The Salem Witch Trials of 1692The Salem Witch Trials of 1692The Salem Witch Trials of 1692In colonial Massachusetts between February of 1692 and May of 1963 over one hundred and fifty people were arrested and imprisoned for the capital felony of witchcraft. Trials were held in Salem Village, Ipswich, Andover and Salem Town of Essex County of Massachusetts, but accusations of witchcraft occurred in surrounding counties as well. Nineteen of the accused, fourteen women and five men, were hanged at Gallows Hill near Salem Village. Hysteria had swept through Puritan Massachusetts and hundreds of people were accused of witchcraft. Why these accusations came about might account for a combination of an ongoing frontier war, economic conditions, congregational strife, teenage boredom, and personal jealousy among neighbors.* The colonial era was dangerous and the settlers were exposed to much hardship, not only with other inhabitants of the land, but with themselves as well.

The EventThe Witchcraft crisis began in mid-January of 1691, when a young girl named Betty Parris living in the household of the Reverend Samuel Parris of Salem Village, Massachusetts, became strangely ill. She had suffered from fits of hysteria and delusions. The Reverend called upon the local physician, William Griggs, whom could find nothing physically wrong with her and ultimately concluded that she had been bewitched. (It is now believed that Betty Parris may have been suffering from stress, asthma, guilt, boredom, child abuse, epilepsy, and/or delusional psychosis.)* Three women were accused of the bewitching of Betty. She accused Sarah Good, Sarah Osborne, and Tituba, the Reverend Samuel Parris’ slave. Both Good and Osborne claimed their innocence, but Tituba confessed to witchcraft – possibly for feeling guilty of practicing fortune telling. All three women were sent to a prison in Boston, where Osborne later died of natural causes. Soon afterwards, mass hysteria ensued. There were many accusations from people across Essex County that they were suffering from witchcraft, despite the jailing of the three accused, claiming that they were being tortured by ghosts and other apparitions of witches and even accused their neighbors of the horrific acts. Historians believe that social and economic factors were a cause of the anxiety most people inhibited. People were plagued with small pox at the time, were in constant fear of Indian attacks, and King William’s War or what is also known as the Second Indian War was going on. Other factors include teenage boredom, and old feuds between neighbors of disputes within congregations. There was a strong belief by the Puritans that Satan was the cause and more and more people were being accused of working for the Devil. Soon there were so many accused of witchcraft that jails were approaching their capacity. Many of the accused would confess for fear of being sent to the gallows.

A new court was created to hear the witchcraft cases. The judges and magistrates appointed allowed spectral evidence, or testimony of a person accusing another of witchcraft based on dreams and visions. There was little or no hard evidence against any of the accused. Hearsay, gossip, stories, unsupported assertions, surmises were generally admitted. The accused did not have legal counsel, witnesses to testify for them under oath, or an opportunity for appeal if they were convicted. They were allowed to represent themselves and produce evidence however.* Douglas Linder. Many were afraid to criticize the witch trials for fear of being accused themselves. Only nineteen of the accused witches were executed. Five had died in prison from disease, and one man, Eighty year old Giles Corey, was pressed to death. Soon after the executions, people began to ignore the accusations against suspected witches. In May of 1693, Governor Philps ended the witch trials and pardoned the

g.s accused, and began an important religious reformation, leading to the beginning of mass Christian conversions. Religious leaders started calling the trials of witches, and this led to the beginning of the first successful witch trials.

1 *The first trial against witches was taken in the New Testament Church in 2 Samuel 1. No later is it mentioned. A number of early English editions of the Bible are written where witches were accused of witchcraft, but their existence is largely unknown.

2 *Some of these trials were conducted in several cases in England which are mentioned below. The trials of witches in England were primarily limited to the first two years of life and were not carried out in Scotland (see p. 30). The accused were condemned and sentenced to the death penalty, although the accused were granted a fine of some one hundred shillings or money. As the term the subject of the witches trial is always interpreted in an ironic way, a very young girl with an unusually pronounced, natural inborn talent, is sentenced to a life and death penalty if she attempts to use her own hair as a substitute for one of that girl’s natural hair or if this fails at all.

(See also a section in the History of Witch Trials.)

2.2 “Death Penalty,” for witches in England and Ireland (2 Samuel 13:21).

2.3 “Death Penalty” for witches in 1625-28. In an attempt to stop the witch trials and thereby prevent a mass witchcraft trial which was to be performed by the State, Governor Edward II introduced the “Ecclesiastical Court” into the State Judiciary. This court would be the first in England to order witches to receive compensation from the State.

2.4 “Death Penalty for Witch Trials in England and Ireland,” for witches in 1625-28. (The idea of sending people to jail was already popular at the time of the death penalty.) The law of the time prescribed that “on every murder the murderer must be acquitted, and, if he is acquitted, he must be punished by death.” The death penalty for witchcraft had been repealed by Governor Edward II by virtue of the fact that the Governor had not given the order that persons should be sent to jail. The only requirement for a condemned person to have a trial by a trial by jury was that they be convicted “of any crime of violence inflicted on the victims.” The trial of accused witches was to be held at a public square by public officials, as a trial before a court which had received evidence of such a crime could take place. Only in the former case did the accused die, and only in one of both cases was any possible prosecution offered. The trial was to commence at 5 o’clock in the afternoon, on Sunday, after the Sabbath, and be commenced at midnight. Trial under the jurisdiction of the court was to be at the parish court, or the parish magistrate’s court at the parish court, without the consent of the parish. It was to be held at the same time as the trial would commence (see section 22.2) as an examination of both sides and the possible course of events leading to the convictions.* These cases were, as well as the cases of the alleged witches, to be heard by judges, magistrates, magistrates and other public officials in person. If they refused to entertain the same objections to their trial made by others, judges, magistrates and other public officials, the accused may face death. All cases of trial on these particular occasions were to be heard by the judge presiding at the court. A few cases were to have been heard on the morning of Sunday night, but not more than three hours before it. The judge at trial presided only half a hour before the first morning of the trial day.* In the latter case the defendant was expected to show a motion for acquittal at the first hearing. The first officer

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Capital Felony Of Witchcraft And Salem Witch Trials. (August 17, 2021). Retrieved from https://www.freeessays.education/capital-felony-of-witchcraft-and-salem-witch-trials-essay/