The Salem Witch Trials

The ideas, thoughts, and words on this page were compiled from the U.S. Embassy web site in Sweden and the Salem Witch Museum web site.  Some wording and phrases from the original articles have been slightly edited / modified for middle school use by Sam Greene.  To view the source articles, navigate to the following links: http://www.usemb.se/usis/history/chapter2.html http://www.salemwitchmuseum.com/learn2.html  

Prior to reading this passage, make sure you've previewed the questions to focus your reading of this article.  This is a reading strategy you can and should use in all your classes!

To understand the events of the Salem witch trials, it is necessary to examine the times in which the accusations of witchcraft occurred. There were the ordinary stresses of 17th-century life in Massachusetts Bay Colony,  strong belief in the devil, rivalry between Salem Village fanatics and nearby Salem Town, a recent small pox epidemic, and the threat of attack by warring native tribes.  All of these factors helped to create a fertile ground for the fear and suspicion that fueled the trials.

In 1692 a group of adolescent girls in Salem Village, Massachusetts, became subject to strange fits of screaming, convulsive seizures, and trances.  Their symptoms baffled the doctor. When other girls began exhibiting the same odd behavior, the townspeople became suspicious. When they were questioned, they accused several women of being witches who were tormenting them. The townspeople were appalled but not surprised: belief in witchcraft was widespread throughout 17th-century America and Europe.

What happened next provides a vivid window into the social and psychological world of Puritan New England. Town officials convened a court to hear the charges of witchcraft and swiftly convicted and executed a tavern keeper, Bridget Bishop. Within a month, five other women had been convicted and hanged.

Nevertheless, the hysteria grew, in large measure because the court permitted witnesses to testify that they had seen the accused as spirits or in visions. By its very nature, such "spectral evidence" was especially dangerous, because it could be neither verified nor subject to objective examination. By the fall of 1692, more than 20 victims, including several men, had been executed, and more than 100 others were in jail -- among them some of the town's most prominent citizens. But now the hysteria threatened to spread beyond Salem, and ministers throughout the colony called for an end to the trials. The governor of the colony agreed and dismissed the court. Those still in jail were later acquitted or given reprieves.

The Salem witch trials have long fascinated Americans. On a psychological level, most historians agree that Salem Village in 1692 was seized by a kind of public hysteria, fueled by a genuine belief in the existence of witchcraft. They point out that, while some of the girls may have been acting, many responsible adults became caught up in the frenzy as well.

But even more revealing is a closer analysis of the identities of the accused and the accusers. Salem Village, like much of colonial New England at that time, was undergoing an economic and political transition from a largely agrarian, Puritan-dominated community to a more commercial, secular society. Many of the accusers were representatives of a traditional way of life tied to farming and the church, whereas a number of the accused witches were members of the rising commercial class of small shopkeepers and tradesmen. Salem's obscure struggle for social and political power between older traditional groups and a newer commercial class was one repeated in communities throughout American history . But it took a bizarre and deadly detour when its citizens were swept up by the conviction that the devil was loose in their homes.

The Salem witch trials also serve as a dramatic parable of the deadly consequences of making sensational, but false, charges. Indeed, an oft used term for making false accusations against a large number of people is "witch hunt."

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Last modified: 05/08/06