Salem Witch Trials Research Paper

477 Words1 Page

The period of the Salem Witch Trials was a terrible point in American history. Twenty people died during the trials, they could’ve been saved if it wasn’t for the vengeful accusers just out for revenge, or even just a laugh. Many women were falsely accused of witchcraft during the late 1600s, the most memorable of them being Tituba Indian and Sarah Good. A famous group of accusers, the afflicted girls, also played a large role in the start of witchcraft. The trials began in January, 1692 when nine young girls became ill after playing a fortune-telling game. These girls would later be known as the “afflicted girls”. The first girl to experience symptoms was Betty Parris, followed by Abigail Williams, than Ann Putnam Jr., Mary Walcott, and Mercy Lewis. After these girls were affected, the other four started to experience the same symptoms, which consisted of, “suffering “fits,” hiding under furniture, contorting in pain and experiencing fever” (History of the Salem Witch Trials). Modern theories suggest that all of the girls might have been suffering from boredom, child abuse, or even mental illness. After being examined by a doctor who suggested they were bewitched, two of the girls named three women who they thought …show more content…

Tituba set a pattern that would run throughout the course of trials after being the first accused witch to ever confess to witchcraft. She was accused of practicing voodoo and of teaching fortune-telling to the young Salem girls, neither of which were confirmed. Court records indicate that, “...Tituba and her husband John helped a neighbor named Mary Sibley bake a witch cake, a cake made from rye meal and the afflicted girl’s urine, and fed it to a dog hoping it would reveal the name of whoever bewitched the girls” (Tituba: The Slave of Salem). This incident caused the girls to accuse her and the other two women. Her arrest sparked the witch hunt in Salem that would kill 20

Open Document