Murder, Mystery & Makeup - Witches in Salem or Something Much Darker? The Salem Witch Trials
Episode Date: October 31, 2023Hi friends! Today I wanted to talk about the Salem Witch Trials and I won’t lie, I learned so much! Did it really have anything to do with Witches after all?? Well, I ain't holding my breath! Lo...ve you so much and please be safe out there! Hope to be seeing you very soon. x o Bailey Sarian Watch the original video here and don't forget to subscribe to my YouTube @BaileySarian! Tik Tok: https://bit.ly/3e3jL9v Instagram: http://bit.ly/2nbO4PR Facebook: http://bit.ly/2mdZtK6 Twitter: http://bit.ly/2yT4BLV Pinterest: http://bit.ly/2mVpXnY Youtube: http://bit.ly/1HGw3Og Snapchat: https://bit.ly/3cC0V9d Discord: https://discord.gg/BaileySarian
Transcript
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Hi my beautiful friends, how are you today?
I hope you're having a wonderful day so far.
My name is Bailey Sarian and today is Monday,
which means it's murder, mystery, and makeup Monday!
If you are new here, hi, my name is Bailey Sarian
and on Mondays I sit down and I talk about a true crime story
that's been heavy on my noggin and I do my makeup at the same time.
If you're interested in true crime and you like makeup,
I would highly suggest you hit that subscribe button
because I'm here for you on Mondays.
But other than that, let's just get right into it.
Wish me luck.
I don't really fully know what I'm doing today.
So that's great.
Mass hysteria has been prevalent throughout world history
in a variety of different contexts
for a variety of different reasons, right?
It often appears that mass hysteria had a sort of a peak in the late 17th century,
when both Europeans and American colonists alike became just obsessed with the idea
that there were evil beings walking amongst them.
These evil beings were capable of supernatural abilities that instilled fear into the hearts of those who lived near them. These evil beings were capable of supernatural abilities
that instilled fear into the hearts
of those who lived near them.
Fear that resulted in over 20 deaths
in the span of one year,
which is so sad, but doesn't even sound like that much.
So today's story is not only about death,
but about prejudice, politics, assumptions,
and potentially even LSD.
That's right, baby.
So in at least some regard,
most people feel as though they're pretty familiar
with the events that occurred throughout the year of 1692
in colonial Massachusetts.
I'm sure you remember it like yesterday, right?
However, there are much larger implications
surrounding the sudden and aggressive surge of witchcraft accusations
on the small community of Salem. For starters, in the late 17th century there were actually two
distinct Salem's occupying the same area. There was the Salem village and the town of Salem.
They were both located along the north coast of Massachusetts above Boston.
The two Salem's often had their conflicts on a local level,
both politically and religiously.
There were often disputes regarding land rights and property lines,
but more than that, the two Salem's were composed of religious refugees
who had left Europe for the North American English colonies,
because they had different, they had a different interpretation of the Bible.
Some of the people of Salem were Calvinist and Puritans
who pretty much followed an extremely strict interpretation
of the Bible to the T.
Like they took that Bible literally.
The Puritan laws were hardcore, okay?
And they weren't very forgiving to say the least.
And a lot of the members of society were expected
to follow a very strict moral code.
You know what I didn't look up though?
Like why?
Why?
So due to this, anything that was believed
to be going against this code was considered a sin and deserved to be punished.
So members of the Salem community had very specific ways
in which they viewed the supernatural, the devil, and God.
In Salem, if you didn't believe in the devil
or the supernatural,
then you were rejecting the nature of God himself.
And by doing so,
you would be highlighting your position as an outcast.
Pretty much their lives revolved around God and the Bible.
And if you had hobbies or anything,
any different opinion other than that,
then you were the devil, like you were just an outcast.
So God and religion in general was a massive part
of the everyday lives of the people of Salem.
The local government was not concerned with the idea
of separation of church and state and politics.
And overall pre-revolutionary politics
were just messy in general.
And on top of all of that,
there was this ever looming fear of the presence of something darker than man.
What was that you ask?
Witches.
After a variety of disagreements and disputes regarding who would become the proper first ordained minister of Salem village in 1689,
a religious man by the name of Samuel Parris became the choice for the position.
Now Sam Parris, he was not liked by a lot of people in Salem.
He seemed to be shady, he did shady things with money,
it's like same shit, different era.
The community just felt like this Sam Parris guy was the person for the job.
So Sam Parris, his wife Elizabeth, their daughter Betty, their son Thomas, their other daughter Susanna,
their niece Abigail, and their slave Tituba,
they all moved from Boston to join Sam
and his new job in Salem.
So by contract, Sam and his family,
they were granted to live in the ministry house
and owned the land around it as well.
So around 1692, Sam's daughter Betty and his family, they were granted to live in the ministry house, and own the land around it as well.
So around 1692, Sam's daughter Betty and his niece Abigail,
they seemed to like go missing for a short period of time.
They would run off together,
nobody really knew where they were, what they were doing,
but was raising some questions like where are they going?
Sam Parris's nine-year-old daughter, Betty,
and her 11-year-old cousin, Abigail,
I guess what they were doing was they were sneaking away
and they were attempting fortune telling methods
during their missing periods
in hopes of discovering their future,
who they were gonna marry,
would they be rich or live a very successful life,
you know, future stuff that you ask.
But they were dabbling in that.
Not a good idea when you have a very strict situation going on.
But not long after they started dabbling in all this stuff,
the two of them began to demonstrate a series of strange actions
that would become a cause of concern within the community.
So in February, 1692,
both of the girls appeared to be struggling
or suffer from some strange illness.
It was said that Betty was acting odd
by hiding under furniture.
She complained of a fever.
She was barking like a dog,
and she screamed and cried out in pain.
On top of that, the strangest thing of all,
I'm not laughing, but like it's whatever,
her body, it convulsed into unhuman-like positions.
Betty, Betty, what are you doing?
This is 1692, you know, like what do you do?
Yeah, okay, so Abigail was doing the same shit.
She complained of similar symptoms
shortly after Betty was doing what she was doing.
Both of the girls complained that they were bitten
and pinched on their arms, necks and back.
Mr. Sam Paris, he tried everything he could
to like help the girls.
He prayed and he tried natural home remedies,
but nothing seemed to be helping them.
They were screaming in pain,
contorting their bodies in strange ways.
It must've been wild.
The home remedies and the praying isn't working.
So instead they decide,
okay, we need to call in a doctor and a minister.
So they call in the town physician
and they call in a minister by the name of John Hale.
And both of them are going to help give
some kind of diagnosis as to what's going on
with these girls.
Both the minister and the physician came to the conclusion
that Abigail and Betty were suffering from bewitchment.
Oh yes.
So this diagnosis not only just shocks the community,
but it also led to one of the largest witch hunts in history.
After Betty and Abigail had their diagnosis,
which was bewitchment, people start talking.
I feel like this is a very common theme in every story.
People start talking.
Everyone was like, what's going on?
What's the news?
Tell me. And they're like, have you heard about what's going on? What's the news, tell me.
And they're like, have you heard about what's going on?
Bewitchment.
So people are talking, rumors are spreading,
but most of all, the people of Salem,
they began to see other young girls in the area
acting the exact same way.
Nobody had answers as to what was going on
or why these other girls are acting the same way.
Now it was happening so much
that even when church was in service,
girls in the pews would just be randomly
like screaming, yelling.
I mean, no one could go through their church services
without being interrupted by outbursts,
just screaming in pain or contorting themselves.
Now, Betty and Abigail,
they had come from well-known families in Salem.
The blame for their bewitchment diagnosis
did not rest solely on them.
Rather, the Salem community was quick to point the fingers
at anyone else to save their own.
The first person accused and arrested
for allegedly afflicting the Sam Parris' daughter and niece
was none other than the Parris family's slave, Tituba.
She most likely became a target
because of her ethnic differences
from all the white villagers.
Let's be real here.
So the members of the church,
they just jumped on that shit.
They were like, yeah, it's Tituba for sure.
I saw her doing some magic one time.
I saw her.
And people were like, what?
So people in the community were just looking
for someone to blame.
Rumors and just straight lies were coming out
of people's mouths.
Poor Tatuba.
Tatuba, no!
So according to her accusers, Tatuba would attract girls
like Betty and Abigail with stories of enchantment
from her book of witchcraft.
Tatuba pleaded with the people who were making
these wild accusations,
but because she was a slave,
nobody believed her or cared to even listen.
The injustice Tatuba faced in what would serve
as the beginning of the Salem witch trials
was just the tip of the iceberg.
Shortly after Betty and Abigail
had been diagnosed with bewitchment,
a 12 year old girl named Anne
and a 17 year old girl named Elizabeth,
they were also experiencing the same symptoms
as Abigail and Betty.
Both of them were also diagnosed with bewitchment
that very same year.
When asked who had caused their state of bewitchment,
Ann cast the blame towards two women
named Sarah Good and Sarah Osborne.
She had something against Sarah's, I don't know.
Now Sarah Good, she was of lower economic status
and she was in poverty due to the debt
from her first husband.
The people who accused Sarah often cited jealousy and envy
as explanations of why she was a witch.
Sarah depended on her neighbors,
which led others to believe that the other women
who were dependent on their neighbors
were probably also practicing witchcraft.
So Sarah's second husband, his name was William,
he also went along with it and was like,
"'Yeah, my wife is definitely a witch.'"
What a douche.
She was mainly being accused by her neighbors
because she often challenged Puritan values
and was accused of possessing two women.
I mean, people were just making wild claims here
and there was no proof.
It was just like, it was like, what?
How?
Breathe.
Even her damn husband, what a loser.
I'd be like, really babe?
Really, you think I'm a witch?
Is that how you really feel babe?
Okay, so Sarah Osborne, who was the other girl
being accused by this younger child,
Sarah Osborne had been in a scandal previously
within the community because she had sex before marriage.
But also she rarely attended church,
which led the Salem community believing
that there was a lack of God in her life.
Everyone knew that she was having sex outside of marriage.
They called her a whore.
They were like, you are not allowed to be a whore
unless it's a whore for Jesus.
But most of all, this Sarah was in a legal dispute
with the higher social status family in the community.
Oh yes, there's always a real reason.
It's believed that the accusations against Sarah
were likely a product of powerful suggestions
from this family that was going after her.
It just wasn't looking good for these two Sarahs.
So the first women to be accused as witches
were those who strayed from the Puritan lifestyle
and were considered to be social outcasts
or of lower social status.
And most of the people that were accused were women,
women who were challenging the system.
Starting on March 1st, 1692,
the three women were interrogated relentlessly, okay?
They wouldn't accept any answer other than,
"'Yes, I am a witch.
So Sarah Good and Sarah Osborne,
they refused, refused, refused.
They were like, we are not witches.
We're standing our ground and we're not going to confess
because there's nothing to confess, you know?
So the two Sarahs, they deny, deny, deny.
I mean, they're innocent, so they're denying, right?
Tituba admitted to being the devil's servant.
Yes, she stated that a tall man dressed in all black
came to them demanding that they sign their names
in a great book.
Tituba was like, shit, if you can't beat him, join him.
You know, she's like, yeah, I'm a witch.
You know, like, hey, maybe this will get me out of it.
When Sarah Good was allowed the chance to defend herself
in front of the 12 jurors in the Salem Village Meeting House,
she argued her innocence,
proclaiming to Tuba and Sarah Osborne as the real witches.
In the end, however, Sarah Good was convicted of witchcraft
and sentenced to death.
And on July 29th, 1692, Sarah Good was hanged
along with four other women convicted of witchcraft. and sentenced to death. And on July 29th, 1692, Sarah Good was hanged
along with four other women convicted of witchcraft.
More and more women and also children were being questioned.
And later that same month,
four other individuals were accused of witchcraft.
Martha Corey, Dorothy Good,
who was the four-year-old daughter of Sarah Good,
who they just hanged,
Rebecca Nurse and Rachel Clinton.
What concerned the Salem community most
was that Rebecca Nurse and Martha Corey
were actually avid members of the church.
Now this detail struck even more fear
into the hearts of the people of Salem
because it was becoming more clear
that even the upstanding citizens of Salem
could be labeled a witch and possibly murdered.
I know, this whole story is just infuriating, honestly.
I just wanna go back in time and be like,
look, hi everyone, I'm an angel, okay?
When Martha Corey had been accused,
her husband Giles was shocked.
He insisted that his 80 year old wife
could not have been a witch in any regard.
She was older, frail, and a woman of God
in every sense of the word.
So Martha's husband was like,
"'No, there's no way she's a witch.
She's a godly woman.'"
Now, because he is standing up for Martha,
the people of Salem were like,
"'Why is he standing up for her so hard?
That's a little weird.
Why is he so ride or die for his wife?'
Well, get this, because Giles was standing up for his wife, and he was the one who was the one who was the one who was the one who was the one who was the one who was the one who was the one who was the one who was the one who was the one who was the one
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because it was all meant to go to his children.
But in order for the trial to proceed,
the judges, they needed Gauss to make a plea.
So the judges applied an old fashioned form of punishment,
and this was a method of torture formerly used
in the common law legal system,
in which a defendant who refused to plead
would be subjected to heavier and heavier stones
placed upon his or her chest
until a plea was entered or they died.
So they're laying stone after stone onto Giles' chest,
but he was determined to save his family's inheritance
for his children and said nothing.
Plus he's thinking, well, so it's believed,
he's thinking like, if I don't say anything,
I'm going to prove to these people that I am not a witch
because a witch would crack or something.
So he remained under the pressure of the rocks
for two whole days before he stopped breathing and died.
So you're probably wondering, well, how in the world
did they determine if someone's a witch or not?
To properly test whether or not a person was a witch,
the trial would include a demonstration surrounding something called a witch or not. To properly test whether or not a person was a witch, the trial would include a demonstration
surrounding something called a witch cake.
Mm, now I know this sounds super delicious,
but let's stop being hungry hippos for a minute
because this was no treat, nay nay.
This witch cake consisted of only two ingredients.
Follow me for more easy recipes.
So this witch cake included rye flour
and the urine of the bewitched person in question.
Once the cake was baked, it would be fed to a dog.
If the dog ate the cake and started to mimic
the convulsive actions of the assumed witch,
then the person in question was in fact a witch.
Now, a lot of the times,
nothing would happen once the dog ate the cake,
but that didn't matter
because they were set on these people being witches.
So why they did it, I don't know,
to make themselves feel better.
Other evidence that would prove someone was a witch
included the confessions of the accused,
because sometimes they would just confess
in hopes to get out of things,
in hopes that they won't be murdered,
hanged, put in jail, you know?
So some of them just straight up confessed.
After one of the people would confess,
a lot of the times they would point out others
in the community who also were witches
in order to get off the hook.
Oh, it was real messy, it was real bad.
Now, if they would go into someone's house
and they found books of palmistry, horoscopes,
pots of ointments in the they found books of palmistry, horoscopes,
pots of ointments in the possession or home of the accused,
then they were a witch.
No ointments, you witches.
Also, there were physical signs
which were referred to as witch treats.
Now a witch treat also sounds delicious.
A witch treat was said to be a mole
or blemish somewhere on the body
that was insensitive to the touch.
Discovery of such insensitive areas
was considered evidence of witchcraft.
Yeah, this is wild.
It sounds like they needed more hobbies, honestly.
Like they were just like, oh, you have a mole?
Witch.
13 women and five men would all be found guilty of being a witch or dabbling in witchcraft and were then sentenced to death So, looking back, I mean, there were quite obvious prejudices
about the way that the church was built,
and I think that's why it's so important
that we're talking about the church
and not the church itself.
So, I think that's a good point.
And I think that's why I think that the church
is so important to us,
because it's a place where we can be a part of the church.
And I think that's why I think that the church
is so important to us,
because it's a place where we can their aversion from the ways of God.
So messed up.
So looking back, I mean,
there were quite obvious prejudices present
in analyzing who was accused and who wasn't.
78% of assumed witches during the Salem witch trials
were women who were often regarded as lesser
by their male counterparts.
This is when aqua to fafana would come into play,
I wish they got some of that.
More than that, various servants, slaves,
and any native Americans were seen as suspish,
purely based on the color of their skin.
The mass hysteria that flooded the Massachusetts area
in the late 17th century,
was less of the result of real evident witchcraft and more of a way
to further push a narrative that deemed marginalized
communities as the bad guys who they essentially
just wanted out of their town.
So besides all this, a lot of people wanna know,
well, what really happened?
Like what actually was causing the young girls from Salem
to convulse so violently?
Were they seeking some kind of attention?
Was this part of some elaborate plan
for feuding families to blame each other?
Were they really even bewitched, possessed?
I mean, what was it, you know?
Historians have studied the Salem witch trials for years.
Recently, something quite interesting was discovered.
As the people of Salem frequently farmed rye and wheat as their main crops,
foods from the fields were consumed every day,
it's believed that around the late 17th century,
there may have been a fungus present in the fields.
So this fungus is a fungus known to grow on rye,
and when consumed causes ergotism in humans and other animals.
Ergotism symptoms include muscle spasms, fever, hallucinations, and the victims may appear dazed,
unable to speak, become manic, or have other forms of paralysis or tremors. Some of them may suffer
from hallucinations and other distorted perceptions.
But this ergot contains lysergic acid, which is used in LSD.
So some believe that maybe they were just tripping balls.
Maybe the crops had this fungus growing in there.
They were eating the food.
I mean, that kind of makes sense, right?
And then some believe that maybe it didn't even
occur at all, the convulsions and stuff like that. Maybe they were making it up as an excuse
to kind of get rid of some people, you know, like witches. Despite the fact that the last trial was
held in May of 1693, public response to the events continued over the years. In the decades following the trials,
survivors, family members, and their supporters
sought to establish the innocence of the individuals
who were convicted and to gain compensation
for the heinous executions.
In the following centuries,
the descendants of those unjustly accused and condemned
have sought to honor their memories.
Events in Salem in 1992 were used to commemorate the trials
and in November of 2001, yeah,
300th anniversary of the Salem witch trials,
the Massachusetts legislator passed an act
exonerating all who had been convicted
and named each of them innocent.
The Salem witch trials have gone down in history
as this horror story concerning witchcraft
in the late 17th century.
But more than that, the Salem Witch Trials served
as a large scale execution of marginalized communities
without any real evidence.
So moving forward, it's imperative that we look back
on events like the Salem Witch Trials of 1692
and see them for what they really were.
Moments in history are so often remembered,
but not necessarily in the way that they truly occurred.
And they tend to sugarcoat things.
When you think back, or at least when I think back
to like American history and whatnot,
they always sugarcoat things.
Like I really believe that the Salem Witch Trials
was about witches and just women being accused of being witches.
But once I started doing the research for today's video,
it was like, oh, everything stems back to like racism
and just weeding out people
who don't have the same beliefs as you.
So that my friends is the light version,
is the simplified version of the Salem witch trials.
I so wish I could time travel.
I would love to go back and see what really went down.
I feel like with history, I, this is completely side note,
I love history, which is weird
because I was a D minus student,
but the older I get, the more fascinated I am by history.
And it's just, you realize that like everything
was pretty much a lie that we've been told.
I don't know how it is now,
but we were told a lot of lies, okay?
Yeah, I would just love to time travel
and just be a fly on the wall
and just like, just see like what really happened.
Maybe it was innocent.
Maybe they really did think they were witches.
I'm not holding my breath, but it could be a possibility.
Anyways, thank you guys so much
for hanging out with me today.
I love and appreciate you so much.
I hope you have a wonderful rest of your day. You make good choices and I'll be seeing you guys later, bye!
I'm gonna go count some blessings, wish you were beer.
