The Salem Community Goes wrong The Salem Witch trials started in 1688. However witch trials started many years before. There were forty- to fifty-thousand people killed because of witchcraft, in a matter of 300 years. The main punishment for witchcraft was being hanged, others died in jail, or rocks were stacked on them till their chests collapsed. The Salem community consisted of five hundred individuals who were very pious. Witchcraft was considered a capital offense. The first to be accused of witchcraft was Tituba and Sarah Good. Tituba was the servant of Reverend Parris. The Salem accusations began in Reverend Parris’ kitchen. Tituba was bringing Sarah Good and the other young girls into the woods and telling them stories, and doing spells on them. When they were caught, paranoia occurred with the girls. Tituba admits that nine people, counting herself, had signed the …show more content…
People throughout the community were accused of witchcraft and put in prison, but not yet proven guilty. This later lead to four-year-old Dorcas, who was the youngest of them all, accused of witchcraft. If anyone chose to confess to witchcraft, it was in the hands of God to treat them. Giles Corey would not admit to witchcraft, so they tried to tangibly squeeze the truth out of him by placing heavy stones on his chest, which collapsed his chest. There were more women Hanged that there were men, there was misogyny towards the women. The ones who were convicted of Witchcraft were hanged, others died in jail. Later on the girls started vilifying the upper class people in the community, most likely because if those people were proven guilty, then their land would go to auction and the girls’ parents could buy it.The girls actions were unprecedented about what they felt and saw. After all this was settled, on January 16 1697 they all Elicited God for
An arrest warrant was issued out against for Tituba Indian in Salem Village on February 29, 1692. There were also arrest warrants out for Sarah Good and Sarah Osborne. All three of these women were accused of witch craft and examined the day after they were captured. They were examined at Nathaniel Ingersoll’s tavern in the Salem Town. This examination was performed by Jonathan Corwin and John Hathorne.
On February 29, 1692, issued warrants were released for Sarah Good, Sarah Osborne, and Tituba for witchcraft. Good, a beggar, and Osborne, a poor elderly woman, both claimed they were innocent and Tituba, a Caribbean slave from Elizabeth Parris’ family, confessed to being a witch. Tituba not only confessed to doing witchcraft but that there was a whole coven of witches in Salem, making her not the only one. Elizabeth Parris and Abigail Williams were experiencing tremors, spasms, fits and crying while throwing things. All of this made everyone suspicious about witchcraft.
Tituba caused the witch hunt outrage in Salem. Tituba was the servant of Reverend Parris. Practicing black magic was one of her hobbies and she showed this hobby to Reverend Parris’s curious daughter and niece. The young
The Salem Witch Trials and The Holocaust were very similar in many ways even though they happened at different times. They both had a lot of killing but yet the Holocaust had even more killings than the Salem Witch Trials. The Salem Witch Trials in 1692 it was a dark time in American history (Salem Witch Trials). Over 200 people were accused of doing witchcraft and it started because of some teenage girls (Salem Witch Trials).
Accused and Betrayed Throughout the late 1600’s women had been accused of being a part of witchcraft. In this time women went through many disgusting torture treatments and got charged with many different things. When a women had been accused she would be “treated” with many different types of torture until they had died or had admitted to doing witchcraft. Some of the tortures were called: “The Garotte”,” Dunking the Witch”, and “The Boots”.
The Salem Witch Trials started in February 1692. It all began with a young African American slave who was owned by Samuel Parris. Samuel Parris called a doctor on this day for his daughter and niece because they were having weird out buts and not acting like themselves. The doctor claimed that his kids where under the exemption of witchcraft. The girls later on accused Tituba and two other woman.
The girls began to experience unusual fits and confusion. Sometimes they would throw their arms up as if they could fly, they would cover their ears and scream during prayer, or they would fall to the floor screaming and twitching. They also experienced other symptoms as well, such as temporary hearing and sight loss; loss of memory, where they could not remember what had happened during the fits; and hallucinations. Some of their hallucinations involved demons torturing them with pinching and biting.
Nineteen individuals was hanged because it was unacceptable to use witchcraft. If you had been known to use witchcraft, you was basically shunned. (history.com) Was these people men or women? There were eighteen teenage girls hanged, and one man.
On August 5, 1692, they were tried, convicted, and sentenced for the crime of witchcraft. Fourteen days later they were hung by the neck on Gallows
The Salem Witch Trials began in the 1692 in Salem Village, Massachusetts. The Salem Witch Trials caused the life’s of 19 men, women, and children. Throughout the months of 1692 more than 150 people were accused of witchcraft or being a servant to the devil. Witchcraft is the practice of magic involving spells and spirits. The first person who was hanged for being a servant to the devil was a women.
Although the beginning of witchcraft cannot be dated, it was believed to be a very real thing by many, even arguably all civilizations. Throughout history many horrendous trials have been focused on witches/wizards. Historically one of the most well know trails was the one that took place in Salem. The Salem Witch Trails occurred in 1692, this conflict caused death, the downfall of a community, and diminished the trust of 100’s of people. Many religious beliefs, mixed with fear of witchcraft, and a lack of knowledge resulted in 200 accused and 19 permanently suffering.
Between February 1692 and May 1693, there were a series of hearings where people were being accused of witchcraft. The outcome of the hearings ended with 20 people being executed, but more than 200 people were accused of performing witchcraft. The hearings and prosecutions are very well known as the Salem witch trials. The trials took place in colonial Massachusetts. Nineteen accused witches were convicted and hanged on Gallows Hill in 1692.
In the year 1692 an incident that resulted to twenty people being executed and even an additional two hundred people being accused of witchcraft which most people know today as The Salem witch trials. These injustices had prevailed in the society and people would be randomly accused and randomly killed because people believed that witchcraft was a punishable crime like other. In the most bizarre events in the American history the Salem trials had entirely become rampant and even shaped the court decisions (Levin,1955). However, in the year 1933 common sense prevailed and most people argued that witchcraft would not be a punishable offense since supernatural forces could not be used as evidence in a court of law. Before the trials ended many
It should be noted that witchcraft was a very bad act, and if caught, the penalty was being hung. Abigail Williams, the leader of the girls in the woods and Rev. Parris’s niece was brought in for questioning. She said all the girls did was dance in the woods. In reality, Abigail
In 1692, Salem, Massachusetts had the first accusations of witchcraft. Trials were held and concluded in 1693, where fourteen women and five men were executed. Many other trials were held in different towns, the most famous being in Salem. It all began when a group of girls made false accusations toward older women, that they were interacting with the devil. The Salem Witch Trials shaped the American society and affected the way America deals with crime today.