The Witches at Salem 1692 by Dick Eastman CompuServe Genealogy Forum In the long and bitter winter of 1691-1692, several young girls frequently gathered at the parish house of Reverend Samuel Parris where they enjoyed the palmistry and black magic of a black servant woman named Tituba. She and her husband, John Indian, had been slaves who were bought by Rev. Parris while he was a merchant in the West Indies. These sessions apparently fired the imaginations of the girls, several of whom later started performing nightmarish fits and telling tales of witchcraft and of being possessed of evil spirits amongst them in Salem. The primary instigators were Elizabeth Parris and Abigail Parris, daughters of Rev. Parris, along with Ann Putnam, Elizabeth Hubbard, Mary Warren, Mercy Lewis, Mary Walcott, Elizabeth Booth and Susan Sheldon. Ann Putnam was 12 years old, the others were in their mid to late teens. By the time the hysteria had subsided, many of their neighbors had paid the ultimate price. The following is a list of those hanged at Gallows Hill, Salem, Massachusetts for witchcraft: Name Village or Town Date ------------------------------- ----------------------- ----------- Bridget Bishop Salem June 10, 1692 Sarah Good Salem Village (Danvers) July 19, 1692 Susanna Martin Amesbury July 19, 1692 Elizabeth Howe Ipswich July 19, 1692 Rebecca Nurse (or Nourse) Salem Village (Danvers) July 19, 1692 Sarah Wildes Topsfield July 19, 1692 George Jacobs Salem Village (Danvers) Aug. 19, 1692 Martha Carrier Andover Aug. 19, 1692 Reverend George Burroughs Wells, Maine Aug. 19, 1692 John Proctor Salem Village (Peabody) Aug. 19, 1692 John Willard Salem Village (Danvers) Aug. 19, 1692 Martha Corey Salem Village (Peabody) Sep. 22, 1692 Mary Easty Topsfield Sep. 22, 1692 Alice Parker Salem Sep. 22, 1692 Mary Parker Andover Sep. 22, 1692 Ann Prudeater Salem Sep. 22, 1692 Wilmot Reed Marblehead Sep. 22, 1692 Margaret Scott Rowley Sep. 22, 1692 Samuel Wardwell Andover Sep. 22, 1692 --------------------------------------------------------------------------- In addition, 80 year old Giles Corey was pressed to death on Sep. 19, 1692 for the "crime" of witchcraft. Giles Corey's execution was dictated because he stood mute in court. He refused to plead either innocent or guilty. He simply stood in silence. Many of Corey's friends believed he remained silent in court because, by doing so under English law, he could leave his property to whomever he pleased. Otherwise, the Sheriff would confiscate it. Giles reportedly was a stubborn, fiery man who realized that he would not get a fair trial. By not pleading one way or the other, English law dictated that a person could not be tried, but the penalty for standing mute was "slow crushing under weights" until a plea was forthcoming or the person died. On Monday, September 19, 1692, 80-year-old Giles Corey was led naked to a pit in the open field beside Salem Jail. He was made to lie down in the pit, then six men lifted heavy stones, placing them one by one, on his stomach and chest. Giles Corey did not cry out, which perplexed Sheriff Corwin whose duty it was to squeeze a confession from the old man. "Do you confess?" the Sheriff cried over and over. More and more rocks were piled onto him, and the Sheriff, from time to time, would stand on the boulders staring down at Corey's bulging eyes. Robert Calef, who was a witness along with other townsfolk, later said, "In the pressing, Giles Corey's tongue was pressed out of his mouth; the Sheriff, with his cane, forced it in again." Three mouthfuls of bread and water were fed to the old man during his many hours of pain. Finally, Giles Corey cried out at Sheriff Corwin, "Damn you. I curse you and Salem!" Giles Corey died a few seconds later. Giles' wife Martha was hung at Gallows Hill three days later. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- In the spring of 1693, Sir William Phips, Governor of Massachusetts, liberated 168 people in Salem's Witch Dungeon who awaiting the hangman's noose. Several of these people died shortly thereafter from their neglect and abuse in the dungeon. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- While the term "Salem Witches" is common nowadays, it ignores the fact that most of the accused were not from Salem. The jail and site of executions were in Salem, but the accused were mostly from other towns and villages in the area. Only 10 the 134 who were accused and were held in Salem's Jail were from Salem Towne. The complete count was: Andover.....................38 Boxford......................2 Boston.......................1 Amesbury.....................1 Billerica....................6 Beverly......................6 Charlestown..................3 Chelmsford...................1 Gloucester...................3 Haverhill....................3 Great Island.................1 Marblehead...................2 Lynn.........................7 Malden.......................1 Reading......................4 Rowley.......................1 Romney Marsh (today called Revere)..................1 Salisbury....................1 Salem.......................10 Salem Village (today this is part of Danvers and of Peabody)...............30 Topsfield & Ipswich..........7 Wells, Maine.................1 Woburn.......................3 In addition to the 134 above, another 34 were accused and in various jails awaiting trial when Governor Phips released all the prisoners. Miscellaneous notes: Martha Carrier and Rebecca Nurse were sisters. Ann Foster was the mother of Mary Lacy. Mary Lacy of Andover was accused of witchcraft and admitted to it. She said "me and Martha Carrier did both ride on a stick or pole when we went to witch meetings at Salem Village." Ironically, those who confessed to being witches were not executed, but many of those who denied witchcraft were hung. Mary Lacy was allowed to go free after her "confession" but she had damned Martha Carrier in the process. Martha was hung a few weeks later. Mary Lacy's mother, Ann Foster, died in Salem Dungeon due to ill treatment from Sheriff George Corwin. Sarah Osborne and Sarah Dustin were both convicted of witchcraft and sentenced to be hung but both died in the Salem Dungeon from exposure, ill treatment and lack of adequate food before the sentences could be carried out. Rebecca Nurse was first granted a reprieve by the jury in her witchcraft case. Judge John Hathorne refused to accept the verdict and he convinced the jury to change their verdict. Judge Hathorne is now known as Salem's "witch hanging judge" and also was the great-great-grandfather of Nathaniel Hawthorne, author of the "House of Seven Gables." Rebecca Nurse was 70 years old when executed. Martha Corey was 60 years old when executed. She was generally disliked by her neighbors, something that may have been a contributing factor to her being accused. Years earlier she had given birth to an illegitimate child which apparently had not been well-received by the Puritans of Salem. Reverend George Burroughs had earlier been pastor of the Salem Village church but had left for a parish in Wells, Maine after arguments with Ann Putnam, the mother of the 12-year-old of the same name. In 1692, daughter Ann Putnam testified that Rev. Burroughs had appeared before her in an apparition one night asking her to sign the Devil's books. Two women also appeared in this apparition, Ann Putnam reported that they were the Rev. Burroughs' first and second wives. These wives "told" Ann Putnam that Rev. Burroughs had murdered both of them. Based upon this apparition, Rev. Burroughs was brought back to Salem, tried for witchcraft, found guilty and executed. John Alden, son of the couple John Alden and Priscilla Mullins, was a resident of Boston when accused by the young girls of Salem of witchcraft. Alden was arrested and brought to Salem to face the girls. When Alden approached them in court, the girls who had accused him all fell to the floor in a faint. Alden then turned to Judge Hathorne and said, "What's the reason you don't fall when I look at you?" Hathorne had no answer, but he imprisoned Alden anyway. Three months later John Alden managed to escape from jail and he was never apprehended. Mary Bradbury of Salisbury was found guilty of witchcraft, but managed to escape the jail before execution. She apparently had assistance in this from her friends and relatives, she was never re-captured. Bridget Bishop was the first to be hung for witchcraft. There is still debate today as to whether or not she should be included in the list of Salem witches of 1692. Bridget Bishop had been tried for witchcraft in 1679 and acquitted. She was a twice-widowed tavern owner, owning "an ordinary" on the road between Salem and Beverly. She served a new and powerful drink called "rum" to many of the sailors who frequented her place. The sailors also played an evil new game called "shuffleboard" that upset many of the neighbors. Bridget wore bright clothes, a major offense in the eyes of the Puritans of Salem. Bridget apparently was condemned more for her lifestyle and for the veiled accusations of prostitution that cannot be proven or disproven today. During this time, two dogs were also hung by the neck at Gallows Hill because one of the girls said they had appeared to her as the Devil's disciples and gave her the evil eye. There is a popular theory today that mouldy rye was the real cause of the Salem hysteria. An article in "Science Magazine," April 2, 1976, by Linda Caporael, a University of California graduate student, reveals that the physical afflictions of the accusing girls might have been caused by "Convulsive Ergotism", a disorder resulting from the ingestion of contaminated rye grain. "Rye, which grows in low, wet ground, yields ergot," wrote Miss Caporael. Rye was known to be a staple in the diets of the Salem Puritans. Rye was a common ingredient of bread and was eaten as a cereal. Judge Sewall's diary for the summer of 1692 states that the rye harvest was during a time that was "rainy and warm, hot and stormy." Ergot (claviceps purpura) is spread by a fungus that causes symptoms of hallucination, violent fits, choking, pinching, itching, a crawling sensation in the skin and muscular contractions. Linda Caporael adds that "females and children are more likely to get ergot poisoning than the males. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Several young girls and a black servant were the primary instigators of the witchcraft hysteria. Of these, Ann Putnam confessed her fraud 14 years later at the age of 26. She had her minister read the confession at Sunday service "It was a great delusion of Satan that deceived me in that sad time whereby I justly fear I have been instrumental to bring upon myself and this land the guilt of innocent blood." The primary instigator apparently was the black servant Tituba. She was then accused of witchcraft herself, spent 14 months in jail and was finally sold into slavery. The only person who seemed to profit from the witchcraft hysteria was Sheriff George Corwin who confiscated property and pocketed fees collected from the accused and their relatives. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Much of the above information was obtained from: "Witches and Wizards" by Robert Ellis Cahill former Essex County (Mass.) Sheriff and Keeper of the Salem Jail. Supplemental material came from a number of other sources.