Jon Morris Social studies Period 7 What Caused The Salem Witch Trial Hysteria Of 1692? Do you believe the salem witch trials happened for a reason? The salem witch trials happened in 1692 for one year, and it was believed to be a corruption by the devil. I believe the salem witch trials happened because of jealousy, religious differences, and malicious intent. Jealousy was one of the reasons that the salem witch trials happened.…
The Witch Trials of 1692 The year of 1692 was a trying time for the young Salem town. At the time, Massachusetts was awaiting their new governor William Phips arrival, the colony lacked a charter, and the towns of New England were being attacked by French men and Indians. Of the many hardships taken place in that year the most infamous event was — the Salem Witch Trials. This was not the first witch trial to take place in the colonies, in fact, 45 years earlier, or 1647 the first witch hysteria occurred in the colonies in Hartford, Connecticut, ending in four people executed. Connecticut then held another trial of witches in 1692 with no casualties, and another in 1697 with 46 prosecutions and at least 11 executions.…
The Salem Witch Trials When individuals talk about what had happened during the seventeenth century, it brings back to the dark period full of social, political, and economical challenges and gender inequality in American history. Richard Godbeer’s book, Escaping Salem: The Other Witch Hunt of 1692, discusses the events of the story of a witch hunt in Stamford, Connecticut. Furthermore, the book details how series of witchcraft cases brought before local adjudicators in a settlement called Salem, a part of the Massachusetts Bay colony, caused many innocent people to be accused of crimes they had never committed. The Salem Witch Trial hysteria caused by fear of the witchcraft, political and social anxieties, changes in the roles of women, and…
In 1692, Puritans in colonial Massachusetts faced an interesting event called the Salem Witch Trials. The first sign of witchcraft was discovered when two girls, Elizabeth and Williams were having “fits.” The local doctor blamed their unusual movements on the supernatural. Satan worried the Puritan community because they believed that they always had to behave to go to heaven. Whether puritans were in or out of their home, they believed the devil was always watching them which is why they were always cautious towards their actions.…
In The Salem Witchcraft Trials: A Legal History, Peter C. Hoffer closely examines the many complexities of the bizarre Salem Witchcraft Trials and offers explanations as to what led up to and caused the terrible event. In the book, Hoffer uses analogies and insight to village life to support his explanations. This paper will review Hoffer’s re accounting of the trials, his theories on the trails, and the way in which he presents his arguments.…
When it comes to folktales and scary legends people tend to not believe in them now a day. Back in the ancient time people had the belief of witchcraft. 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. Although it is believed that the witch hunt of 1692 started in Salem Village, in reality it first occurred in Charlestown. First of all, the witch hunt of 1692 started long ago in Charlestown by Margaret Jones who was a midwife, and the first person to be executed for witchcraft in the Massachusetts Bay Colony.…
Since the early 17th century multiple lands in Europe and Puritan Colonial communities in New England had been living in suspicion of members in their communities to be practising witchcraft while living amongst them in secret. The act of practising witchcraft was punishable by death. In many small farming towns, such as the infamous Salem, Massachusetts, this had gained Salem a dark reputation. The practice of witch trials had been going on for 300 years.…
The Salem Witch Trials began in 1692 and consisted of prosecutions of women and some men who were thought to have been practicing witchcraft. These women were taken to trial, and if they were convicted of practicing witchcraft, they were violently put to death. With the rising tensions in the colony, The Salem Witch trials of 1692 were caused by curiosity in religious beliefs, young women claiming they were possessed by the devil, and troubles arising among the community. By this point the people of Salem would consider themselves Puritans. They had many standards they had to abide by to keep good Christian standings, and as the people of Salem were learning more about the Christian religion, they learned about the devil and his possession.…
Historians have debated on what was the main cause for the progressive executions of twenty people (fourteen women, six men and two dogs) in the hysteria of the 1692 Salem Witch Trials. Many historians have debated what the cause was varying from PTSD, diet, rivalry between families and neighbours, and the oppression of women based on the Puritan culture. To judge this however, I will look at what cause had the most long lasting impact, of which I will be focusing on the following; religious views in the Puritan culture, the oppression of women, war and the rivalry between the two main families occupying Salem Town and Salem Village: the Putnams and the Porters. But how did the trials start? In Salem, it began when Abigail Williams (eleven years old) and Betty Parris (nine years…
An infamous episode in American history, the Salem witch trials of 1692 resulted in the execution, by hanging, of nineteen villagers, fourteen women and five men, accused of witch craft. Additionally, one man, Giles Corey, was punished by peine et fort, death by pressing (Linder, paragraph 22). These antics could have been the cause of teenage boredom, congregational strife, personal jealousies, and fears of the citizens. The main question is why did this travesty happen in Salem?…
Beginning in the 1630’s Puritans came to the colonies after facing persecution in England for their want to purify and reform the Church of England. The Puritans believed that the New World was similar to the Garden of Eden and that the New World was going to be the “city upon the hill”. The Puritans settled in the now known area of Boston, and held services in bare churches throughout the town. Three people who were principal to Puritan religion in the colonies were Richard Mather, a minister in Dorchester Massachusetts who drafted the Cambridge Platform, a description of the Congregational system.…
The Salem Witch Trial In 1629, Salem was settled as a Massachusetts Bay Colony (Dunn 4). Little did anybody know that in about 50 years, this land would turn into one of the most remembered and haunted places in the world. In Salem, in the years between 1692 and 1693, over 150 people were accused of witchcraft, and 20 people were executed because of this accusation (“First Salem Witch Hanging”). This report will explain exactly how these executions happened and some of the dark conspiracies that tag along with it.…
The Salem Witch Trials hysteria occurred in 1692, when the citizens of Salem Massachusetts turned on each other and accused hundreds of their own neighbors and people of practicing witchcraft. While around 150 total people were accused (most of them women), not everyone of them met the same fate. 19 people were hanged, one man was pressed to death, and a few died while imprisoned. The reasons behind the trials themselves are complex and they tie into the religious beliefs/constraints of Puritanism, socioeconomic class issues, and the longing for power in a strict community. The Salem Witch Trials also caused problems within the Puritan community by making fear a prominent factor of everyday life, which led to people doing things they normally…
Salem Witch Trials In 1692 a small town in Massachusetts, Salem, set of one of the biggest most well known hysterias, the Witch Trials. First person to accuse someone of witchcraft was the young daughter of Reverend Parris and she accused two other Salem women and a Caribbean slave, Tituba (Keene). G.K. Chesterton once stated, “It is one thing to believe in witches, and quite another to believe in witch-smellers.” During the trials, most people were trying to express their guilt and sins, under the cover of accusations against the victims (Miller, 7).…
It was June 10th of 1692 when Martha Cory stood in front of a crowd of people waiting to be hanged. Martha was not the first to be hanged though. After two little girls accused Bridget Bishop of being a witch. Paranoia swept throughout the small village, Salem. There had already been a trial the month before.…