The Salem Witchcraft Trials of 1692: The History, Proceedings, and Legal Consequences of the Mass Hysteria

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Salem, Massachusetts. Before the 1600’s, it might have been regarded as a peaceful farming community, but in 1662, everything changed. A bout of what might have been regarded as religious fervor, but was actually a wave of panic over the fear of witches and witchcraft swept the Christian Puritan-dominated Essex County, located in Massachusetts. The panic originated in the now-infamous town of Salem. During the famous Salem Witch Trials of 1662, over 150 men and women were formally charged with the crime of witchcraft. Of those 150, only 19 were ever executed (Godbeer). The trials at Salem had both immediate and lingering aftereffects, some of which have changed the world today. The witch trials represent the largest outpouring of anti-witchcraft activity in the British colonies bordering the Atlantic Ocean, as well as its last. No more would there be mass witch-hunts or trials. Though a few trials still took place in America, and many more in Europe, they were not undertaken with nearly as much hysteria and fervor as the ones before the end of the Salem trials. The trials also had an impact on the early justice system of America, altering the legal process of how trials of this magnitude, in all felonies, would be handled at later dates. Finally, with the passing of the last execution, an end was finally put on the hold the Puritan oligarchy had over the control of England’s public affairs (Goss). However, though those had shattering impacts on the world then and now, nothing could be as shocking as the immediate impact of the loss of innocent human lives. The Salem Witch Trials of 1662 destroyed the lives and careers of a large amount of innocent victims, both of those who were accused and those who were not.
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