Money Crimes with Nicole Lapin - A Crime House Halloween Special: The Salem Witch Trials | From Clues with Morgan Absher & Kaelyn Moore
Episode Date: October 31, 2025Here at Crime House, we love Halloween and we know you do too! Because you’re one of our most loyal fans, we’re treating you to a spooky bonus episode from our hit series, Clues. Join hosts Morga...n Absher and Kaelyn Moore as they take a deep dive into the paranoia and chaos that consumed The Salem Witch Trials. From shocking murders to serial killers, Clues dives into all the forensic details and brilliant sleuthing of the world's most infamous cases. New episodes drop every Wednesday. Follow Clues on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, or wherever you get your podcasts. LEARN MORE To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi, Crime House community. It's Vanessa Richardson. And if you love digging into the most
gripping true crime stories, then you need to listen to another Crime House original, Crimes of,
with Sabrina Deanna Roga and Corinne Vienne. Crimes of is a weekly series that explores a new
theme each season from crimes of paranormal, unsolved murders, mysterious disappearances, and more.
Sabrina and Corinne have been covering the true stories behind Hollywood's most iconic horror
villains, and this month they'll be diving into the paranormal.
Listen to Crimes of every Tuesday on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, or wherever you listen
to podcasts.
The Halloween celebration continues here at Crime House, and today we've got another
chilling bonus episode just for you. Clues with Morgan Absher and Kaylin Moore.
In this episode, they're rewinding to 1692.
and digging into the Salem witch trials.
From a bizarre witch cake to coerced confessions
and a court that put dreams on the witness stand,
19 executions, hundreds accused,
and a panic that only ended when power felt threatened.
It's Salem 1692 like you've never heard before,
and it's a perfect Halloween podcast to listen.
I'm excited to share this episode of Clues with you now.
If you like what you hear,
follow Clues with Morgan Absher and Kailen Moore on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen,
so you can hear them dig into more notorious crimes and cases.
This is Crime House.
All right, Clumidati, Halloween is upon us.
So today we're going to be covering a different and spookier kind of case.
We're going back, way back.
In time to bring you our creepiest story yet, the Salem Witch Trials.
In 1692, the town of Salem, Massachusetts descended into chaos when two young girls suddenly developed a bizarre set of symptoms.
What began as a minor nuisance escalated into a vicious witch hunt that pitted neighbor against neighbor.
By the time the bloodbath was over, around 150 people had been accused of witchcraft.
19 were brutally executed, one died while tortured, and five died in prison.
The true causes of the panic remain a mystery.
But today, we're going to try to get to the bottom of it.
Hi, guys, welcome back to Clues, where we sneak past the crime scene tape to explore the key evidence
behind some of the most gripping true crime cases.
I'm a pilgrim woman with a penchant for speaking my mind, Kailen Moore,
and I'm going to be the ones digging deeper into the timelines,
the backstories, and the court files released for these cases.
And I'm your internet to witch, Morgan Abshur.
I'm the one who's diving into the Reddit forums
to talk about the lesser known details
and pulling out threads that just don't add up.
At Crime House, we value your support.
So please share your thoughts on social media.
And remember to rate, review, and follow clues
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And for bonus episodes, early access and ad-free listening, join our Crimehouse Plus community on Apple Podcasts.
More on the case and the clues that defined it after this quick break.
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Ooh.
Happy Halloween, Morgan.
My least favorite time of the year, usually.
Because you get scared.
I get really scared.
Honestly, like, I'm scared of the dark, as you guys know at this point.
I believe in a little bit of the woo-woo.
stuff. So I'm kind of a believer that witchcraft does exist. Is it dark? I'm not sure. But I think
it's out there. I think there's some people that got some tricks up their sleeve. Definitely.
I mean, we'll get into it today, but we're the women in Salem actually witches. Let's find
out. Let's find out. Just a quick reminder, anyone who's watching this episode on YouTube,
you're going to see some photos and images and assets that will help you kind of paint a bigger
picture of this case. And if you're listening, you can find those same images on our
our social media that's at Clues Podcast on Instagram.
So I want to take you back to June 10, 1692,
when a woman named Bridget Bishop lies on the cold, damp floor of a jail cell in Salem, Massachusetts.
Now, Bridget's in her 50s.
She's actually an immigrant from Norwich, England.
As she stares at the ceiling, she wonders if that's what brought her here,
if her differences are the things that landed her in this cell.
Her mind wanders to thoughts of her third husband.
Is he thinking of her too?
Will he be okay?
after this. And then she hears footsteps. And looking up, she sees a man named George Corwin
unlocking her cage. George is related to several of the judges who put her in this jail,
and now he's come to march her to her fate. George then loads Bridget into a two-wheeled cart
and drives her through the streets of Salem, past all the neighbors that she once called her
friends, past the tavern she used to run. The cart bumps and rattles over.
the rough colonial roads as it makes its way to its final destination, a rocky secluded
hillside called Proctor's Ledge. Dozens, maybe hundreds of people watch on as a court officer
reads her death sentence out loud. A minister named Reverend John Hale recites a short prayer,
angering some of the people in the audience, but with this fire in his eyes. And then somewhere
in the crowd, a shopkeeper yells out that no salvation awaits Bridget. Only a to
Hellfire. See, he believes that she's made a pact with the devil, and that's exactly who
she's going to see after she's executed. When the minister finishes his prayer, she's led up a ladder
next to a sturdy tree with a rope tied to the lowest branch. And we don't know if Bridget says
anything at this point, if she shouts out a protest, or if she begs for mercy. There's also the
chance that she just accepted her fate in silence. But ultimately, it doesn't change.
the outcome of what happens. The executioner places a cloth over her head, he tightens the rope
around her neck, and he pushes her off. She thrashes, some reports say, for as long as 10 minutes
until death eventually comes for her. A few witnesses have to turn away from the sight.
Others shout and cheer that justice has been done, that a witch has been killed. But not all of
the townspeople would agree, because they actually think that there's more
witches in Salem that haven't been unmasked yet. And the executioner, they say, is going to come for
them all. I want to go back in time. And I want to set the stage for what was happening in Salem because
there's a lot of context that really helps explain why this happened, where this happened,
like what was going on in the community at the time. This did not just erupt out of nowhere,
similar to basically everything that happens in history. There's a reason for it. So Bridget Bishop wasn't
the first woman in the world by a long shot to die after being accused of being a witch.
And it's hard to know the exact numbers. We truly won't ever know the exact numbers. But historians
believe that at least 50,000 people had already been killed in a witch hunt craze that swept through
Europe from the 1400s through the 1700s. I mean, Germany was particularly brutal. Some regions
saw entire villages decimated. I read stories where there were entire villages where only one woman
remained. And that was just so she could reproduce. Oh my God. Those were the witch trials.
Towns in Russia, France, Switzerland, even Iceland, all descended into violent mobs and kangaroo
courts that sometimes executed dozens of suspected witches at a time. Not Iceland. I know.
Nowhere was safe from it. England obviously experienced these witch trials as well. They did tend to
be a little bit less intense than what was happening throughout the rest of Europe, probably because
they had a more restrained legal tradition when that required a little bit stronger evidence
for conviction. And it's worth noting here, too, that where most of the witch trials happened
in England is where these pilgrims immigrated from. So they were already coming from the area
of England where the witch trials were happening. And it's when these European colonists came to
America that they brought their beliefs and their fear of witchcraft and the devil with them.
Now, for a while, there was just a handful of cases scattered throughout the
colonies, a witch executed here, a trial there. The first witch ever executed in these witch
trials was Alice Young. From down the street of my childhood home in Windsor, Connecticut,
how are you always connected to these old cases? I don't know, a lot of scary, spooky things
happen in my town, but she was executed. They don't know exactly why she was executed, but we do know
that that year there was a influenza that swept through the town. And a lot of the children around
Alice died, but Alice's own child didn't.
And so we kind of think that people started pointing the finger at her that she was
maybe responsible for these deaths.
But like I said, these were for the most part isolated incidents.
And by the late 1600s, it felt like these witch crazes were kind of dying down.
The witch trials that happened in Connecticut were over and people were kind of moving on
with their lives.
Ideology was changing.
People were just becoming more skeptical in general.
Social and political reform was happening.
And with that, there were these new laws that were put in place all over to actually ban witch hunts, or at least make it harder to get a conviction.
And it seemed like maybe this dark chapter of human history was finally coming to a close.
But then the Salem witch trials happened.
But like I said earlier, there's a specific reason why this was able to happen in a place like Salem, even as the witch trials around the country were kind of coming to a close.
So let's talk a little bit more about like Salem as a town.
Established in 1626, Salem was essentially a frontier community in the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
And it was ruled entirely by the Puritans.
Now, when people hear the word Puritan, some people think of like pilgrims, black clothing, the buckle on the hat, Mayflower, Thanksgiving.
It was so much more than just that.
They were not just European settlers.
They were hardcore religious fundamentalists.
They believed really strict, kind of crazy things.
Like, one of the things that they believed was that humans were born sinful and corrupt and nothing you did could change that.
So essentially, one of their biggest beliefs was what was going to happen to you in the afterlife was already decided by God upon being born.
So you're born into this world.
You already know if you're going to hell or if you're going to heaven.
And it's up to you as a person to try to decode the messages from God in your life that tell you which.
So people would do things that kind of like bordered on witchcraft essentially to figure out what their sign from God was.
They would read the Bible and look for hidden words like does anything about this say what's going to happen to me?
But also they felt like they had to prove to each other that they were one of the ones going to heaven.
So they lived these intensely devout, pure lives.
And they would also point to their neighbors who they felt like weren't living these peer lives to be like, well, but those are the ones going to hell. And I'm not like that. So you already have this like culturally. They're really, really set on kind of blaming other people for evil to prove that they're the ones going to heaven.
We're seeing that even today in modern times with some religions and blood atonement. It's still out there.
Puritans were so extreme that even the Protestant Church of England, which they descended from kind of one.
wanted nothing to do with them. So many of them fled England to create their own what they called
pure society in New England where they could make their own religion the law of the land.
Now, also, Puritan is just something that we call them. They called themselves good Christians.
They wanted to create their own pure religion. They had beliefs that God's hand was in every
aspect of daily life from something like a successful harvest to a failed crop to a sudden death.
They would cite biblical passages to settle land disputes.
They thought that by being really godly people,
God would reward them with an easier life.
However, creating a whole brand new society from scratch in the new world was a lot harder than they thought it was going to be.
I don't know what they thought it was going to be like over here,
but maybe because they felt like they were God's chosen people,
they thought it was going to be easy.
It was not easy for them at all.
Life in colonial Massachusetts was absolutely brutal.
They lived in cramped dark houses, entire families would share a single room, sometimes without heat.
And there's all these diseases that were wiping through the communities constantly.
Smallpox would just completely decimate an entire community or, like, kill all the children.
The winters were harsh.
There was something called a little ice age that happened in that part of the world from about 1,400 to 1800.
What?
Where kind of similar to today, where every summer is the hottest summer on record.
Back then, every winter was the cold.
as winter on record. And then summer would come and there would be no rain. So the crops,
everything would just freeze to death over the winter and then nothing could be re-sowed in the
summer to grow. So it was absolutely treacherous. A lot of people just died from the cold because
of this food was super scarce. And then there was this constantly looming threat of violence.
So one thing that came up when I was researching just like everything that was leading to
Salem was King Phillips War. And King Phillips War had happened about 15 years before the
Salem Witch trials started. And it was essentially, some people say that it was probably the most
grisly war fought on American soil, even more so than the Civil War. Wow. The Puritans really
believed that the Native Americans were sent by Satan to destroy them. So according to them,
and God's plan for them, they had to destroy the Native Americans first. So they would wage war
with the Native American people on American soil
who had lived here four thousands of years
and were way better equipped to fight back.
And so what the Puritans would do
is they would just essentially try to dismember the bodies
as much as they could
to scare off the Native Americans.
So you would walk through these Puritan villages
and there would be heads in the trees
and arms and limbs and just body parts everywhere
because they thought that was going to be the thing
that scared the Native Americans away
and the Native Americans would obviously retaliate
and would basically do the same thing.
So it was just a really grisly time to be alive
because you were seeing all of this carnage
and death and despair everywhere.
I'm learning so much new information from you today.
Growing up in New England,
maybe there's some listeners that can relate to this.
We were just, like, taught a lot about a New England history.
We didn't get this in Minnesota.
But I'm really, I'm feeling a little thankful
that you're our resident occult studies girly over here.
Thank you.
I'm sitting over here, like, give me some popcorn.
I can finally put my knowledge of the pilgrims to you.
finally for the first time of my life.
Anyone else shaking in their boots?
Because I'm... Wow.
And, like, on top of all of this, kind of to make matters worse, the colony was constantly
being rocked by political instability.
The Puritans were still fighting with the English crown for more independence.
Massachusetts was being run by a provisional government that had been selected by the king.
Remember, we didn't have the Revolutionary War yet.
So they were still very much tied to the crown.
Bad at math, but about a hundred years away.
Yeah, exactly. No, exactly.
That government eventually was overthrown by a rebellion in Boston in 1689.
It caused the legal system in Massachusetts to be thrown into really this state of limbo.
It was like, we don't follow the rules of the crown anymore, but we haven't set up our own government yet.
So like, what do we do?
And nobody was quite sure at this time what laws applied to them or who even had the authority to enforce those laws.
especially as it related to some of like the witch hunts that were happening but then this new governor
was going to come from england in 1692 and he said that he was going to sort out which laws
everyone was going to follow and what courts had the authority to prosecute these crimes but until
then it was pretty much lawless and the whole colony salem included was kind of this powder keg
of miserable people, people who were deeply religious and felt like they had to prove that they were worthy of heaven,
people who felt like they had to point out that their neighbors were worthy of hell and that those were the ones going to hell.
Just like seeing all this death and despair, it really felt like the whole area was kind of this powder keg that was going to spark one day.
And no one really thought that it would be essentially two young girls that lit the match.
You know what's better than the one big thing?
Two big things.
Exactly.
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It's early January of 16.
it is another brutally cold winter in Salem, another record cold winter. It's the kind that gets deep, deep, deep into your bones, especially a place where you can only heat yourself with fire. And it's especially hard for this man, this 38-year-old named Reverend Samuel Paris. He is the new Puritan minister in Salem. Now, he spent most of his childhood in the warm tropics of Barbados because, fun fact, that's where the other Puritan society was. You could go.
go to the freezing tundra of Salem, Massachusetts, or you could go hang out in the tropical
islands of the Barbados. And a lot of people still chose to go to Salem instead. So he comes
up to Salem from Barbados. He lost his family's sugar cane fortune because essentially all
of the Puritans were going to the Caribbean islands and just like enslaving people and sealing
the sugar cane and getting like insanely rich off of it. But his family lost that whole sugarcane
fortune, and he ended up returning to Massachusetts to preach and earn money as a merchant.
And he is horribly unsuccessful and unlikable as a minister.
It's been really tough for him to settle into his role as Salem Village's new active minister.
Even among the, like, very overly zealous Puritans, he kind of stands out as being
unnecessarily and unusually strict to them.
It got stricter?
Yeah.
He comes in and he thinks he's going to whip everyone into shape.
by being very strict in telling them what they can and cannot do.
He's been pushing the community towards a more religious orthodoxy, what he calls
moral reform.
He thinks that the Puritans have gone soft, which is hysterical because they're truly
one of like the most pious sect of like any religion ever.
Yeah, they're in it.
But for Samuel, when you look at his legacy, it seems like most of what he was doing was not
necessarily about church policy.
it was maybe more about the power that he wanted to hold over everyone.
And there's no better way to get power over people than to make them like insanely afraid to sin.
And so that's what he was going to do these people.
Basically, whatever he says within the church goes.
And he wants people to start obeying him without any question.
And this starts creating a lot of tension inside of the village.
One thing I heard was it was really hard to recruit people to the church at the time.
They're trying to like set up new laws where like,
kids could join the church and then their parents would kind of be part of the church but like couldn't
take the Eucharist, all that kind of stuff. And he had recruited one of like the lowest amounts of new
people into the church of all time, of like any minister ever. So already kind of the community was
frustrated with him. Also the people who did go to his church initially stopped going once he became
the minister. So he was just like trying all these different things he could do to get more people
to the church, but also get them under his control. And because he's this strict with all the people
and site of Salem Village, we can kind of imagine how strict he was with his own family.
Now, Reverend Samuel lives in a parsonage, and that's a house that's provided by the church.
He lives there with his wife, his nine-year-old daughter Betty, and his 11-year-old niece, Abigail Williams.
And these are described as good Puritan girls.
They've been raised to be quiet, obedient, pious.
But in late January of 1692, both of these girls start acting.
acting a bit strange. Which brings us to our first clue. The Paris Girls' symptoms. It seems
like 11-year-old Abigail was the first to experience what Reverend Samuel describes as
odd fits. First, she complained about having prickling sensations all over her body, like she was
being pinched and bitten by invisible hands. Then she danced around the house erratically,
dove under furniture, and contorted her body in these painful-looking positions.
Sometimes she would bark like a dog. Other times she'd fall completely mute, then suddenly babbled nonsense. No one could understand. Now I know this seems like normal attention seeking behavior for an 11-year-old today. I mean, I galloped around and neighed like a horse when I was this age, I'm sure. But back then, this was not how kids acted. It was even seen as bizarre, satanic even. And it
appeared to be contagious, because within a day or so, nine-year-old Betty was having similar episodes.
The girls screamed. They were being stabbed with needles and burned by invisible fire as they writhed in pain.
At first, Samuel thought it was a physical illness, like smallpox. He prayed over them. He called for doctors,
like William Griggs, to examine them. He even reached out to other ministers for advice. But
they were all stumped. Neither girl had a fever or signs of any other illness. The only diagnosis
anyone could give was that they were afflicted by some unknown, quote, evil hand.
And this is one of the, when I mentioned earlier, that the Puritans would do things that felt like
witchcraft in order to see messages from God. That's like one of the things that these girls were doing.
They would take eggs and crack them into cups and stuff so that they could see.
see if there were any symbols in the egg whites. And they had seen something like a coffin
a sign from the devil, they thought. So I have one of my listeners on two hot takes
that she does this every year. She actually, she reads tarot and her grandma's a little
witchy. And so every year before the year starts, New Year's Eve, their celebration,
they do this egg reading. Right. Which is so funny because you have these little girls who are
deathly afraid of witches and aren't going to start accusing people of being witches and they're doing
the things that people today do as witchcraft, but to them they thought it was like a puritanical
thing they could do to get messages from God. Well, Samuel's main attempts at treatment were fasting
and prayer, but that didn't work. The symptoms always seemed to come back. If anything, they were
getting worse, which is like any kid that you kind of enable and give them attention for something bad,
they'll do it again. In his sermons, he told his parishioners that God was, quote, angry and sending
forth destroyers, which if your plan to control everyone through fear wasn't working
before and now all of a sudden you can point to your daughters and say, look, the devil is
alive and well in Salem, my daughters, you start to see how like all of this stuff was
happening at this time, like just like all of the groundwork being laid for this whole mass
hysteria to happen. I know. And it's like it's so fishy. Like this guy that you don't really
like, not really the best minister. You're going to believe him when he says his kids are
haunted? They were terrified of witches back in the day. That was like the scariest thing that could
come into the community. So I think he just really thought that this was going to be his way
to control everyone. His claim to fame, I guess. Because then in late February, he comes forward
and he says that he thinks he has learned the identity of his child's attacker. Which brings us to
clue number two, the witch cake. On February 25th, over a month after troubles began,
Reverend Samuel and his wife Elizabeth traveled to a nearby village to attend a sermon.
With Emma Way, their neighbor, Mary Sibley, decided to stop by and check on the girls.
She was a practitioner of white magic from time to time, and these were spells that could be used to help heal.
Yeah, you could do witchcraft back in the day, apparently, but only if it was sanctioned by the church.
Certain witchcraft.
Yeah.
Though it didn't seem like Samuel Paris knew any of this, or he likely wouldn't have trusted Mary around his girls at all.
This kind of folk healing was frowned upon by the clergy, who believed it still required Satan's help to even work.
Yet there were people who used it as a last resort in times of desperation, and the Paris girl's bizarre illnesses seemed to fall into that category.
Mary suspected that an evil witch, practicing black magic, was behind the attacks.
she went to the Paris's family's enslaved person, a woman named Tichuba, and showed her how to make something called a witch cake. Now, this wasn't your typical dessert. It was a spell, one that would supposedly prove that witchcraft was involved. To make it, Mary first collected urine from the afflicted girls, then had Tichuba bake it into a loaf of rye bread before feeding it to the family dog.
The idea was that magic was present in someone's body in their fluids.
Things like blood and urine, I mean, we had seen bloodletting for years prior to this to let demons out.
Yeah, they really overestimated the amount of stuff in our blood.
It's like, the sickness gets out and the demons get out.
Like, let's just get rid of the blood.
I know.
Bloodletting's crazy.
And if the girls were bewitched, the magic could be transferred through fluids to another living being.
like poor little lassie, the dog.
If the dog showed the same symptoms afterwards,
it would prove that the girls were actually sick.
And in some cases, the dog would also point out
who was responsible for the bewitching.
Like a little bloodhound.
There's no record about what happened to the dog
after eating the cake, if anything at all.
But can tell you this.
When Samuel Paris returned home and found out
what had taken place in his house,
he was furious.
He yelled at Mary, calling it, quote,
going to the devil for help against the devil.
But the damage had already been done at this point.
And Betty and Abigail said that the ritual
had helped them figure out who was responsible for their agony.
That's when they pointed their fingers directly at to Chuba.
They said that her specter,
basically a ghostly projection of her mind,
was chasing them around the house and tormenting them.
Even though she had just essentially tried to help the children,
Tichuba was accused of being a witch,
and she was not going to be the last.
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History Daily wherever you listen to podcasts. No, things definitely didn't end there with the
Paris family. So that same day, February 25th, two more people were showing similar symptoms,
but on the other side of town. There was 17-year-old Elizabeth Hubbard who claimed that she was
being stalked by witches, two of them. Women in town named Sarah Good and Sarah Osborne,
the accuser, Elizabeth Hubbard, was Dr. Griggs' servant, the doctor who's believed to have gone
to visit Abigail and Betty when their symptoms first arose. So he had maybe come home and also
told Elizabeth about what was going on. Yeah, they didn't have HIPAA back then. Yeah, it seemed
like Elizabeth knew about this behavior. And now she claimed that she was also being tormented.
although in a pretty different way.
Supposedly, the two Sarahs had sent a wolf and hairy abominations to terrorize her.
And on the exact same day, a 12-year-old girl who, I'm sure we'll talk about a lot, but Anne Putnam, Jr., also developed similar symptoms to Betty and Abigail.
Anne Putnam, Jr. was the granddaughter of Salem Village's richest man, Thomas Putnam.
And like Elizabeth, Anne Putnam, Jr., named Sarah Good as her attacker.
She said that Sarah's specter pinched her and tried to force her into a covenant with Satan,
and it took all of her strength to refuse.
But let's talk about who the two Sarahs were, Sarah Good and Sarah Osborne,
because who they were in the community of Salem and their reputations is very important to the story.
Now, both of them were social outcasts.
They were pretty much on the fringes of society, both metaphorically and quite literally.
In a way, they fit the stereotype of what people expected witches to look like at the time.
39-year-old Sarah Good was born into a wealthy family, but her father took his own life when she was 17,
and that cast a dark shadow over her family's reputation, obviously because suicide was seen as a very serious sin for the Puritans.
Because of this, she married this poor indentured servant.
and when he died, she ended up going into serious debt.
Her second husband had to sell his own farm to pay off Sarah's debt,
leaving the two of them and their two children completely desolate, essentially.
They had to work odd jobs, they had to beg for food.
They sometimes had to sleep in barns and stables at night.
And as a result of all this, what we imagine, like Sarah became a pretty bitter person.
She was known for having quite a sharp tongue.
And speaking her mind, not being very nice, she didn't really have a lot of friends in town.
As for the 49-year-old Sarah Osborne, she was also seen as a social pariah after she married an indentured servant as well.
This was after the death of her first husband in which she took control of the family estate, something women did not really do back in Puritanical society.
And it was very much looked down on.
The fact that she tried to manage the estate on her own as a woman, compounded with her unusual choice for a second husband,
led to a lot of tiffs with her sons and some land disputes with the Putnam family,
one of the most wealthiest families in town.
And not to mention, as of late, she had been dealing with a lot of serious health issues
that had left her frail and bedridden, meaning that no one had seen that much of her lately,
especially not at church.
And there's some accounts, too, that suggest that when the team girls were all figuring out who to accuse,
or, you know, like, just about to accuse someone.
Yeah.
Names were coming up as to, like, who were the most believable people they could accuse in town.
And it was essentially the two Sarahs.
Their reputations were known all over town.
It was a very small community at the time.
Yeah.
There were some of the most outcast women in society.
They were the easiest to accuse.
And then Tichuba.
So, like, I know.
A couple of the sources I saw, they were like, well, they picked the two most vulnerable on the fringe.
Yeah.
picked a woman of color and a homeless woman and kind of ran with that.
So then on February 29th, Thomas Putnam, Anne's father, along with three other men,
rode from the rural community of Salem Village to the bustling port of Salem Town to see the county magistrates.
A magistrate was kind of like a judge or a lower-ranking judicial officer.
And there, Thomas told them stories of his child's abuse at the hand of a malevolent spirit,
one that seemed to be derived from witchcraft.
And the two magistrates asked very few questions,
and they immediately signed arrest warrants for all three women,
Tituba, Sarah Good, and Sarah Osborne.
They were ordered to appear the next morning, March 1, 1692,
at Ingersoll Tavern in Salem Village for questioning.
Hundreds of people showed up to watch these proceedings the following day,
so many that they actually ended up having to move to a larger building
because there was just not enough space.
Tituba, Sarah Good, and even the very weak Sarah Osborne
were marched out of their homes
and into the makeshift courtroom to face their accusers.
And one of the first questions that was asked was, quote,
Sarah Good, what evil spirit do you have familiarity with?
Why do you hurt these children?
And Sarah Good said that she had been falsely accused.
Everything they were saying was a lie.
But the judges didn't believe her.
They just kept pressing.
And every time she spoke, the four afflicted girls who were all there in attendance, Abigail, Betty, Elizabeth, and Ann Jr., fell into fits, started losing their minds in the courtroom, rolling around, screaming that they were possessed.
They writhed, they screamed that Sarah Good's specter was attacking them right then and there in the courtroom.
The more she denied the charges, the more violently the girls reacted.
And finally, Sarah Good tried to deflect her own guilt by just blaming Sarah Osborne.
No. When it was Sarah Osborne's turn, she also denied the charges, but at that point, no one really believed her. And then the magistrates got to Tituba. And it was her testimony that really started ripping the whole town apart. Now, when Tituba stepped before the packed Salem meeting house on March 1st, 1692, the odds obviously were already stacked against her. Although her exact origins are murky, like many enslaved people stories were, Stacey Schiff, who is the author of the book,
The Witches, Salem, 1692, believes that Tituba was most likely a South American indigenous woman.
There are some sources that claim she could have come from Africa or perhaps the Caribbean Islands.
It's probably more of a reflection of kind of like the historical shift and racism at the time.
Scholars today just seem to agree she was of indigenous American origin.
Samuel Paris likely met Tituba during his time in the Barbados and brought her with him when he moved.
But here's the thing.
To the Puritans, her very identity made her a suspect.
They believed, like I mentioned earlier, that all Native Americans were tools of the devil,
part of a grand satanic conspiracy to destroy their godly little colony.
And it didn't matter that she wasn't even from the same tribe that was at war with the English.
They felt like because she was the same skin color as them, basically, that she was just complicit in everything they were doing.
And at first she did what the other two accused women had done and she just denied everything.
She claimed that she had never even met the devil.
She'd never hurt the children.
But at some point, Tichuba does change her story.
Yeah, which brings us to clue number three.
Maybe it was fear.
Maybe it was survival instinct.
Or maybe Reverend Samuel Paris had been beating her for weeks to get her to confess, as one witness later claimed.
Either way, Tichuba confessed.
to being a witch. The magistrate had worn her so thin by that point that she just told them
what they wanted to hear. She claimed it all started when she was visited by a tall man from
Boston. He said he needed her to serve him by torturing and killing young Abigail and
Betty. At first, Tituba said she refused, but Satan's minions kept at it, threatening to kill
her if she didn't cooperate. When she did, the devil said,
sent her several demonic creatures in the shape of animals to aid in her mission.
It was a common belief at this time that witches had familiars.
We see it in modern witch tales even these days.
These were evil shape-shifting spirits that would often appear in the form of animals.
That's where the connection between witches and black cats comes from, actually.
But really, any animal or household pet could be a familiar.
When asked who else was involved, Tichiba pointed to the other two accused women.
She declared that Sarah Good and Sarah Osborne had familiars of their own.
While it's unclear which familiar belonged to who, Tichiba mentioned in her statement that they ranged from a, quote,
hog, a great black dog, a red cat, a yellow bird, and a hairy creature that walked on two legs.
This was all the crowd needed to hear to believe that these women were indeed witches.
According to Tichibah's confession, Sarah Good and Sarah Osborne were already seasoned witches when she met them, and they pulled her into their coven.
They flew all over the village on broomsticks, inflicting pain upon children and villagers.
She also claimed that the Sarah's wanted her to kill Anne Putnam Jr., but she resisted.
Throughout her confession, she depicted herself as a reluctant co-conspirator, unable to resist the forces of evil.
But the most shocking revelation was the devil's book. This was a legendary document that every Puritan had heard of by this point.
Supposedly by signing your name in blood on the pages, you would bind yourself to Satan forever.
Tichiba claimed that she had signed the book, and when she had signed the book, and when she was,
did. She saw Sarah Good and Sarah Osborne's signatures too. But there were nine more names that she
didn't recognize. Though she did seem to know they were all from the Boston area. I mean,
just kind of conveniently giving them everything they want more. Yeah, they really put her in a corner.
I don't think she had much of a choice. No, no. To give them exactly what they were asking for.
it's really this confession that sends shivers down everyone's spine because according to her the devil had come to salem after tituba sarah good and sarah osborne were carted off to a boston jail there was this uneasy stillness that settled over salem village the afflicted girls had all quieted their fits had temporarily subdued but it was really just the calm before the storm according to tituba's confession there were at least
nine more witches out there walking amongst them. And the quiet finally shattered on March 12th
when who but Ann Putnam Jr. had another violent episode. And this time, everyone rushes to her
and asks Anne who was cursing you. And she points to someone new. A woman in her 60s named
Martha Corey. Unlike the first three accused witches, Martha was a church member who did attend
services regularly. So this accusation was actually pretty different. It wasn't a beggar. It wasn't a
outcast. It wasn't a woman with some illness like the other Sarah. Martha Corey was very much
one of the people inside of Salem society. Martha even listened calmly as Anne's father Thomas
privately accused her. After hearing the story, Martha just asked a single question. What clothes was she
wearing when she attacked Anne. And Thomas goes and he asks Anne the same question. And Anne says
that she couldn't see what clothes Martha's spectre was wearing because Martha had very conveniently
blinded her. Quick think of that one. Well, two days later, Thomas summons Martha back to his house.
And as soon as she entered, Anne began to thrash like she was under attack by an invisible spirit.
And that night, Thomas's 19-year-old housekeeper, Mercy Lewis, also fell ill and nearly rocked her chair into the fireplace, supposedly pushed by these invisible hands.
On March 19th, the magistrates issued a warrant for Martha Corey's arrest, and things were really just getting started in Salem.
That same day, Ann Putnam Jr. and Abigail Williams accused a woman named Rebecca Nurse of trying to get them to sign the doubles.
book. And now, Rebecca was a 71-year-old grandmother, and she was one of the most respected women
in the community. However, it's interesting to note that her family had been feuding with the Putnam's
for years over Landis Butes. It seemed like, though, at least to like the larger Salem community,
if the devil could recruit Rebecca, he could recruit anyone. Everyone's at risk.
The most chilling accusation really comes on March 23rd when Sarah Goods four to five,
five-year-old daughter named Dorothy gets dragged into this nightmare. The afflicted girls
claimed Dorothy's tiny spectre was biting and pinching them and demanding that they signed
the devil's book too. So they arrested the little girl and they threw her into prison. And soon
after, more accusations popped up from people in different houses. And by early May, the jails were
filling up. Fear was spreading like a contagion, creeping under doors. It was infecting every single
household in Salem. And then on May 10th, Salem actually saw its first casualty because of this
fear. Sarah Osborne, one of the original three accused, did die in her prison cell. Maybe it was from
the illness she was suffering previously. Maybe it was exacerbated by being in that Boston jail.
By that point, she had been locked up for over two months in the disease-ridden jail, having
never faced trial, and it was really a grim sign of what was to come, because the witch hunt
was nowhere near finished, and Salem's appetite for blood was near insatiable. By late May of
1692, the jails in Suffolk County were overflowing with accused witches, but no one was exactly
sure what to do with them. Remember, Massachusetts was stuck in this kind of weird legal limbo.
Everyone was waiting for the new colonial governor William Phipps to arrive from England.
and essentially tell them what to do
and tell them what the laws were.
He had this new charter with him that he was bringing
and that was going to be the thing
that would define what the new laws were.
It would also allow the legislature
to create a new court system
which would replace the ad hoc courts
that they had been relying on at that point.
When Governor Phipps finally showed up
on May 14th, he thought that he had plenty of time
to make all of this happen
and to institute his new order.
But as soon as he arrived,
fresh off the boat, he was hit with this crazy situation.
There were dozens of accused witches rotting in prison cells, and there were more accusations every single day.
So on May 25th, he creates this emergency order just for witchcraft cases.
He called it the Court of Oyer and Terminer, which literally means to hear and determine.
It was supposed to be temporary.
It was just going to clear out this backlog.
The chief justice was this guy, Lieutenant Governor William Stoughton, a Harvard-educated Puritan zealot, who was convinced that witches were real and that they were very dangerous.
And most of the other judges he picked were wealthy merchants with zero legal training.
Since the new official court system wasn't up yet, they could set whatever rules they wanted when it came to running their trials, which is why they allowed something called spectral evidence.
This included evidence that you could bring into court at the time, included dreams, visions, and encounters with invisible spirits that only the accusers could see.
And on June 2nd, 1692, the Court of Oyer and Terminer was open for business.
That same day, they put Bridget Bishop on trial.
She was the woman we met earlier in this episode at the beginning.
And you'll see why Prosecutor Thomas Newton picked her to start with.
See, Bridget was really perfect scapegoat material.
She was in her 50s.
She was twice widowed and her late husband had died under what they believed to be suspicious circumstances.
She also owned a tavern where people could drink cider and play shuffleboard, even Morgan, on Sunday.
Not Sunday.
And you're supposed to be resting.
Man.
In Puritan Salem, she was basically advertising herself as a sinner.
I mean, she was a woman who had a job.
People could drink at her tavern, which actually Puritans were allowed to drink just a little bit.
But also, like, working on the day of rest.
Not God's Day.
Not on God's Day.
So really she becomes this perfect scapegoat.
She also argued with a lot of people in town.
She's kind of known for not paying her bills on time.
She's just like us.
She had a reputation.
Okay, maybe not for getting into violent
in public fights with her late husband.
And this also wasn't her first time
being accused of witchcraft.
See, 13 years earlier in 1679,
she stood trial for witchcraft
after an enslaved person's horses
went nuts and ran into a frozen swamp.
A week later, that person claimed
that he saw an apparition that looked like Bridget in his barn.
Bridget was acquitted, but the stink of black magic followed her ever since.
On the town green in my hometown, this 19-year-old guy fired off a gun in like maybe 1680,
and it killed someone.
And so they were like, we're not going to send you to jail because they didn't really have manslaughter charges back then,
but like you're on probation and you can't handle weapons.
And then like three years later, he was like, actually, I think this woman Lydia, bewitched my gun.
Oh, my God.
Executed for being a witch.
They were really, really freaked out by witches.
I mean, this is a time that, like,
it was just a man who made a mistake,
let his horses go, and they died,
and he was able to blame a woman for it.
I know.
And say it was the specter of this witch woman
that made the mistake for me
and therefore she should die.
As a horse girl, I'm like,
it just sounds like they spooked.
Yeah.
Horses are, they're spooky.
They get spooked.
And that's probably why in 1692,
Bridget faced a lot of different accusers.
Among them were mercy.
Lewis, the Putnam's made. Also, Ann Putnam Jr. She's back. Of course. At Bridget's 1692 trial,
10 people testified about everything, from missing money to demons that Bridget had supposedly
summoned. But the prosecutors, at least in this trial, relied on more than just hearsay.
And that brings us to clue number four. The Witch's Marks. One of the piece of evidence used
against Bridgett was the discovery of something called Poppits. A Poppins. A
Poppet is another name for a voodoo doll, which someone can use to torment another person from a distance.
The doll is supposed to represent a person, and sticking pins in it will cause that real-life person physical pain.
Poppits were considered a pretty standard tool for black magic back then.
A man who Bridget hired 17 years earlier to do some repairs in her cellar had allegedly discovered several of these dolls in Bridgett.
its walls. The man didn't keep the puppets to show in court, but his testimony was apparently
convincing enough without it. Another thing the prosecutors looked for was the presence of a devil's
mark or witch's teat. These were skin blemishes that apparently indicated where Satan or a witch's
familiar would suckle from them, drinking blood like a baby drinks milk from the teat. Straight from
the teat you're from the teat i'm like thinking about that like you have a mole on you and they're like
witch i know which is teat yeah they would literally see a mole and be like that's the devil's nipple
that he uses for you there was it's funny like for puritans there's like weird sexual parts to some
of these but um there was in germany i believe it was germany there was one of the witch trials
where the lore was that satan would literally have you kiss his butthole that was how you made the deal
with Satan. Like, it was weird. Well, I mean, this court examined Bridget's body. Yeah. So they had a panel of
women and one male surgeon. They examined Bridget's body and they claimed to find some sort of sore
near her genitals. That was all the jury needed. They didn't deliberate for long. And the same day that
her trial began on June 2nd, Bridget was convicted of witchcraft and sentenced to death by hanging. Again,
this is like colonial times like what you don't know what kind of diseases they had back then I know and
they had a lot I know like strip her down like this is I know for being so pure I'm like surprised you could see another person naked and it's another situation where it's women doing it to women and I know that there's the argument right that women were kind of primed to be these foot soldiers for the puritanical men looking to weed out the women but I don't know I just get the feeling that it was a lot more cutthroat amongst the women than that like they were
all just trying to weave each other out. Yeah, they're really taking each other out. And eight days
later, Salem had its first ever execution. But not everyone was necessarily on board with how
everything was being handled in Salem. One of the judges who was named Nathaniel Saltonstahl
was disgusted by the way the court handled itself. And he ended up resigning immediately.
But that didn't make the process slow enough to halt the proceedings. Actually,
Some of the people would go on to accuse him of being a sorcerer, but he never had to stand trial for that.
So without Nathaniel, the court reconvened on June 28th for really a mass trial.
Over the next three days, five more women were tried, convicted, and sentenced to die.
It was Rebecca Nurse, Sarah Good, and three other women named Elizabeth Howe, Susanna Martin, and Sarah Wilds.
On July 19th, all five were hanged together.
In her final moments, a junior minister tried to get Sarah good to confess, and instead she spat back at him, quote,
I am no more a witch than you are a wizard, and if you take away my life, God will give you blood to drink.
Which, for a town that's terrified of witches, I'm sure that did not comfort them.
No, I know. Yeah, then I think the witches are being vindictive.
The witch hunt had also kind of become this like self-perpetuating nightmare at the time.
In March, there had only been three accused witches.
But by the end of the summer, there were over 200 people, both male and female, that were named.
And the accusations just were exploding after that.
It wasn't just the original Salem Village girls anymore that were accusing.
It wasn't just that like the afflicted teenage girls of Salem Village anymore.
The mean girls.
There were these new accusers that were popping up all across.
across Essex County where Salem was located. Adults, teenagers, even men were now claiming to be
tormented by specters. Servants accused their employers. Children accused their parents and sometimes
their grandparents. And each new victim widened the circle because the real accelerant was the
confessions. When the accused witches confessed in order to save their lives, because I was really
all they could do was say, yes, this is what is happening. They didn't just admit
their own guilt. They were expected to name their accomplices. It's kind of a precedent that
Tituba and the Sarah's unknowingly set for others. Each confession spawned new arrests. You were
forced to name the other, sometimes up to 11 people that you had seen like within the devil's
book or whatever. Like you just had to name all the other people that were implicated in this
as well. And some of those new prisoners would go on to confess too, which just created this
endless chain of accusations. Yeah, by now it should be pretty clear that a lot of people were
admitting to doing a lot of evil stuff, even though it likely wasn't true. No, it just seemed to
become the way that people were settling their petty little disputes within Salem and now the
surrounding areas. Oh, we're in a land dispute. You're a witch. Oh, you close your bar too early or
whatever. Like, I owe you money. You're a witch. You cut off my wagon.
Witch. Just everyone was crying witch for every little transgression.
Which is insane. Like if you think about it, like that level of crying wolf, like the town is not that big.
No, it's very small. So what are you doing? And this just brings us to clue number five, all of these forced confessions.
The interrogators really relied on high pressure tactics to bully and manipulate accused witches into admissions of guilt.
And, like, I feel like bully is an understatement of a word because we're probably going to get into what methods they used on some of these people.
During her trial, Bridget Bishop, the woman we met in our first story, claimed she didn't even know what a witch was in response.
The magistrate asked how, if she didn't know what a witch was, she could be sure she wasn't one after all.
Oh, my God.
Like, the gas lady.
If you don't know what one is, how do you know you're not?
the mental gymnastics
gaslighting
and these tricks
often threw the accused
off balance
and got them to agree
to things that they
didn't understand
I mean if we look at
Tichuba like
we don't even know
if there was a language
barrier potentially
because of where she came from
so she might not even know
what she was admitting to
others were simply threatened
with execution
or assured
a lighter sentence
if they agreed
with whatever the magistrates
said and confessed
true to their word
no one who confessed
was sentenced
to death. That included Tichiba, who was ultimately spared from execution and had her case
dismissed. But we also can't ignore the psychological influence of the region. I mean, these people
were told that if they confessed, their souls might be saved from damnation. I'm sitting here,
I'm like, how did they believe these little girls, like a 12-year-old writhing on the floor? But it's like,
we, you see it in some cults even today. Like, there's podcasts on cults out there. And like,
people can be convinced of crazy things.
And if there's one thing that these Puritans were scared of, it was hell.
One of the now debunked urban legends as to why this happened was that they were suffering from ergot poisoning.
Urgot was like a fungus that grew on the grain.
And so the idea that they were eating this grain and actually having these hallucinations and really believing that they were witches was always a theory.
But we now know that the symptoms would have been a lot worse and they would have died pretty much right afterwards.
And a lot of the accusers went on to live, like, very long lives.
But also just the idea of it being a social contagion that they really did think they were getting these symptoms from witches when really they were kind of catching it from each other like any other mass hysteria event.
Yeah.
And I mean, it's hard because even family members of the accused were peer pressuring them to save their souls.
Yeah.
So it's like for these people that are up there, they're probably starting to go crazy too where they're like, even my family thinks I'm a witch.
Maybe I am a witch.
And when all of these methods failed, the interrogators could rely on torture to get the job done, and they resorted to it quite a bit.
John Proctor, a 60-year-old farmer and tavern owner, told the court that some of the accused, like his own son, were forced to confess when, quote, they tied him neck and heels to the blood gushed out of his nose.
Some were subjected to torture for 18 hours straight, with interrogators taking shifts to keep the torment going around.
the clock. Sleep deprivation was huge. They would keep these suspected witches awake for days,
forcing them to stand with their arms outstretched while wearing heavy shackles.
Strip searches were routine, oftentimes looking for that devil's mark. But it was really just
another form of humiliation designed to break these people down. When the agony became unbearable,
the accused would inevitably say whatever the torturers wanted to hear.
The system turned victims into accomplices, creating that endless cycle of accusing other people to save yourself.
And as the weeks ticked by, the paranoia reached an epic proportion.
And no one, no matter how powerful, was safe.
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The witch hunt that began on February 29, 1692, with just three outcast women had morphed into something far more terrifying.
The, quote, stereotypical witch, think the elderly, the poor, the social pariah, was not the only target anymore.
One of the accused was this woman, 77-year-old Mary Bradbury, the wife of a very high-status person in the town of Salisbury.
Her husband, Captain Thomas Bradbury, was related to the Archbishop of Canterbury.
He was one of the first English settlers in town.
Yet five people, including Dr. Griggs' mate Elizabeth Hubbard and Anne Putnam, Jr., claimed they saw Mary Spector attack a 29-year-old man named Timothy Swan.
But Timothy had been struck with an unknown illness since June 23rd, but by the beginning of July, Mary was already in chains for this alleged crime.
On August 5th, 1692, about five months after Betty and Abigail first accused Tituba, the frenzy reached chilling new heights with the trial of 40-ish-year-old Reverend George Burroughs.
George was a Harvard-educated minister.
Yes, they did have Harvard back then.
How did you know that was my thought?
I was like, Harvard was around back then?
People are like very surprised at how old Harvard is.
Also, people are like, Morgan, don't you know the script?
I'm like, no, I actually stayed away from Kalin's parts for this one because I wanted to be surprised.
And again, she's pulling these facts out of like her brain.
I'm just like, again, our resident occult studies girl over here.
Oh, yeah, Harvard is older than calculus.
They didn't even have certain forms of math when Harvard first opened.
That's nuts.
So George was this Harvard educated.
administer. And he was also a former Puritan pastor of Salem Village. He was the father of seven
and he had served at a number of parishes in New England. He barely survived an attack in Casco, Maine in
1888. And normally, you know, this is like a sign of God's favor to the Puritans. But now he was
accused of making a pact with the devil. One of his first accusers was. And Putnam. 12 year old
Ann Putnam, Jr. At his trial on August 5th, hundreds of people cried.
into the courtroom, including some of the most important ministers and politicians in the colony.
There, about 30 witnesses depicted him as a bloodthirsty wizard, who was the ringleader of New England's witches, and Satan's chief lieutenant on earth, is what they called him.
Wow.
Nine people claimed that they'd seen the small-framed reverend perform superhuman acts of strength.
Eight confessed witches claimed the devil had promised to make George a king.
in hell once his work on Earth was done. His supposed victims proudly displayed bite marks
on their arms that matched George's mouth, they said. George had a reputation for being abusive
to his previous two wives, but now these rumors had escalated into stories about how he had actually
kept them in chains. Meanwhile, his accusers choked and writhed when they testified as if
George was attacking them right there in the stands. At one point, they had to pause the proceedings
because his accusers said they saw ghosts of his former wives in the courtroom.
And like many others who refused to confess, he was quickly convicted and executed just two weeks later.
I mean, especially for a man like him, he's a reverend.
He's not going to admit to being a witch.
No.
Some of them were much more comfortable with dying than with just saying anything to save their lives.
Yeah.
In his last moments, he gave an eloquent speech and recited the Lord's Prayer,
something that was said to be impossible for a soon to be king of hell.
Yeah.
To say the Lord's prayer and not catch fire.
I mean, at this point, a lot of people in attendance started freaking out.
Yeah.
Like, oh, my God, we've made a mistake.
A lot of people felt like they had made a mistake.
They had these twinges of doubt, but it was just too late.
Yeah.
George's death really sent shockwaves throughout the colony.
But instead of bringing all this madness to an end, it just accelerated it.
Which is also crazy because he was also Paris's, like, biggest competition.
Yeah, there you go.
Like, it was all of these, like, accused people where they were either fighting over land or fighting over a job.
And it's like he was the previous minister.
And Paris had kind of taken over.
No, a lot of it does boil down to the Paris and Putnam's.
Yeah.
Just the people that were on their hit lists were the ones to go.
Because, yeah, also of the over 200 people accused.
accused, 20 were executed, and a lot of them had ties.
August and September were a blood-soaked blur of just trials and executions.
By September 22nd, more than 50 people had confessed to practicing witchcraft, and 19
of them had been executed.
Two died in prison.
Once accused, your fate was pretty much sealed, either with jail time or with death.
If you pleaded not guilty or refused to enter a plea at all, that only made things worse.
Remember the elderly woman Martha Corey, who was one of the first to be accused by Ann Putnam?
Well, her 80-year-old husband, Giles, was accused as well after he defended her.
He tried to exploit a legal loophole by refusing to enter a plea at all.
Legally, this meant that he couldn't face trial.
But, of course, the authorities just found a way around that.
They resurrected an old English practice to make him answer the question.
Was he guilty or was he not guilty?
To do this, I mean, so many people have heard this story.
like the famous story of the witch trials.
They piled heavy stones on his chest, which slowly crushed the life out of him.
But he still resisted.
His last words gasped through his broken and breaking ribs were reportedly more weight.
Yeah.
By the end of September, hundreds of people had been accused of witchcraft across more than a dozen villages and towns, even outside of Salem.
And I will say, Giles, like, this was a tactic he pursued, according to a lot of historians,
because by not standing trial, by not being formally executed, his assets didn't go to the court and the town.
They actually then descended to his next of kin.
So a lot of people speculate he kind of took one for his team, so to ensure his children still had the estate.
Yeah, because if you were accused of witchcraft and executed all your apartment,
property just went to the state, which was really like the Corwin's and the Putnam's.
And opposition seemed to be forming.
He criticized how the trials were being handled by the local government.
And in response, the governor actually silenced him by forcing him to pay an enormous fine.
They didn't want to hear it.
The pleas of a Baptist meant nothing to a Puritan governor.
And he had no intention of stopping the trials for anyone.
But as more and more wealthy and politically connected people were,
accused, more spoke out against the trials. Which is funny because you kind of see that today.
Like, the more the rich people are affected, they're going to be like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa,
actually, no, we have to stop. We have to put a stop to this. Yeah. One of the leaders of this movement
was a man named Increase Mather. He was the president of Harvard and the most influential
minister in all of Massachusetts. He visited the overstuffed jails and he spoke to the accused.
They told him about the torture. Many of them recanted their earlier confessions. And so he urged
Governor Phipps to outloss spectral evidence in the courtroom. Unlike the Baptist minister,
Increase was a close advisor to Governor Phipps and held a tremendous amount of political power.
So he moved the needle more than other people. Other ministers and colonial leaders started speaking
out as well, and their voices were growing bolder as the body count just continued to climb.
But it was one final accusation that would prove to be the end of the trials. In October,
someone made the fatal mistake of pointing an accusing finger at Governor Phipps' own wife, Lady Mary Phipps.
Of course he's going to care now.
The governor had stood by his respected citizens were dragged to the gallows, but when the witch hunt came for his own family, that was a bridge too far.
On October 29th, almost five months since the first execution, he declared miraculously that the witch trials were officially over.
Just like that.
Just like that.
Done.
Actually, we're done here.
No more witches.
Needless to say, Lady Mary never even saw the inside of a courtroom.
And a lot of people were obviously pretty upset with this decision, including Lieutenant
Governor William Staun.
But mostly, it seemed to bring the people of Salem a whole lot of relief because finally
this witch hunt was over.
In December of 1692, new laws were passed giving suspected witches more rights, and they
eliminated the death penalty for the accused witch.
In January of 1693, a newly created superior court took over all the cases, still unfinished by
the court of Oyer and Terminer. And luckily, this new court banned spectral evidence. You could no
longer have ghosts as your witness. So just saying that someone's spirit attacked you is no
longer good enough evidence, thank God. And they worked really quickly to acquit as many witches as
they could. In the first two weeks of January, they tried 22 people. And they still convicted
three, which is wild, because they had already confessed, basically, so they said,
okay, you guys are still convicted. But the governor quickly put an indefinite pause on their
executions, which was eventually made permanent. The court heard dozens more witchcraft cases
over the next several months, but every single one just resulted in an acquittal or a pardon.
In May of 1693, all remaining prisoners had been acquitted and pardoned. However, their freedom
still came with a really cruel price.
Those who couldn't pay their prison fees
remained locked away even after their acquittals.
A woman named Lydia Dustin died
of unknown causes in her cell a month
after being declared innocent, simply
because she could not afford to pay her jailer's fee,
which meant that
she wasn't provided things like
food or bedding. Tiduba,
the enslaved woman who confessed first,
was sent to live with
a new enslaver when Reverend
Paris refused to pay for her release,
and perhaps one of the most
Heartbreaking stories of all was that of the four or five-year-old Dorothy Good, Sarah Good's daughter who was accused.
During her interrogation, she did claim that her mother had given her a snake that acted as her familiar, which she said sucked blood from her finger.
While her confession may have saved her own life, it ruined it, too.
Not only did her mother die at the gallows, but Dorothy was imprisoned for about nine months, which some believe did contribute to mental illness that she suffered from later in
life. The aftermath of those who were not accused was a mix of guilt, denial, and desperate
attempts at redemption. Some, like Judge Samuel Sewell, one of the magistrates, and later
the 26-year-old Anne Putnam Jr., publicly confessed to their errors and begged for forgiveness.
But others just refused to acknowledge any wrongdoing. Chief Justice William Staunton,
soon to be the governor, never apologized publicly. Until the day he died, he insisted that he had
done his duty by ferreting out witches and resented those who stopped him from finishing the job.
Everyone would have died with you at the helm.
Yep.
For over two and a half centuries, the state of Massachusetts itself would refuse to acknowledge the harm that it had done.
As soon as the trials were over, Governor Phipps had banned the publication of books that even mentioned the whole debacle.
The historian Emerson Baker called it one of the first cover-ups in American history.
They just didn't want word getting out about what they had done.
So George Corwin was the guy who brought everyone to the gallows, which is behind a Walgreens in Salem now.
It's just like this little plot of land.
Wow.
But he died very shortly after the trials occurred, and they were so afraid to bury him because the people of Salem were so upset that the witch trials had happened.
They thought that if they buried him on his property, which was customary at the time, they would just bury people on their properties, that people would come dig him up and destroy his body so that he could not rest.
So they hid him in the basement of his house.
house for years until they finally felt like it was quiet enough they could just bury him and
he wouldn't be dug up. So his grave is still there. You can still see where he's buried in
Salem. Wow. If you ever visit. It wasn't actually until the 1950s that the state began the
long process to officially exonerate the victims. And the very last one, Elizabeth Johnson
Jr. wasn't officially cleared until 2022. That's insane. Three years ago. What is that? Three hundred and
330 years, basically. That's insane. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. As you can imagine, there are a lot of questions that
still remain. The biggest being, why the hell did this happen? How did a couple of teenage girls
nearly burn an entire English colony to the ground? I mean, Ann Putnam Jr.,
She just went out with a vengeance.
Anne Putnam of the 20 people executed, she named 18 of them.
I mean, I have a hard time imagining myself in colonial America.
But I'm like, I would just look at Anne.
I'd be like, honestly, what Anne's doing is a little suspicious.
Anne's the witch.
I wonder if other teen girls thought that about Anne.
If they were like, oh, she kind of does this.
Like, you know, someone must have caught onto what she was doing.
Yeah.
I mean, you try taking away screaming.
between time from an addicted toddler, you're going to get the same reaction.
Yeah.
Like, how did.
Yeah.
And it's just like, how did kids act?
Like, I mean, there's, I could have been accused of being a witch based on my reactions.
There's maybe even people watching this today.
It's not just women.
It's also men that feel like if they lived at the time, whether you were an outcast,
whether people just didn't like you, if you spoke your mind too much, if you were ambitious.
If there was anything that set you apart from the crowd, at least at the beginning, because
eventually it was just everyone.
But, like, you would have been accused of being a witch.
Yeah.
So I think it was a lot of us.
There's a lot of, like, actual theories about why this happened.
There's a big one, the first kind of being fraud.
At least on one occasion, a witness testified that she had heard an afflicted girl admit she lied for sport.
Even some of the accused called out the girls for faking it.
I mean, Anne accused a lot of her father's adversaries.
I mean, it did seem very intentional.
and purposeful, and maybe these kids weren't getting enough attention.
As crazy as that, like, sounds that that's a reason for all of this.
But who knows?
Another theory is the ergot poisoning that you briefly mentioned.
Like, that comes up a lot, but there has been a lot of modern science to kind of disprove that
and demonstrate that they would have died, actually, and not gone on to live happy, healthy lives afterwards.
One of the symptoms, I think, of ergot poisoning is you just develop really severe dementia
almost immediately. So like Ann Putnam would have just gotten really bad dementia and died very
quickly afterwards. She lived a long time. She lived a long time. Another big theory is mass conversion
disorder. As we mentioned, the doctors who examined all these patients, like kind of really find
anything wrong with them. But when you look at how the accusations spread, it seemed to move
from person to person house to house. So some kind of speculate that this epidemic wasn't physical.
It was psychological, which is this mass conversion or mass hysteria.
as we kind of hear it. And it is a form of mental illness, basically psychological stress that
manifests into physical symptoms. And it can actually sometimes spread like the flu. And it might
sound far-fetched, but you can just Google Leroy, New York, and you'll see something pretty creepy.
Basically, in 2011, there was a high school cheerleader that woke up from a nap and started making
weird jerky movements like muscle spasms that just wouldn't go away. About a month later,
one of her friends woke up from a nap with odd symptoms of her own.
She could barely speak, stuttering, twitching, flailing.
One by one, other girls on the cheer squad came down with similar twitches and spasms.
The doctor ruled out any illness.
Some girls were put on antibiotics.
Others received psychiatric treatment.
And some simply recovered on their own.
It's hard to say what did the trick.
And scientists still don't really understand how this phenomenon works,
But some historians have suggested that what happened in Salem was similar. Only in their
situation, they assumed all this was due to witchcraft. And besides those ones, there's also a lot
of historical theories. Yeah. Historians have been studying the context that surrounded the
Salem Witch trails for decades, and they've come up with a couple different potential causes.
One is the social situation. Like we said, Salem was basically a powder keg of petty grudges,
class warfare. You had Salem Village, which was poor rural farming area that was feuding oftentimes
with Salem Town, which was a wealthy maritime hub. And then there were the family rivalries,
especially between the Putnam's and several other families in town, who were locked in this
epic battle over land and power. And at the center of all of this was Samuel Paris, father and
uncle of the very first accusers. One of Samuel's biggest supporters, even when the people in town didn't
like him when he first showed up was the Putnam family. A number of the people that they
accused were threats to Reverend Samuel's authority. Other targets were the Putnam family
foes, like Reverend George Burroughs, the so-called future king of hell. Turns out nine years
before George was accused, Captain John Putnam had George arrested for failing to repay a debt.
And of course, there's the religious aspect of all of this. Without that, the witch trials would
have never happened, even though it's hard to point to one thing to say the witch trials happened
because of this. It was kind of this whole ecosystem of things that were happening at the same
time. But they were hardcore zealots. They blamed Satan even if their food spoiled. And they also
believed without a shadow of a doubt that witches were 100% real. In the midst of every awful
tragedy happening at the time, war, famine, political upheaval, the idea of witches in their midst
wasn't a very big leap. And from their perspective, any sign of witchcraft was a real test of
their faith. If they could purge themselves of spiritual impurities like black magic, maybe it would
prove something to God. And specifically, that they weren't as vile and corrupt as the rest of the
world and that their souls could go up to heaven. All this being said, I'm not sure we'll ever
be able to point to one concrete cause for the Salem witch trials. Obviously, that answer is very nuanced,
got a little bit of everything involved here, political rivalries, religion, social class, everything.
And it's very clear that all of these factors created this toxic brew that really poisoned the
minds of settlers and watered the soil with a lot of blood of innocent people. I mean, this was a cauldron
of paranoia. And it twisted every sense of reality and turned neighbor against neighbor,
family member against family member. I mean, it was a dark,
day and you know a lot of historians about how this really didn't teach Salem a lesson like when they
looked back at this there wasn't a lot they learned they kind of went forward still believing in
witchcraft and if anything and this is a hot take from one historian on a documentary i watched
he said it just made them learn to believe young women less yikes that hurts to hear i know but on that
note, we are closing our case files on the Salem Witch Trials and moving on to our missing
person of the week.
Our missing person of the week this week is L.J. Moore.
Lovett is described as a 33-year-old black male, about 5-6, 140 pounds.
33-year-old L.J. Moore went missing from Sacramento, California.
Surveillance footage shows him inside the aisle one fuel station on Arena Boulevard.
His family states that he is disabled at risk.
and blind. The Sacramento Police Department is still working to locate Lovett after more than a
month. They've been in contact with his family and are working with local and regional partners
to help find him. The Sacramento Police Department is asking for the community's assistance
in locating LJ. If you see Lovett or know his whereabouts, please contact the Sacramento
Police Department immediately. They can be reached at 916-808-5471. Thank you guys for joining us on another
episode of Clues. If you have any other missing people we should highlight, please put them in the
comments. That's really how we're finding a lot of these cases and getting the word out. And a lot of
the other commenters are seeing them. Like it's really, it's spreading the news. So make sure you
keep sending us those. No, thank you guys so much for that. And that is really all that we have for
this episode of Clues. Thank you for helping us unravel this case. I hope you all have a very safe and
very spooky Halloween. And now we want to hear from you all. Your thoughts, theories, feedback. All of
That's what makes this community so special.
At Crime House, we really value your support.
Again, share all those thoughts on social media.
Maybe some other spooky Salem facts that we haven't touched on.
I'm doing paranormal stuff over on Tua Takes this season.
Oh, yeah.
If you've been to Salem and done any of the tours or had an experience, I know Galen has had one.
Yes.
You stayed in a haunted Airbnb there.
I stayed in a haunted Airbnb and I talked to a ghost while I was in there.
No.
It was great.
If you have any of these experiences, please comment them on this one.
I know this is a true crime channel, but we can get a little spooky and paranormal over here.
But again, rate, review, and follow clues to help others discover our show.
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And we're going to be back next week with another case to unravel.
All right, we'll see you guys then.
Bye.
Bye.
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