the salem witch trials salem, massachusetts 1692 – 1693

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The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

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Page 1: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

The Salem Witch Trials

Salem, Massachusetts

1692 – 1693

Page 2: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693
Page 3: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

The Puritans considered Indians to be devilish and barbaric. They lived in constant fear of attack. This caused great fear among the citizens, some believe even hysteria.

Hysteria - behavior exhibiting excessive or uncontrollable emotion, such as fear or panic

Page 4: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

Key PeopleTituba: Indian slave from Barbados (Caribbean)

Reverend Samuel Parris: minister of Salem; daughter was

bewitched

Ann Putnam Jr.: the “leader” of the bewitched girls

Betty Parris: daughter of Rev Parris; one of the bewitched

Mary Warren: one of the bewitched girls

Abigail Williams: one of the bewitched girls

Page 5: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

Rev. Samuel Parris

• minister in Salem during the trials

• preached harsh sermons

• his house was the center of the witch hunt

Page 6: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

Tituba entertains Salem girls with supernatural tales of her native land.

Page 7: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

As a young girl swoons under the influence of witchcraft as the pilgrims pray to cast out the

evil spirits afflicting her.

•the girls fall into trances

•they can’t bear to hear the Lord’s name

•they feel pricked by pins and stabbed by knives

•doctors examine the girls and believe the devil is loose in Salem

Page 8: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

(Summons for Witnesses)

A summons for witnesses

•the girls accuse Tituba of bewitching them

•Tibuba confesses to witchcraft and accuses others

Page 9: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

Accused witches were arrested and brought in for questioning

Page 10: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

•the afflicted girls cry out in court claiming to be pinched and harmed by unseen forces controlled by the accused witches

Spectral Evidence: the belief that a witch can send his/her spirit out of their body to cause harm

Page 11: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693
Page 12: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

Increase Mather• a powerful minister

• viewed witchcraft and supernatural happenings as God’s growing displeasure with New England

• cautioned against using spectral evidence

Page 13: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

Swimming a Witch

•person was tossed into a body of water

•if they floated they were guilty and if they sank they were innocent because water rejects evil

•innocence seldom mattered because they usually drowned before being pulled to safety

Page 14: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

Witch’s Mark:•believed witches had a mark left by the Devil

•searched the body for these marks

•often pierced them with needles to see if they bled

Page 15: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

The Lord’s Prayer:

•they believed witches could not recite the Our Father

•often made suspected witches do this to prove they were innocent

Page 16: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

The courts followed guidelines set forth in books such as the

Malleus Maleficarum

(Hammer of the Witches)

Page 17: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

• Governor of the colony

• called forth the court of Oyer & Terminer

(“To Hear & Determine”)

Page 18: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

The Trial of George Jacobs

The Trial of George Jacobs

Page 19: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

The Death Warrant of Rebecca Nurse and others

issued by the court of Oyer and Terminer

Page 20: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

No witches were burned in Salem.

Page 21: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

Bridget Bishop

• she was an outcast in Salem

• had been accused of witchcraft several times in the past

• the first to be hanged

Page 22: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

Bridget Bishop is hanged on an oak limb on Gallows Hill as onlookers jeer and condemn her

Page 23: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

After being hanged, the bodies were disposed of in a shallow grave since they did not deserve a proper burial.

Condemned witches were excommunicated (kicked out of the church)

Page 24: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

The Outcome

• 141 were arrested• 19 were hanged • 1 man was pressed to

death• several died while in

prison

Page 25: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

Bridget Bishop George Burroughs Martha Carrier Martha Corey Mary Easty Sarah Good Elizabeth Howe George Jacobs, Sr. Susannah Martin

Nineteen accused witches were hanged on Gallows Hill

Nineteen accused witches were hanged on Gallows Hill

Rebecca Nurse Alice Parker Mary Parker John Proctor Ann Pudeator Wilmott Redd Margaret Scott Samuel Wardwell Sara Wildes John Willard

• Giles Corey , an accused witch, was pressed to

death

•Pressing is when a board is placed on the victim’s chest; rocks are placed on the board until they talk

Page 26: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

Samuel Sewall• Deputy Governor of MA;

judge during the trials• after the hysteria, he

publicly acknowledged his shame and regret

• he kept an annual day of fasting and prayer in memory of his sins

Page 27: The Salem Witch Trials Salem, Massachusetts 1692 – 1693

Judge Samuel Sewall delivers a public apology for his involvement in the trials.