nurse and John Willard but they did not go to trial immediately for reasons which are unclear Bishop was executed by hanging on June 10 1692 Immediately following this execution the court adjourned for 20 days until June 30 while it sought advice from New England s most influential ministers upon the state of things as they then stood 57 58 Their collective response came back dated June 15 and composed by Cotton Mather The afflicted state of our poor neighbours that are now suffering by molestations from the invisible world we apprehend so deplorable that we think their condition calls for the utmost help of all persons in their several capacities We cannot but with all thankfulness acknowledge the success which the merciful God has given unto the sedulous and assiduous endeavours of our honourable rulers to detect the abominable witchcrafts which have been committed in the country humbly praying that the discovery of those mysterious and mischievous wickednesses may be perfected We judge that in the prosecution of these and all such witchcrafts there is need of a very critical and exquisite caution lest by too much credulity for things received only upon the Devil s authority there be a door opened for a long train of miserable consequences and Satan get an advantage over us for we should not be ignorant of his devices As in complaints upon witchcrafts there may be matters of inquiry which do not amount unto matters of presumption and there may be matters of presumption which yet may not be matters of conviction so it is necessary that all proceedings thereabout be managed with an exceeding tenderness towards those that may be complained of especially if they have been persons formerly of an unblemished reputation When the first inquiry is made into the circumstances of such as may lie under the just suspicion of witchcrafts we could wish that there may be admitted as little as is possible of such noise company and openness as may too hastily expose them that are examined and that there may no thing be used as a test for the trial of the suspected the lawfulness whereof may be doubted among the people of God but that the directions given by such judicious writers as Perkins and Bernard be consulted in such a case Presumptions whereupon persons may be committed and much more convictions whereupon persons may be condemned as guilty of witchcrafts ought certainly to be more considerable than barely the accused person s being represented by a specter unto the afflicted inasmuch as it is an undoubted and notorious thing that a demon may by God s permission appear even to ill purposes in the shape of an innocent yea and a virtuous man Nor can we esteem alterations made in the sufferers by a look or touch of the accused to be an infallible evidence of guilt but frequently liable to be abused by the Devil s legerdemains We know not whether some remarkable affronts given to the Devils by our disbelieving those testimonies whose whole force and strength is from them alone may not put a period unto the progress of the dreadful calamity begun upon us in the accusations of so many persons whereof some we hope are yet clear from the great transgression laid unto their charge Nevertheless we cannot but humbly recommend unto the government the speedy and vigorous prosecution of such as have rendered themselves obnoxious according to the direction given in the laws of God and the wholesome statutes of the English nation for the detection of witchcrafts Hutchinson sums the letter The two first and the last sections of this advice took away the force of all the others and the prosecutions went on with more vigor than before Reprinting the letter years later in Magnalia Cotton Mather left out these two first and the last sections Major Nathaniel Saltonstall Esq resigned from the court on or about June 16 presumably dissatisfied with the letter and that it had not outright barred the admission of spectral evidence According to Upham Saltonstall deserves the credit for being the only public man of his day who had the sense or courage to condemn the proceedings at the start chapt VII More people were accused arrested and examined but now in Salem Town by former local magistrates John Hathorne Jonathan Corwin and Bartholomew Gedney who had become judges of the Court of Oyer and Terminer Suspect Roger Toothaker died in prison on June 16 1692 From June 30 through early July grand juries endorsed indictments against Sarah Good Elizabeth Howe Susannah Martin Elizabeth Proctor John Proctor Martha Carrier Sarah Wildes and Dorcas Hoar Sarah Good Elizabeth Howe Susannah Martin and Sarah Wildes along with Rebecca Nurse went to trial at this time where they were found guilty All five women were executed by hanging on July 19 1692 In mid July the constable in Andover invited the afflicted girls from Salem Village to visit with his wife to try to determine who was causing her afflictions Ann Foster her daughter Mary Lacey Sr and granddaughter Mary Lacey Jr all confessed to being witches Anthony Checkley was appointed by Governor Phips to replace Thomas Newton as the Crown s Attorney when Newton took an appointment in New Hampshire In August grand juries indicted George Burroughs Mary Eastey Martha Corey and George Jacobs Sr Trial juries convicted Martha Carrier George Jacobs Sr George Burroughs John Willard Elizabeth Proctor and John Proctor Elizabeth Proctor was given a temporary stay of execution because she was pregnant On August 19 1692 Martha Carrier George Jacobs Sr George Burroughs John Willard and John Proctor were executed citation needed Mr Burroughs was carried in a Cart with others through the streets of Salem to Execution When he was upon the Ladder he made a speech for the clearing of his Innocency with such Solemn and Serious Expressions as were to the Admiration of all present his Prayer which he concluded by repeating the Lord s Prayer as witches were not supposed to be able to recite was so well worded and uttered with such composedness as such fervency of spirit as was very Affecting and drew Tears from many so that if seemed to some that the spectators would hinder the execution The accusers said the black Man Devil stood and dictated to him As soon as he was turned off hanged Mr Cotton Mather being mounted upon a Horse addressed himself to the People partly to declare that he Mr Burroughs was no ordained Minister partly to possess the People of his guilt saying that the devil often had been transformed into the Angel of Light And this did somewhat appease the People and the Executions went on when he Mr Burroughs was cut down he was dragged by a Halter to a Hole or Grave between the Rocks about two feet deep his Shirt and Breeches being pulled off and an old pair of Trousers of one Executed put on his lower parts he was so put in together with Willard and Carrier that one of his Hands and his Chin and a Foot of one of them was left uncovered Robert Calef More Wonders of the Invisible World 59 September 1692 nbsp Petition for bail of eleven accused people from Ipswich 1692 nbsp The personal seal of William Stoughton on the warrant for the execution of Bridget Bishop nbsp Examination of a Witch 1853 by T H Matteson inspired by the Salem trialsIn September grand juries indicted 18 more people The grand jury failed to indict William Proctor who was re arrested on new charges On September 19 1692 Giles Corey refused to plead at trial and was killed by peine forte et dure a form of torture in which the subject is pressed beneath an increasingly heavy load of stones in an attempt to make him enter a plea Four pleaded guilty and 11 others were tried and found guilty citation needed On September 20 Cotton Mather wrote to Stephen Sewall That I may be the more capable to assist in lifting up a standard against the infernal enemy requesting a narrative of the evidence given in at the trials of half a dozen or if you please a dozen of the principal witches that have been condemned On September 22 1692 eight more persons were executed After Execution Mr Noyes turning him to the Bodies said what a sad thing it is to see Eight Firebrands of Hell hanging there 60 Dorcas Hoar was given a temporary reprieve with the support of several ministers to make a confession of being a witch Mary Bradbury aged 77 managed to escape with the help of family and friends Abigail Faulkner Sr was pregnant and given a temporary reprieve some reports from that era say that Abigail s reprieve later became a stay of charges citation needed Mather quickly completed his account of the trials Wonders of the Invisible World 61 and it was given to Phips when he returned from the fighting in Maine in early October Burr says both Phips letter and Mather s manuscript must have gone to London by the same ship in mid October 62 I hereby declare that as soon as I came from fighting and understood what danger some of their innocent subjects might be exposed to if the evidence of the afflicted persons only did prevaile either to the committing or trying any of them I did before any application was made unto me about it put a stop to the proceedings of the Court and they are now stopt till their Majesties pleasure be known Governor Phips Boston October 12 1692 On October 29 Judge Sewall wrote the Court of Oyer and Terminer count themselves thereby dismissed asked whether the Court of Oyer and Terminer should sit expressing some fear of Inconvenience by its fall the Governour said it must fall 63 Perhaps by coincidence Governor Phips own wife Lady Mary Phips was among those who had been called out upon around this time After Phips order there were no more executions Further information William Phips The Salem witch trials Superior Court of Judicature 1693 This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Salem witch trials news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In January 1693 the new Superior Court of Judicature Court of Assize and General Gaol Jail Delivery convened in Salem Essex County again headed by William Stoughton as Chief Justice with Anthony Checkley continuing as the Attorney General and Jonathan Elatson as Clerk of the Court The first five cases tried in January 1693 were of the five people who had been indicted but not tried in September Sarah Buckley Margaret Jacobs Rebecca Jacobs Mary Whittredge or Witheridge and Job Tookey All were found not guilty Grand juries were held for many of those remaining in jail Charges were dismissed against many but 16 more people were indicted and tried three of whom were found guilty Elizabeth Johnson Jr 64 Sarah Wardwell and Mary Post 65 When Stoughton wrote the warrants for the execution of these three and others remaining from the previous court Governor Phips issued pardons sparing their lives In late January early February the Court sat again in Charlestown Middlesex County and held grand juries and tried five people Sarah Cole of Lynn Lydia Dustin and Sarah Dustin Mary Taylor and Mary Toothaker All were found not guilty but were not released until they paid their jail fees Lydia Dustin died in jail on March 10 1693 At the end of April the Court convened in Boston Suffolk County and cleared Capt John Alden by proclamation It heard charges against a servant girl Mary Watkins for falsely accusing her mistress of witchcraft In May the Court convened in Ipswich Essex County and held a variety of grand juries They dismissed charges against all but five people Susannah Post Eunice Frye Mary Bridges Jr Mary Barker and William Barker Jr were all found not guilty at trial finally putting an end to the series of trials and executions Legal proceduresOverview After someone concluded that a loss illness or death had been caused by witchcraft the accuser entered a complaint against the alleged witch with the local magistrates 66 If the complaint was deemed credible the magistrates had the person arrested 67 and brought in for a public examination essentially an interrogation where the magistrates pressed the accused to confess 68 If the magistrates at this local level were satisfied that the complaint was well founded the prisoner was handed over to be dealt with by a superior court In 1692 the magistrates opted to wait for the arrival of the new charter and governor who would establish a Court of Oyer and Terminer to handle these cases The next step at the superior court level was to summon witnesses before a grand jury 69 A person could be indicted on charges of afflicting with witchcraft 70 or for making an unlawful covenant with the Devil 71 Once indicted the defendant went to trial sometimes on the same day as in the case of the first person indicted and tried on June 2 Bridget Bishop who was executed eight days later on June 10 1692 There were four execution dates with one person executed on June 10 1692 72 five executed on July 19 1692 Sarah Good Rebecca Nurse Susannah Martin Elizabeth Howe and Sarah Wildes 73 another five executed on August 19 1692 Martha Carrier John Willard George Burroughs George Jacobs Sr and John Proctor and eight on September 22 1692 Mary Eastey Martha Corey Ann Pudeator Samuel Wardwell Mary Parker Alice Parker Wilmot Redd and Margaret Scott Several others including Elizabeth Bassett Proctor and Abigail Faulkner were convicted but given temporary reprieves because they were pregnant Five other women were convicted in 1692 but the death sentence was never carried out Mary Bradbury in absentia Ann Foster who later died in prison Mary Lacey Sr Foster s daughter Dorcas Hoar and Abigail Hobbs nbsp Giles Corey was pressed to death during the Salem witch trials in the 1690sGiles Corey an 81 year old farmer from the southeast end of Salem called Salem Farms refused to enter a plea when he came to trial in September The judges applied an archaic form of punishment called peine forte et dure in which stones were piled on his chest until he could no longer breathe After two days of peine fort et dure Corey died without entering a plea 74 His refusal to plead is usually explained as a way of preventing his estate from being confiscated by the Crown but according to historian Chadwick Hansen much of Corey s property had already been seized and he had made a will in prison His death was a protest against the methods of the court 75 A contemporary critic of the trials Robert Calef wrote Giles Corey pleaded not Guilty to his Indictment but would not put himself upon Tryal by the Jury they having cleared none upon Tryal and knowing there would be the same Witnesses against him rather chose to undergo what Death they would put him to 76 As convicted witches Rebecca Nurse and Martha Corey had been excommunicated from their churches and denied proper burials As soon as the bodies of the accused were cut down from the trees they were thrown into a shallow grave and the crowd dispersed Oral history claims that the families of the dead reclaimed their bodies after dark and buried them in unmarked graves on family property The record books of the time do not note the deaths of any of those executed citation needed Spectral evidence Main article Spectral evidence nbsp Title page of Cases of Conscience Boston 1693 by Increase MatherMuch but not all of the evidence used against the accused was spectral evidence or the testimony of the afflicted who claimed to see the apparition or the shape of the person who was allegedly afflicting them 77 The theological dispute that ensued about the use of this evidence was based on whether a person had to give permission to the Devil for his her shape to be used to afflict Opponents claimed that the Devil was able to use anyone s shape to afflict people but the Court contended that the Devil could not use a person s shape without that person s permission therefore when the afflicted claimed to see the apparition of a specific person that was accepted as evidence that the accused had been complicit with the Devil 78 79 Cotton Mather s The Wonders of the Invisible World was written with the purpose to show how careful the court was in managing the trials Unfortunately the work did not get released until after the trials had already ended 80 In his book Mather explained how he felt spectral evidence was presumptive and that it alone was not enough to warrant a conviction 81 Robert Calef a strong critic of Cotton Mather stated in his own book titled More Wonders of the Invisible World that by confessing an accused would not be brought to trial such as in the cases of Tituba and Dorcas Good 82 83 Increase Mather and other ministers sent a letter to the Court The Return of Several Ministers Consulted urging the magistrates not to convict on spectral evidence alone 84 The court later ruled that spectral evidence was inadmissible which caused a dramatic reduction in the rate of convictions and may have hastened the end of the trials A copy of this letter was printed in Increase Mather s Cases of Conscience published in 1693 The publication A Tryal of Witches related to the 1662 Bury St Edmunds witch trial was used by the magistrates at Salem when looking for a precedent in allowing spectral evidence Since the jurist Sir Matthew Hale had permitted this evidence supported by the eminent philosopher physician and author Thomas Browne to be used in the Bury St Edmunds witch trial and the accusations against two Lowestoft women the colonial magistrates also accepted its validity and their trials proceeded 85 Witch cake nbsp Reverend Samuel ParrisAccording to a March 27 1692 entry by Parris in the Records of the Salem Village Church a church member and close neighbor of Rev Parris Mary Sibley aunt of Mary Walcott directed John Indian a man enslaved by Parris to make a witch cake 86 This may have been a superstitious attempt to ward off evil spirits According to an account attributed to Deodat Lawson collected by Deodat Lawson this happened around March 8 over a week after the first complaints had gone out and three women were arrested Lawson s account describes this cake a means to discover witchcraft and provides other details such as that it was made from rye meal and urine from the afflicted girls and was fed to a dog 87 88 In the Church Records Parris describes speaking with Sibley privately on March 25 1692 about her grand error and accepted her sorrowful confession After the main sermon on March 27 and the wider congregation was dismissed Parris addressed covenanted church members about it and admonished all the congregation against going to the Devil for help against the Devil He stated that while calamities that had begun in his own household it never brake forth to any considerable light until diabolical means were used by the making of a cake by my Indian man who had his direction from this our sister Mary Sibley This doesn t seem to square with Lawson s account dating it around March 8 The first complaints were February 29 and the first arrests were March 1 86 nbsp This 19th century representation of Tituba and the Children by Alfred Fredericks originally appeared in A Popular History of the United States Vol 2 by William Cullen Bryant 1878 Traditionally the allegedly afflicted girls are said to have been entertained by Parris slave Tituba 89 A variety of secondary sources starting with Charles W Upham in the 19th century typically relate that a circle of the girls with Tituba s help tried their hands at fortune telling They used the white of an egg and a mirror to create a primitive crystal ball to divine the professions of their future spouses and scared one another when one supposedly saw the shape of a coffin instead The story is drawn from John Hale s book about the trials 90 but in his account only one of the girls not a group of them had confessed to him afterward that she had once tried this Hale did not mention Tituba as having any part of it nor did he identify when the incident took place But the record of Tituba s pre trial examination holds her giving an energetic confession speaking before the court of creatures who inhabit the invisible world and the dark rituals which bind them together in service of Satan implicating both Good and Osborne while asserting that many other people in the colony were engaged in the devil s conspiracy against the Bay 91 Tituba s race has often been described in later accounts as of Carib Indian or African descent but contemporary sources describe her only as an Indian Research by Elaine Breslaw has suggested that Tituba may have been captured in what is now Venezuela and brought to Barbados and so may have been an Arawak Indian 92 Other slightly later descriptions of her by Gov Thomas Hutchinson writing his history of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the 18th century describe her as a Spanish Indian 93 In that day that typically meant a Native American from the Carolinas Georgia Florida citation needed Touch test The most infamous application of the belief in effluvia was the touch test used in Andover during preliminary examinations in September 1692 Parris had explicitly warned his congregation against such examinations If the accused witch touched the victim while the victim was having a fit and the fit stopped observers believed that meant the accused was the person who had afflicted the victim As several of those accused later recounted we were blindfolded and our hands were laid upon the afflicted persons they being in their fits and falling into their fits at our coming into their presence as they said Some led us and laid our hands upon them and then they said they were well and that we were guilty of afflicting them whereupon we were all seized as prisoners by a warrant from the justice of the peace and forthwith carried to Salem 94 The Rev John Hale explained how this supposedly worked the Witch by the cast of her eye sends forth a Malefick Venome into the Bewitched to cast him into a fit and therefore the touch of the hand doth by sympathy cause that venome to return into the Body of the Witch again 95 Other evidence Other evidence included the confessions of the accused testimony by a confessed witch who identified others as witches the discovery of poppits poppets books of palmistry and horoscopes or pots of ointments in the possession or home of the accused and observation of what were called witch s teats on the body of the accused A witch s teat was said to be a mole or blemish somewhere on the body that was insensitive to touch discovery of such insensitive areas was considered de facto evidence of witchcraft 96 Primary sources and early discussion nbsp Reverend Increase MatherPuritan ministers throughout the Massachusetts Bay Colony were exceedingly interested in the trial Several traveled to Salem in order to gather information about the trial After witnessing the trials first hand and gathering accounts these ministers presented various opinions about the trial starting in 1692 Deodat Lawson a former minister in Salem Village visited Salem Village in March and April 1692 The resulting publication entitled A Brief and True Narrative of Some Remarkable Passages Relating to Sundry Persons Afflicted by Witchcraft at Salem Village Which happened from the Nineteenth of March to the Fifth of April 1692 was published while the trials were ongoing and relates evidence meant to convict the accused 41 Simultaneous with Lawson William Milbourne a Baptist minister in Boston publicly petitioned the General Assembly in early June 1692 challenging the use of spectral evidence by the Court Milbourne had to post 200 bond equal to 33 310 or about US 42 000 today or be arrested for contriving writing and publishing the said scandalous Papers 97 nbsp First page of Some Miscellany Observations On our present Debates respecting Witchcrafts in a Dialogue Between S amp B attributed to Samuel WillardThe most famous primary source about the trials is Cotton Mather s Wonders of the Invisible World Being an Account of the Tryals of Several Witches Lately Executed in New England printed in October 1692 This text had a tortured path to publication Initially conceived as a promotion of the trials and a triumphant celebration of Mather s leadership Mather had to rewrite the text and disclaim personal involvement as suspicion about spectral evidence started to build 98 Regardless it was published in both Boston and London with an introductory letter of endorsement by William Stoughton the Chief Magistrate The book included accounts of five trials with much of the material copied directly from the court records which were supplied to Mather by Stephen Sewall a clerk in the court 99 nbsp Title page of Wonders of the Invisible World London 1693 by Cotton MatherCotton Mather s father Increase Mather completed Cases of Conscience Concerning Evil Spirits at the same time as Wonders and published it in November 1692 This book was intended to judiciously acknowledge the growing doubts about spectral evidence while still maintaining the accuracy of Cotton s rewritten whitewashed text Like his son Increase minimized his personal involvement although he included the full text of his August petition to the Salem court in support of spectral evidence 100 Judging from the apologetic tone of Cases of Conscience that the moral panic had subsided Thomas Brattle directly ridiculed the superstitions of Salem and Increase s defense of his son in an open letter notable for its openly sarcastic tone 101 Samuel Willard minister of the Third Church in Boston 102 was a onetime strong supporter of the trials and of spectral evidence but became increasingly concerned as the Mathers crushed dissent 103 Writing anonymously to conceal his dissent he published a short tract entitled Some Miscellany Observations On our present Debates respecting Witchcrafts in a Dialogue Between S amp B The authors were listed as P E and J A Philip English and John Alden but the work is generally attributed to Willard In it two characters S Salem and B Boston discuss the way the proceedings were being conducted with B urging caution about the use of testimony from the afflicted and the confessors stating whatever comes from them is to be suspected and it is dangerous using or crediting them too far 104 This book lists its place of publication as Philadelphia but it is believed to have been secretly printed in Boston 105 Aftermath and closureAlthough the last trial was held in May 1693 public response to the events continued In the decades following the trials survivors and family members and their supporters sought to establish the innocence of the individuals who were convicted and to gain compensation In the following centuries the descendants of those unjustly accused and condemned have sought to honor their memories Events in Salem and Danvers in 1992 were used to commemorate the trials In November 2001 years after the celebration of the 300th anniversary of the trials the Massachusetts legislature passed an act exonerating all who had been convicted and naming each of the innocent 106 with the exception of Elizabeth Johnson who was cleared by the Massachusetts Senate on 26 May 2022 the last conviction to be reversed after pressure from schoolchildren who discovered the anomaly 107 The trials have figured in American culture and been explored in numerous works of art literature and film Reversals of attainder and compensation to the survivors nbsp Title page of A Modest Enquiry Into the Nature of Witchcraft by John Hale Boston 1702 The first indication that public calls for justice were not over occurred in 1695 when Thomas Maule a noted Quaker publicly criticized the handling of the trials by the Puritan leaders in Chapter 29 of his book Truth Held Forth and Maintained expanding on Increase Mather by stating it were better that one hundred Witches should live than that one person be put to death for a witch which is not a Witch 108 For publishing this book Maule was imprisoned twelve months before he was tried and found not guilty 109 nbsp Reverend Samuel WillardOn December 17 1696 the General Court ruled that there would be a fast day on January 14 1697 referring to the late Tragedy raised among us by Satan and his Instruments 110 On that day Samuel Sewall asked Rev Samuel Willard to read aloud his apology to the congregation of Boston s South Church to take the Blame amp Shame of the late Commission of Oyer amp Terminer at Salem 111 Thomas Fiske and eleven other trial jurors also asked forgiveness 112 From 1693 to 1697 Robert Calef a weaver and a cloth merchant in Boston collected correspondence court records and petitions and other accounts of the trials and placed them for contrast alongside portions of Cotton Mather s Wonders of the Invisible World under the title More Wonders of the Invisible World 59 Calef could not get it published in Boston and he had to take it to London where it was published in 1700 Scholars of the trials Hutchinson Upham Burr and even Poole have relied on Calef s compilation of documents John Hale a minister in Beverly who was present at many of the proceedings had completed his book A Modest Enquiry into the Nature of Witchcraft in 1697 which was not published until 1702 after his death and perhaps in response to Calef s book Expressing regret over the actions taken Hale admitted Such was the darkness of that day the tortures and lamentations of the afflicted and the power of former presidents that we walked in the clouds and could not see our way 113 Various petitions were filed between 1700 and 1703 with the Massachusetts government demanding that the convictions be formally reversed Those tried and found guilty were considered dead in the eyes of the law and with convictions still on the books those not executed were vulnerable to further accusations The General Court initially reversed the attainder only for those who had filed petitions 114 only three people who had been convicted but not executed Abigail Faulkner Sr Elizabeth Proctor and Sarah Wardwell 115 full citation needed In 1703 another petition was filed 116 requesting a more equitable settlement for those wrongly accused but it was not until 1709 when the General Court received a further request that it took action on this proposal In May 1709 22 people who had been convicted of witchcraft or whose relatives had been convicted of witchcraft presented the government with a petition in which they demanded both a reversal of attainder and compensation for financial losses 117 nbsp Governor of Massachusetts Joseph DudleyRepentance was evident within the Salem Village church Rev Joseph Green and the members of the church voted on February 14 1703 after nearly two months of consideration to reverse the excommunication of Martha Corey 118 On August 25 1706 when Ann Putnam Jr one of the most active accusers joined the Salem Village church she publicly asked forgiveness She claimed that she had not acted out of malice but had been deluded by Satan into denouncing innocent people mentioning Rebecca Nurse in particular 119 and was accepted for full membership On October 17 1711 the General Court passed a bill reversing the judgment against the twenty two people listed in the 1709 petition there were seven additional people who had been convicted but had not signed the petition but there was no reversal of attainder for them Two months later on December 17 1711 Governor Joseph Dudley authorized monetary compensation to the 22 people in the 1709 petition The amount of 578 12s was authorized to be divided among the survivors and relatives of those accused and most of the accounts were settled within a year 120 but Phillip English s extensive claims were not settled until 1718 121 Finally on March 6 1712 Rev Nicholas Noyes and members of the Salem church reversed Noyes earlier excommunications of Rebecca Nurse and Giles Corey 122 Memorials Rebecca Nurse s descendants erected an obelisk shaped granite memorial in her memory in 1885 on the grounds of the Nurse Homestead in Danvers with an inscription from John Greenleaf Whittier In 1892 an additional monument was erected in honor of forty neighbors who signed a petition in support of Nurse 123 nbsp Memorial to the Victims of the Witch Trials Principal Inscription Danvers MassachusettsNot all the condemned had been exonerated in the early 18th century In 1957 descendants of the six people who had been wrongly convicted and executed but who had not been included in the bill for a reversal of attainder in 1711 or added to it in 1712 demanded that the General Court formally clear the names of their ancestral family members An act was passed pronouncing the innocence of those accused although it listed only Ann Pudeator by name The others were listed only as certain other persons phrasing which failed specifically to name Bridget Bishop Susannah Martin Alice Parker Wilmot Redd and Margaret Scott 124 nbsp The Salem Witch Trials Memorial Park in Salem nbsp Fanciful representation of the Salem witch trials lithograph from 1892The 300th anniversary of the trials was marked in 1992 in Salem and Danvers by a variety of events A memorial park was dedicated in Salem which included stone slab benches inserted in the stone wall of the park for each of those executed in 1692 Speakers at the ceremony in August included playwright Arthur Miller and Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel 125 Danvers erected its own new memorial 126 and reinterred bones unearthed in the 1950s assumed to be those of George Jacobs Sr in a new resting place at the Rebecca Nurse Homestead 123 In 1992 The Danvers Tercentennial Committee also persuaded the Massachusetts House of Representatives to issue a resolution honoring those who had died After extensive efforts by Paula Keene a Salem schoolteacher state representatives J Michael Ruane and Paul Tirone along with others issued a bill whereby the names of all those not previously listed were to be added to this resolution When it was finally signed on October 31 2001 by Governor Jane Swift more than 300 years later all were finally proclaimed innocent 106 127 nbsp Part of the memorial for the victims of the 1692 withcraft trials Danvers MassachusettsLand in the area was purchased by the city of Salem in 1936 and renamed Witch Memorial Land but no memorial was constructed on the site and popular misconception persisted that the executions had occurred at the top of Gallows Hill 128 Rebecca Eames of Boxford who was brought to Salem for questioning stated that she was held at the house below the hill where she could see people attending executions This helped researchers rule out the summit as the execution site 129 In January 2016 the University of Virginia announced its project team had determined the execution site on Gallows Hill in Salem where nineteen witches had been hanged in public 10 Members of the Gallows Hill Project had worked with the city of Salem using old maps and documentation as well as sophisticated GIS and ground penetrating radar technology to survey the area of what became known as Proctor s Ledge located at the base of the hill which they say was easier for spectators to reach than the top of Gallows Hill The city owns the property and dedicated the Proctor s Ledge Memorial to the victims there in 2017 9 10 A documentary Gallows Hill Nineteen is in production about these events 10 129 In literature media and popular cultureMain article Cultural depictions of the Salem witch trials The story of the witchcraft accusations trials and executions has captured the imagination of writers and artists in the centuries since the event took place Their earliest impactful use as the basis for an item of popular fiction is the 1828 novel Rachel Dyer by John Neal 130 Many interpretations have taken liberties with the facts of the historical episode in the name of literary and or artistic license including the popular but false idea that witches in America were burned 131 As the trials took place at the intersection between a gradually disappearing medieval past and an emerging enlightenment and dealt with torture and confession some interpretations draw attention to the boundaries between the medieval and the post medieval as cultural constructions 132 Most recently the events of the Salem witch trials were interpreted in the 2018 exploitation teen comedy film Assassination Nation which changed the setting to the present United States and added thick social commentary in order to underline the absurdity of the actual events 133 Medical theories about the reported afflictionsMain article Medical and psychological explanations of bewitchment The cause of the symptoms of those who claimed affliction continues to be a subject of interest Various medical and psychological explanations for the observed symptoms have been explored by researchers including psychological hysteria in response to Indian attacks convulsive ergotism caused by eating rye bread made from grain infected by the fungus Claviceps purpurea a natural substance from which LSD is derived 134 an epidemic of bird borne encephalitis lethargica and sleep paralysis to explain the nocturnal attacks alleged by some of the accusers 135 Some modern historians are less inclined to focus on biological explanations preferring instead to explore motivations such as jealousy spite and a need for attention to explain the behavior 136 See alsoList of people executed for witchcraft List of people of the Salem witch trials Modern witch hunts Salem witchcraft trial 1878 Witchcraft accusations against children Witch trials in the early modern periodGeneral Colonial history of the United States Hanging in the United States List of wrongful convictions in the United States Moral panicReferences Snyder Heather Giles Corey Salem Witch Trials Archived from the original on November 22 2019 Retrieved December 3 2019 Demos John 1983 Entertaining Satan Witchcraft and the Culture of Early New England Oxford Oxford University Press pp 11 401 409 ISBN 9780195033786 Adams 2008 Burr George Lincoln ed 1914 Narratives of the Witchcraft Cases 1648 1706 C Scribner s Sons p 195n1 Six Victims of 1692 Salem Witch Trials Cleared by Massachusetts December 2 2015 Archived from the original on January 18 2018 Retrieved January 17 2018 Massachusetts Clears 5 From Salem Witch Trials The New York Times November 2 2001 Archived from the original on January 30 2018 Retrieved January 29 2018 Salem may pardon accused witches of 1692 archive boston com The Boston Globe Archived from the original on January 17 2018 Retrieved January 17 2018 Vaughan Alden 1997 The Puritan Tradition in America UP of New England p 283 ISBN 978 0874518528 Archived from the original on September 19 2023 Retrieved November 13 2020 a b Writer Dustin Luca Staff July 19 2017 On 325th anniversary city dedicates Proctor s Ledge memorial to Salem Witch Trials victims Salem News Archived from the original on November 1 2019 Retrieved November 1 2019 a b c d Caroline Newman X Marks the Spot Archived April 29 2016 at the Wayback Machine UVA Today 16 January 2016 accessed 28 April 2016 Full title A blow at modern Sadducism in some philosophical considerations about witchcraft To which is added the relation of the fam d disturbance by the drummer in the house of Mr John Mompesson with some reflections on drollery and atheisme a b Glanvill Joseph Essay IV Against modern Sadducism in the matter of Witches and Apparitions Essay on Several Important Subjects in Philosophy and Religion 2nd ed London printed by Jd for John Baker and H Mortlock 1676 pp 1 4 in the history 201 course pack compiled by S McSheffrey amp T McCormick p 26 3 Mather Cotton Memorable Providence Relating to Witchcraft and Possessions Archived 2008 12 19 at the Wayback Machine law umkc edu accessed June 5 2010 a b c Nichols Amy Salem Witch Trials Elizabeth Hubbard University of Virginia Archived from the original on April 6 2018 Retrieved April 8 2018 SWP No 062 Dorothy Good New Salem Pelican salem lib virginia edu Archived from the original on May 11 2023 Retrieved May 11 2023 The Memorial History of Boston Including Suffolk County Massachusetts 1630 1880 Ticknor and Company 1881 pp 133 137 2009 Puritanism A Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199740871 The Glorious Revolution in Massachusetts Selected Documents 1689 1692 henceforth cited as Glorious Revolution Robert Earle Moody and Richard Clive Simmons eds Colonial Society of Massachusetts Boston MA 1988 p 2 ISBN missing Pulsipher Jenny Hale December 2007 Dark Cloud Rising from the East The New England Quarterly 80 4 588 613 doi 10 1162 tneq 2007 80 4 588 JSTOR 20474581 S2CID 57560166 Letter of Increase Mather to John Richards 26 October 1691 Glorious Revolution p 621 The Diary of Samuel Sewall Vol 1 1674 1708 henceforth cited as Sewall Diary ed M Halsey Thomas Farrar Straus amp Giroux New York 1973 p 287 Sewall Diary p 288 Sewall Diary p 291 Massachusetts Archives Collections Governor s Council Executive Records Vol 2 1692 p 165 Certified copy from the original records at Her Majestie s State Paper Office London September 16 1846 Governor s Council Executive Records Vol 2 1692 pp 174 177 Salem Village Record Book June 18 1689 Archived July 20 2011 at the Wayback Machine accessed January 9 2019 Salem Village Record Book October 10 1689 Archived July 20 2011 at the Wayback Machine etext virginia edu accessed January 9 2019 Salem Village Record Book December 27 1681 Archived July 20 2011 at the Wayback Machine etext virginia edu accessed January 9 2019 Starkey 1949 pp 26 28 Francis J Bremer and Tom Webster eds Puritans and Puritanism in Europe and America A Comprehensive Encyclopedia ABC CLIO 2006 ISBN missing King Ernest W Mixon Franklin G September 1 2010 Religiosity and the political economy of the Salem witch trials The Social Science Journal 47 3 678 688 doi 10 1016 j soscij 2010 01 008 ISSN 0362 3319 S2CID 143898352 Archived from the original on September 24 2021 Retrieved September 24 2021 Francis J Bremer The Puritan Experiment New England Society from Bradford to Edwards UP New England 2013 Bremer The Puritan Experiment New England society from Bradford to Edwards 2013 Reis 1997 p xvi a b Reis 1997 p 2 Karlsen Carol F 1998 The Devil in the Shape of a Woman Witchcraft in Colonial New England New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0393317596 Roach Marilynne K 2013 Six Women of Salem The Untold Story of the Accused and Their Accusers in the Salem Witch Trials New York Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0306821202 a b Mather Cotton Memorable Providences Relating to Witchcraft and Possessions 1689 law umkc edu Archived 2008 12 19 at the Wayback Machine accessed January 18 2019 Records of the Salem Witch Hunt Rosenthal et al 2009 p 15 n2 John Hale 1697 A Modest Enquiry Into the Nature of Witchcraft Benjamin Elliot Archived from the original on January 21 2013 Retrieved January 9 2019 a b Deodat Lawson 1692 A Brief and True Narrative of Some Remarkable Passages Relating to Sundry Persons Afflicted by Witchcraft at Salem Village Which happened from the Nineteenth of March to the Fifth of April 1692 Benjamin Harris Archived from the original on April 15 2019 Retrieved October 31 2017 Deodat Lawson 1692 A Brief and True Narrative of Some Remarkable Passages Relating to Sundry Persons Afflicted by Witchcraft at Salem Village Which happened from the Nineteenth of March to the Fifth of April 1692 Benjamin Harris p 3 Archived from the original on April 15 2019 Retrieved October 31 2017 Breslaw 1996 p 103 See the warrants for their arrests at the University of Virginia archives 004 0001 Archived August 12 2008 at the Wayback Machine and 033 0001 Archived September 18 2012 at the Wayback Machine Caporael Linnda R 1976 Ergotism The Satan Loosed in Salem Science 192 4234 21 26 Bibcode 1976Sci 192 21C doi 10 1126 science 769159 JSTOR 1741715 PMID 769159 Archived from the original on June 27 2022 Retrieved June 27 2022 Linder Douglas O The Examination of Sarah Good Famous Trials UMKC School of Law Archived from the original on October 31 2019 Retrieved November 21 2019 Sarah Osborne House Salem Witch Museum Archived from the original on August 12 2020 Retrieved August 20 2020 7 trans Montague Summer Questions VII amp XI Malleus Maleficarum Part I sacred texts com Archived February 23 2011 at the Wayback Machine June 9 2010 accessed December 24 2014 Boyer 3 Virginia edu Salem witch trials archives Archived September 18 2012 at the Wayback Machine etext virginia edu accessed January 9 2019 Locke Joseph L Wright Ben 2019 The American Yawp Stanford University Press ISBN 978 1503608146 Massachusetts Archives Superior Court of Judicature Witchcraft Trials January May 1693 Cases Heard Salem Witch Trial Documentary Archive and Transcription Project Archived from the original on December 10 2017 Retrieved November 15 2017 a b For more information about family relationships see Enders A Robinson 1991 The Devil Discovered Salem Witchcraft 1692 Hippocrene New York ISBN 978 1 57766 176 4 Enders A Robinson 1992 Salem Witchcraft and Hawthorne s House of the Seven Gables Heritage Books Bowie MD ISBN 978 1 55613 515 6 and Marilynne K Roach 2002 The Salem Witch Trials A Day To Day Chronicle of a Community Under Siege Cooper Square Press New York ISBN 978 1 58979 132 9 Charles W Upham Salem Witchcraft and Cotton Mather A Reply Archived June 30 2019 at the Wayback Machine Morrisania NY 1869 Project Gutenberg gutenberg org accessed December 24 2014 Silverman Kenneth ed 1971 Selected Letters of Cotton Mather Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press pp 35 40 ISBN 978 0 8071 0920 5 1 The Examination of Bridget Bishop April 19 1692 Examination and Evidence of Some Accused Witches in Salem 1692 law umkc edu Archived 2010 12 31 at the Wayback Machine accessed June 5 2010 Hutchinson Thomas The Witchcraft Delusion of 1692 New England Historical Genealogical Historical Register Vol 24 pp 381 414 381 October 1870 The Witchcraft Delusion of 1692 May 17 2008 Archived from the original on May 17 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b Calef Robert 1823 More Wonders of the Invisible World Salem Cushing amp Appleton OCLC 80040152 Archived from the original on February 5 2012 Retrieved December 24 2014 Alt URL Burr George Lincoln ed 1914 Narratives of the Witchcraft Cases 1648 1706 C Scribner s Sons p 369 Mather Cotton 1914 The Wonders of the Invisible World In Burr George Lincoln ed Narratives of the Witchcraft Cases 1648 1706 C Scribner s Sons pp 203 Letters of Governor Phips to the Home Government 1692 1693 etext virginia edu accessed January 9 2019 Judge Sewall s Diary I p 368 Woman condemned in Salem witch trials on verge of pardon 328 years later The Guardian August 19 2021 Archived from the original on August 19 2021 Retrieved August 19 2021 History of the Supreme Judicial Court Archived from the original on December 15 2015 Retrieved November 15 2017 See The Complaint v Elizabeth Proctor amp Sarah Cloyce Archived September 9 2006 at the Wayback Machine for an example of one of the primary sources of this type The Arrest Warrant of Rebecca Nurse Archived September 9 2006 at the Wayback Machine etext lib virginia edu accessed December 24 2014 The Examination of Martha Corey Archived August 21 2006 at the Wayback Machine etext lib virginia edu accessed January 9 2019 For example Summons for Witnesses v Rebecca Nurse Archived September 9 2006 at the Wayback Machine etext lib virginia edu accessed January 9 2019 Indictment of Sarah Good for Afflicting Sarah Vibber Archived September 29 2012 at the Wayback Machine etext lib virginia edu accessed January 9 2019 Indictment of Abigail Hobbs for Covenanting Archived September 29 2012 at the Wayback Machine etext lib virginia edu accessed January 9 2019 The Death Warrant of Bridget Bishop Archived September 29 2012 at the Wayback Machine etext lib virginia edu accessed January 9 2019 Salem Witch Trials etext virginia edu Archived from the original on September 18 2012 Retrieved August 17 2006 Boyer p 8 Hansen 1969 p 154 Robert Calef More Wonders of the Invisible World 1700 p 106 Kreutter Sarah April 2013 The Devil s Specter Spectral Evidence and the Salem Witchcraft Crisis The Spectrum A Scholars Day Journal 2 Article 8 Archived from the original on November 16 2017 Retrieved November 15 2017 via Digital Commons Craker Wendel D 1997 Spectral Evidence Non Spectral Acts of Witchcraft and Confession at Salem in 1692 The Historical Journal 40 2 332 doi 10 1017 S0018246X9700719X S2CID 159913824 Kennedy Rick 2015 The first American evangelical a short life of Cotton Mather Rick Kennedy Grand Rapids Michigan William B Eerdmans Publishing Company ISBN 978 1467443104 ch 6 Craker Wendel D 1997 Spectral Evidence Non Spectral Acts of Witchcraft and Confession at Salem in 1692 The Historical Journal 40 2 335 doi 10 1017 S0018246X9700719X S2CID 159913824 Craker Wendel D 1997 Spectral Evidence Non Spectral Acts of Witchcraft and Confession at Salem in 1692 The Historical Journal 40 2 336 doi 10 1017 S0018246X9700719X S2CID 159913824 Craker Wendel D 1997 Spectral Evidence Non Spectral Acts of Witchcraft and Confession at Salem in 1692 The Historical Journal 40 2 345 346 doi 10 1017 S0018246X9700719X S2CID 159913824 Walker Rachel Spring 2001 Cotton Mather Salem Witch Trial Document Archive Archived from the original on November 9 2017 Retrieved November 15 2017 via Documentary Archive and Transcription Project Mather Cotton 1681 1724 Diary of Cotton Mather Boston The Society Bunn amp Geiss 1997 p 7 a b Salem Village Church Records pp 10 12 Archived October 11 2020 at the Wayback Machine GL Burr Narratives of the Witchcraft Trials p 342 Archived January 23 2022 at the Wayback Machine Burr George Lincoln ed 1914 Narratives of the Witchcraft Cases 1648 1706 C Scribner s Sons pp 169 190 Reis 1997 p 56 John Hale 1697 A Modest Enquiry into the Nature of Witchcraft Benjamin Elliot Boston Archived from the original on January 20 2013 Retrieved August 26 2007 facsimile of document at the Salem witch trials documentary archive at the University of Virginia Erikson 2005 Breslaw 1996 p 13 Thomas Hutchinson The History of the Province of Massachusetts Bay from the Charter of King William and Queen Mary in 1691 Until the Year 1750 vol 2 ed Lawrence Shaw Mayo Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 1936 accessed December 24 2014 Boyer amp Nissenbaum 1972 p 971 John Hale A Modest Enquiry into the Nature of Witchcraft 1696 p 59 See 1 Archived 2013 01 20 at the Wayback Machine etext lib virginia edu accessed December 24 2014 Flotte T J Bell D A December 1989 Role of skin lesions in the Salem witchcraft trials The American Journal of Dermatopathology 11 6 582 587 doi 10 1097 00000372 198912000 00014 ISSN 0193 1091 PMID 2690652 Archived from the original on November 11 2020 Retrieved August 20 2020 National Archives Great Britain CO5 785 pp 336 337 Holmes Clive December 2016 The Opinion of the Cambridge Association 1 August 1692 A Neglected Text of the Salem Witch Trials The New England Quarterly 89 4 663 doi 10 1162 TNEQ a 00567 S2CID 57558631 The Witchcraft Delusion in New England The wonders of the invisible world by C Mather W Elliot Woodward 1866 Archived from the original on February 25 2021 Retrieved November 9 2019 Holmes Clive December 2016 The Opinion of the Cambridge Association 1 August 1692 A Neglected Text of the Salem Witch Trials The New England Quarterly 89 4 646 doi 10 1162 TNEQ a 00567 S2CID 57558631 Miller Perry 1982 The New England mind from colony to province Belknap Press of Harvard University Press p 196 ISBN 9780674613010 History Old South Church Archived September 29 2011 at the Wayback Machine oldsouth org accessed December 24 2014 Holmes Clive December 2016 The Opinion of the Cambridge Association 1 August 1692 A Neglected Text of the Salem Witch Trials The New England Quarterly 89 4 665 doi 10 1162 TNEQ a 00567 S2CID 57558631 Some Miscellany Archived 2012 09 29 at the Wayback Machine etext lib virginia edu accessed December 24 2014 Moore George 1888 Notes on the Bibliography of Witchcraft in Massachusetts Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society n s 5 248 a b The Boston Globe from Boston Massachusetts 31 newspapers com Archived November 14 2018 at the Wayback Machine New Law Exonerates Boston Globe 1 November 2001 Kole William J May 26 2022 329 years later last Salem witch who wasn t is pardoned Associated Press Archived from the original on May 27 2022 Retrieved May 27 2022 Virginia edu Archived December 12 2007 at the Wayback Machine p 185 Cornell University Library Witchcraft Collection dlxs2 library cornell edu accessed December 24 2014 Robert Calef More Wonders of the Invisible World Part 5 p 143 Francis 2005 pp 181 182 Robert Calef More Wonders of the Invisible World Part 5 pp 144 145 As published in George Lincoln Burr s Narratives p 525 Boyer P amp Nissenbaum S Eds 1977 The Salem witchcraft papers Verbatim transcripts of the legal documents of the Salem witchcraft outbreak of 1692 New York Da Capo Press Robinson 2001 pp xvi xvii Massachusetts Archives Collection vol 135 no 121 p 108 Massachusetts State Archives Boston MA Massachusetts Archives Vol 135 p 112 No 126 Roach 2002 p 567 Upham 2000 p 510 Essex County Court Archives vol 2 no 136 Peabody Essex Museum Salem MA Acts and Resolves Public and Private of the Province of Massachusetts Bay vol 9 1718 1718 Chap 82 Boston Wright and Potter 1902 pp 618 619 Roach 2002 p 571 a b Rebecca Nurse Homestead Archived 2007 12 19 at the Wayback Machine rebeccanurse org accessed December 24 2014 Chapter 145 of the resolves of 1957 Commonwealth of Massachusetts Salem Massachusetts Salem Witch Trials The Stones July 10 and July 19 1692 Archived November 20 2007 at the Wayback Machine salemweb com accessed December 24 2014 Salem Village Witchcraft Victims Memorial etext virginia edu Archived November 12 2007 at the Wayback Machine accessed December 24 2014 Chapter 122 of the Acts of 2001 Commonwealth of Massachusetts Archived from the original on December 2 2021 Retrieved September 13 2021 Actual Site Of Salem Witch Hangings Discovered CBS news January 13 2016 Archived from the original on January 22 2021 Retrieved March 30 2021 a b The Real Salem Witch Hanging Site Was Located Boston Magazine January 1 2016 Archived from the original on July 27 2021 Retrieved March 30 2021 Sears 1978 p 82 Purkiss Diane June 27 2023 Witchcraft Eight Myths and Misconceptions English Heritage Archived from the original on June 24 2023 Retrieved June 27 2023 Bernard Rosenthal Medievalism and the Salem Witch Trials in Medievalism in the Modern World Essays in Honour of Leslie J Workman eds Richard Utz and Tom Shippey Turnhout Brepols 1998 pp 61 68 ISBN missing Assassination Nation 2018 IMDb archived from the original on July 23 2020 retrieved July 21 2020 Secrets of the Dead The Witches Curse Archived June 23 2014 at the Wayback Machine pbs org accessed December 24 2014 Justice at Salem Archived June 13 2009 at the Wayback Machine justiceatsalem com accessed December 24 2014 Ana Kucic Salem Witchcraft Trials The Perception Of Women In History Literature And Culture Archived December 25 2014 at the Wayback Machine University of Nis Serbia 2010 pp 2 4 BibliographyAdams Gretchen A 2008 The Specter of Salem Remembering the Witch Trials in Nineteenth Century America University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226005430 Boyer Paul S Nissenbaum Stephen eds 1972 Salem Village Witchcraft A Documentary Record of Local Conflict in Colonial New England Northeastern University Press ISBN 978 1 55553 165 2 Breslaw Elaine G 1996 Tituba Reluctant Witch of Salem Devilish Indians and Puritan Fantasies NYU Press ISBN 978 0 8147 1307 5 Bunn Ivan Geiss Gilbert 1997 Trial of Witches A Seventeenth Century Witchcraft Prosecution Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 17109 0 Cooke William H 2009 Justice at Salem Reexamining the Witch Trials Undertaker Press ISBN 978 1 59594 322 4 archived from the original on June 13 2009 retrieved October 23 2009 Erikson Kai T 2005 Wayward Puritans A Study in the Sociology of Deviance Allyn amp Bacon ISBN 978 0 205 42403 0 Francis Richard 2005 Judge Sewall s Apology Harper Collins Glanvill Joseph Essay IV Against modern Sadducism in the matter of Witches and Apparitions in Essay on several important subjects in philosophy and religion 2nd Ed London printed for John Baker and H Mortlock 1676 pp 1 4 in the history 201 course pack compiled by S McSheffrey amp T McCormick Hansen Chadwick 1969 Witchcraft at Salem Brazillier ISBN 978 0 8076 1137 1 Mather Cotton Memorable Providence Relating to Witchcraft and Possessions law umkc edu accessed June 5 2010 Trans Montague Summer Questions VII amp XI Maleus Maleficarum Part I sacred texts com Archived February 23 2011 at the Wayback Machine June 9 2010 Reis Elizabeth 1997 Damned Women Sinners and Witches in Puritan New England Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 8611 1 Roach Marilynne K 2002 The Salem Witch Trials A Day To Day Chronicle of a Community Under Siege Cooper Square Press ISBN 978 1 58979 132 9 Robinson Enders A 2001 1990 The Devil Discovered Salem Witchcraft 1692 Hippocrene ISBN 978 1 57766 176 4 Sears Donald A 1978 John Neal Twayne Publishers ISBN 080 5 7723 08 Silverman Kenneth ed 1971 Letter of Cotton Mather to Stephen Sewall September 20 1692 Selected Letters of Cotton Mather University of Louisiana Press ISBN 978 0 8071 0920 5 Starkey Marion L 1949 The Devil in Massachusetts Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0 385 03509 5 Upham Charles W 2000 1867 Salem Witchcraft vol 2 Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 40899 6 The Examination of Bridget Bishop April 19 1692 Examination and Evidence of Some Accused Witches in Salem 1692 law umkc edu accessed June 5 2010 The Examination of Sarah Good March 1 1692 Examination and Evidence of Some the Accused Witches in Salem 1692 law umkc edu Archived January 20 2011 at the Wayback Machine accessed June 6 2010 Further readingAronson Marc Witch Hunt Mysteries of the Salem Witch Trials Atheneum New York 2003 ISBN 1 4169 0315 1 Baker Emerson W A Storm of Witchcraft The Salem Trials and the American Experience 2014 Emphasis on the causes Boyer Paul amp Nissenbaum Stephen Salem Possessed The Social Origins of Witchcraft Harvard University Press Cambridge MA 1974 ISBN 0 674 78526 6 Brown David C A Guide to the Salem Witchcraft Hysteria of 1692 David C Brown Washington Crossing PA 1984 ISBN 0 9613415 0 5 Burns Margo amp Rosenthal Bernard Examination of the Records of the Salem Witch Trials William and Mary Quarterly 2008 Vol 65 No 3 pp 401 422 Demos John Entertaining Satan Witchcraft and the Culture of Early New England New York Oxford University Press 1982 ISBN 0 19 517483 6 Fels Tony Switching sides how a generation of historians lost sympathy for the victims of the Salem witch hunt Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 2018 ISBN 1421424371 Foulds Diane E 2010 Death in Salem The Private Lives Behind the 1692 Witch Hunt Godbeer Richard The Devil s Dominion Magic and Religion in Early New England Cambridge University Press New York 1992 ISBN 0 521 46670 9 Goss K David 2007 The Salem Witch Trials A Reference Guide Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 32095 8 Hale Rev John 1702 A Modest Enquiry into the Nature of Witchcraft Hill Frances A Delusion of Satan The Full Story of the Salem Witch Trials Doubleday New York 1995 ISBN 0 306 81159 6 Hoffer Peter Charles The Salem Witchcraft Trials A Legal History University of Kansas 1997 ISBN 0 7006 0859 1 Karlsen Carol F The Devil in the Shape of a Woman Witchcraft in Colonial New England New York Vintage 1987 This work provides essential background on other witchcraft accusations in 17th century New England ISBN 0 393 31759 5 Lasky Kathryn Beyond the Burning Time Point New York 1994 ISBN 0 590 47332 8 Le Beau Bryan F The Story of the Salem Witch Trials We Walked in Clouds and Could Not See Our Way Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River NJ 1998 ISBN 0 13 442542 1 Levack Brian P ed The Oxford Handbook of Witchcraft in Early Modern Europe and Colonial America 2013 excerpt and text search Archived March 20 2021 at the Wayback Machine Mappen Marc ed Witches amp Historians Interpretations of Salem 2nd Edition Keiger Malabar FL 1996 ISBN 0 88275 653 2 Miller Arthur The Crucible a play which compares McCarthyism to a witch hunt ISBN 0 14 243733 6 Norton Mary Beth In the Devil s Snare The Salem Witchcraft Crisis of 1692 New York Random House 2002 ISBN 0 375 70690 9 Ray Benjamin C Satan and Salem The Witch Hunt Crisis of 1692 The University of Virginia Press 2015 ISBN 9780813937076 Robbins Rossell Hope The Encyclopedia of Witchcraft and Demonology Crown Publishers Inc 1959 ISBN 0 600 01183 6 Robinson Enders A Salem Witchcraft and Hawthorne s House of the Seven Gables Heritage Books Bowie MD 1992 ISBN 1 55613 515 7 Rosenthal Bernard Salem Story Reading the Witch Trials of 1692 Cambridge University Press New York 1993 ISBN 0 521 55820 4 Rosenthal Bernard ed et al Records of the Salem Witch Hunt Cambridge University Press New York 2009 ISBN 0 521 66166 8 Sologuk Sally Diseases Can Bewitch Durum Millers Milling Journal Second quarter 2005 Spanos N P J Gottlieb Ergots and Salem village witchcraft A critical appraisal Science 194 1390 1394 1976 Trask Richard B The Devil hath been raised A Documentary History of the Salem Village Witchcraft Outbreak of March 1692 Revised edition Yeoman Press Danvers MA 1997 ISBN 0 9638595 1 X Weisman Richard Witchcraft Magic and Religion in 17th Century Massachusetts University of Massachusetts Press Amherst MA 1984 ISBN 0 87023 494 3 Wilson Jennifer M Witch Authorhouse 2005 ISBN 1 4208 2109 1 Wilson Lori Lee The Salem Witch Trials How History Is Invented series Lerner Minneapolis 1997 ISBN 0 8225 4889 5 Woolf Alex Investigating History Mysteries Heinemann Library 2004 ISBN 0 431 16022 8 Wright John Hardy Sorcery in Salem Arcadia Portsmouth NH 1999 ISBN 0 7385 0084 4 Preston VK Reproducing Witchcraft Thou Shalt Not Suffer a Witch to Live TDR The Drama Review 2018 Vol 62 No 1 pp 143 159 Gagnon Daniel A A Salem Witch The Trial Execution and Exoneration of Rebecca Nurse Yardley PA Westholme 2021 ISBN 978 1594163678External links nbsp Wikisource has the text of an 1879 American Cyclopaedia article about Salem witch trials Salem Witchcraft Trials of 1692 University of Missouri Kansas City Law School Salem Witch Trials Documentary Archive and Transcription Project University of Virginia archive of extensive primary sources including court papers maps interactive maps and biographies includes former Massachusetts Historical Society link Salem Witchcraft Volumes I and II by Charles Upham 1867 Project Gutenberg SalemWitchTrials com Essays biographies of the accused and afflicted Salem Witch Trials website Cotton Mather The Wonders of the Invisible World Observations as Well Historical as Theological upon the Nature the Number and the Operations of the Devils 1693 online pdf edition at Digital Commons Salem Witch Trials Archived June 6 2017 at the Wayback Machine Salem website 42 31 20 N 70 53 46 W 42 52222 N 70 89611 W 42 52222 70 89611 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Salem witch trials amp oldid 1181193070 Memorials, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.