Stuff You Should Know - Salem Witchcraft Trials: More Bonkers Than You Know
Episode Date: October 26, 2021Looking back 300 years on, it’s easy to overgeneralize why the Salem Villagers decided to persecute (and execute) their neighbors. But as much as this story has become an American history chestnut, ...we still don’t understand why Salem lost its mind. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than any of us want to
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart Radio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark. There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant over there.
There's Jerry over here lurking around like a bit of a ghoul because it is the Halloween season
after all and this is Stuff You Should Know. That's right. Spooky witch trials. Yeah, yeah.
It is. It's really nice to like have stuff like this that you can be removed from by a few hundred
years and you know it just kind of evokes that Halloween spirit or whatever. But Chuck, I have
found just in recently researching this, if you put yourself into the position of people who are
like walking to the gallows and like think about how nuts all this was, it is exponentially scarier
on a much more existential level. It goes beyond like Halloween spooky too. This was a genuinely
frightening event in the history of America. No kidding. I mean like it was messed up in
every way, shape or form. So I take it you never read The Crucible. I did read The Crucible but
I read it in the context. And that didn't do it? No, it really didn't because I don't know if it was
me. Maybe I wasn't mentally or emotionally prepared to accept it on that level. Who knows? But no, it
was like imagining myself in the shoes of the people who were going to die that got me researching
this. Wow. Yeah, yeah. That's dark. No shade though on Arthur Miller. He was great and his
play was great and it was very timely for the time. Yeah, I mean like you know there have been so many
kind of movie adaptations and TV movie adaptations about this time and I'm still waiting for sort of
the one great one that's not The Crucible. Well, I think part of the reason why there
hasn't been that great one yet is because historians are still like actively competing at
explaining just what exactly happened in Salem. It's such an anomaly. Even among like Puritans,
even among people who believe there was such a thing as witchcraft and even executed witches,
this was a genuine anomaly, at least as far as American history goes. And I think because they
don't understand it fully, it's difficult to really get the point across as well, you know?
I don't know, man. I think you could make a great movie. Like look at the witch that danced around
it so well. Like you just need a movie like that but based on this. Well, why don't we just say the
witch then is all we need? Well, because it wasn't about the Salem witch trials. But I mean it was
so analogous to it and took place at the same time. You know, I mean just pretend like there's a
trial scene that they cut out. Okay. And there actually is, remember? A lot of other people.
They drag the father into court basically and excommunicate him. So there is almost
like a witch trial scene right there. Yeah, that's true. I've heard about that for 60 seconds.
The witch is the Salem witch trial movie we've always needed.
That's right. So I'm glad we resolved that. You must feel very satisfied now.
Yeah, I completely disagree but I'm just moving on.
So everybody knows about the Salem witch trials, right? But I think because, you know,
we learn about it in American history. You hear about it as Halloween stories,
all of that kind of stuff. But like I said, I mean, we really genuinely don't understand what
happened. And that's despite the fact that it is really well documented because a lot of the stuff
took place in the courts and they wrote a lot of stuff down. But we only have like official primary
documents that were written by people who were aware that these were public documents,
rather than say a trove of private journals and letters. The Puritans didn't do that that much.
And so we don't have like kind of the underneath the official line explanation for what happened.
Well, yeah. And if people are confused by what we mean there, you know, there were other witch
trials in other places in the young America. There were other witch trials in centuries previous
in other countries. And there were mild panics and stuff. But Salem like collectively lost their
mind for a short period of time. And that's what people still don't get. They're like, why did
that happen only there to this scope and this degree? And, you know, people have looked at
various biological reasons and things like that. But I don't know. I think it was just
sort of one of those weird things that could only happen like at one place in one time.
Yeah, exactly. And there was actually a guy who wrote a book in 1982 named John Demos.
And he said, not only can it happen like under these very specific circumstances,
here are the circumstances that could happen. And his book wasn't just about Salem. It mentioned
Salem, but it was about like witchcraft trials and panics and accusations in New England in
general. And he basically said that when a town starts out really small and it's like a colonial
town, they're living like on the razor's edge of existence. A lot of them don't really know each
other. They're dying. So there's a big population turnover as newcomers come in. And there's just
not enough familiarity to say, I think you're a witch to accuse your neighbor or something like that.
But then after they settle in a little while and maybe there's like some boredom and everybody
gets to know each other and you have grudges, but you're still living in a really small area,
that's when the witchcraft accusations can really take place. And Salem seems to have kind of followed
that pattern too, that these witchcraft accusations like really took hold at a time where the colony
was under tons of stress. People knew each other, had had decades long rivalries and land disputes,
and they lived still in a very small little village. And they were basically crawling all over one
another and saw one another and you could not get away from people you didn't like.
Yeah. And this is especially true in Salem. There was Salem Village in Salem Town.
And like you said, they were stacked on each other and there were a lot of like,
hey, your cowl can't graze over this imaginary line because that's my land. And you're not even
allowed to build a fence over there. Like kind of common land disputes that have happened throughout
history. But in Salem, they were described as very quarrelsome people. They fought and argued
a lot, kind of more so than it seems like even other Puritans in other parts of the country.
Yeah. And the Puritans in general were deeply litigious. They took each other to court at the
drop of a hat, at the drop of a hat with a belt buckle on it. But they had like the way that
they supported that, that kind of litigiousness was to say, most of the courts would be like,
you need to go handle this privately. And then this kind of secondary mediation kind of thing
would come in and there'd be negotiations and then the dispute would be resolved. But the
first thing that they would do is drag one another into court. That was how they would get one
another's attention. Yeah. And so this is sort of the backdrop of what's going on in the Massachusetts
Bay Colony and particularly in Salem Village in Salem Town, which I think, I think Salem Village
today is Danvers. That's right. And then Salem Town is Salem. That's right. Still around and
still has spooky connotations. Yeah. And Danvers is where the state asylum was located. That was the
setting for one of the greatest horror films of all time, session nine. Oh, that's right. Oh man,
that's a movie. I don't even know if I want to see it again. It's so good. I saw it a year or two
ago and it's still just as good. It's great. All right. So the Puritans were in control. I guess
the back backdrop of this was there were full on, you know, human holocausts in Europe in the 16th
and 17th centuries with their witch crazes and things got really out of hand over there. But
by the time folks got to be here, they were mainly just arguing a lot. And there were, you know,
there was a small witch panic in Connecticut, not small if you were one of the people accused,
but it didn't quite get out of hand, certainly not like it did in Europe in centuries previous.
Yeah. And I saw an explanation. I want to give a shout out to a couple of sites, but one I got a
lot of info from is called the historic present. And they were pointing out that like, for the most
part, yes, people generally agreed that there were such things as witches. And yes, you would accuse
your neighbor of witchcraft, but it was kind of like, it was a way of like getting your neighbors
attention like, I'm serious about this. I'm publicly accusing you of being a witch. Let's
talk about your cow grazing on my land. Yeah. You know? And that was another thing that made
Salem so anomalous is it just kept going and going through these steps of like the court
in trial and then finally executions. And it just got out of hand basically.
Right. So the Puritans are in control in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. They've got an iron
fist on ruling. They don't like basically anybody who is not a Puritan. It seems like most of the
Puritans didn't even like each other, but they certainly didn't like Quakers. They didn't like
Catholics. And they did all they could to really establish themselves as the ones in charge and
did so well. Yeah. It depends on who you're talking about though. There were some Puritans who were
deeply conservative religious leaders like Increase Mather who wanted to just completely
secure 100% Puritan control. But there was also like a real thread through the Puritan leadership
that was willing to like give like voting rights and the ability to be elected into office
to non-Puritans who lived in town. And they had kind of a proto-democracy in a lot of ways.
So like the Puritans in general, yes, were deeply intolerant of Quakers and Catholics.
And they actually tortured Quakers who were unrepentant. But they also did have,
they weren't just like this, the band of like theocratic thugs that they're often painted as.
There's just more nuance to it than that. But yes, there were plenty who were like,
no, we just need total Puritanical control over this whole colony.
Yeah. And, you know, as we'll see once the witch trials were conducted, you know,
I said that Salem collectively lost their mind, sort of true in a way and that a lot of people
in power and the decision makers did, but there were still people, even while it was going on,
it wasn't like 100% of the town was behind this or a lot of people. And I guess they were probably
some of those reasonable people, you know, that you were talking about that were like,
you know, what we're doing, is it right? I don't think they really spoke up too vocally.
But they were like, what is going on here? This is getting out of hand and kind of crazy.
Yeah. I mean, it was such a dangerous situation where it was one of those kind of fascist
situations where people who did dare to speak out against this and say, this is crazy, this is wrong,
or even to like testify on behalf of somebody who is accused, you were putting your own life
at risk. Like there was a possibility you would be accused of witchcraft and then tried and then
executed. It was that kind of a situation, even with people on the outside being knowing that
this is wrong, it was just such an inevitable machine that it was like people just stayed
out of its way for a little while. All right. I think that is a healthy preamble. Okay. The
foundation is laid. I think we should take a break. Okay. And come back, talk about those
Mather boys right after this. I concur.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. The
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I'm Mangesh Atikular. And to be honest, I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment I was
born, it's been a part of my life. In India, it's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're
going to get secondhand astrology. And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been
trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention. Because maybe there is magic in the stars,
if you're willing to look for it. So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you,
it got weird fast. Tantric curses, major league baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop. But
just when I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology,
my whole world came crashing down. Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father.
And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
I think your ideas are going to change, too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the I Heart Radio
app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. Okay, Chuck. So you want to talk
some Mathers? I'll talk about some Mathers. That's the beaver. He's still around, I believe,
by the way. He still looks like the beaver. He's one of those guys that stayed the same,
huh? Yeah. I think it doesn't help that he dresses the same still, too. But you can recognize him
even in a tux, I'm guessing. So you can't talk about the Salem Witch Trials without talking
about the Mathers. I'm talking about the Elder Mather, whose name was Increase, love these
Puritan names. And the Younger Mather, Cotton Mather. He was the son, son of a Mather. So
Increase Mather, he was, like you said, he was sort of the staunch Puritan who was in a position
of power. He was working to establish a charter that would basically give the Puritans all the power.
He was also a believer. And because I mentioned the European Witch Trials, this is sort of the
background that allowed people like Increase Mather and Cotton Mather to really legitimately believe
that demons were real and Satan could overtake and possess someone and that there were real witches.
I mean, that was just generally the Puritanical worldview, but some people were much more
preoccupied with it than others. And the Mathers were both deeply preoccupied with this kind of
thing. And Increase Mather gets a lot of the blame for this and rightfully so. But there's a lot of
lesser known people who actually were way more villainous during this and really took advantage
of this crazy situation and really just didn't care about the lives of innocent people.
But he was not good in that he helped fan the flames of this initially big time.
That's right. So should we, I mean, we'll get a little bit more into the Mathers as we go.
Cotton was certainly one of the villains of the Trials. And they were both writing books about
supernatural things. So this was all sort of the foundation that was laid when the first two people
were accused in what? January of 1692.
Yeah. So to start, there were two girls ages 9-11. There was Betty Parris, Elizabeth Parris was
her name, and Abigail Williams. And they basically started barking and convulsing and just behaving
really bizarrely and strangely and would not stop. And so Samuel Parris, who was the head of the
Salem Village Church, it was actually a pretty divisive figure apparently,
he brought in a doctor and the doctor proclaimed this to be a bewitchment, that these girls were
bewitched. And that's ultimately what kicked the whole thing off. And a lot of people have tried
to figure out like, what initially started that? Because just about everybody who has a theory
about this immediately converts to mass hysteria. But you still have that first case of Abigail
Williams and or Elizabeth Parris to explain. And apparently it was like really prolonged stuff.
They were vomiting, they were doing stuff beyond just behaving weirdly. They seemed to be physically
afflicted. And that's another thing too that I think theories that say like, it was all just a
hoax that these girls perpetrated, that doesn't understand like just how long these girls carried
out this stuff. And I think it kind of ignores the fact that there are also like, the Puritans
weren't dumb people. They were deeply religious. They believed in witches and Satan having a hand
on things here on earth. But they also were very smart, very practical. And they would have seen
right through a couple of girls just planning a hoax or carrying out a hoax. So there has to be
something there at the beginning that no one has ever fully explained that kicked this whole thing
off. Yeah. I mean, it's hard not to become a little obsessed with some sort of biological root.
I know ergot poisoning has been mentioned. I saw encephalitis. Oh, I saw that one too. That was
interesting. Yeah. And just some other like possible reasons of like, maybe something physically was
wrong with them while they also happened to be goofing around with folk magic and stuff like
that. Yeah. Not a good combination to like get sick while you're being a kid and playing around
was essentially what they were doing. Yeah. But I mean, if you think about the fact that the adults
were like, okay, this is significant enough that we're going to start looking around for the witches.
And the girls started accusing people too. It does seem like there was something going on with
at least one of them. And then yes, it started to spread probably through mass hysteria to other
girls in the village. It kind of makes when you read the sort of timeline account, I feel like
if that original doctor hadn't said the word witch, it could have gone in a completely different
direction. Yeah. He should have just been like, it's anti-NMDAR encephalitis dummies.
In autoimmune disease that will only begin to grasp in the 2020s.
And everyone would say, you're a witch. Right. He just used some crazy words, doc.
So the doctor has breathed the word witch. The girls are like, they're like, hey, what's going
on with you? And they said, you know, it's Tituba. It is my father's slave, Tituba. And it's her fault
and she's a witch. And so they, like you said, they started accusing and they started with her.
They started with her. And then they very quickly moved on to Sarah Good and Sarah Osborne. And
by doing that, by accusing those two women or actually with Tituba as well, all three of them.
Is it Tituba? I've always heard Tituba, but I've heard, I think I've heard Tituba before too.
It sounds, Tituba sounds more right. Okay. So by accusing those three women,
they were following, Abigail and Elizabeth were following like a well established tradition
of focusing on older women on the margins of society as witches.
Right.
Tituba was easy to accuse because she was a foreigner. She was brought to the colony
as a slave and she worked as a slave in the Paris's house. So who knows what she was into
before, you know, she came over to Massachusetts, I guess was the thinking of the Puritans.
But then also Sarah Good and Sarah Osborne, they were like older women who were poor,
lived on the fringe of society. And like that is who you accused of being a witch typically.
So at first this witch panic kind of followed the standard witch accusations that had been,
you know, spread around New England before. But what made it different is that it just
started to pick up steam more and more because more and more girls and people around the
colony or around the village, I'm sorry, started to suffer bewitchment and started
accusing one another of bewitching them. Yeah. If you were a person for sure a woman, but
a man or a woman who, like you said, was about middle aged and, you know, you were over there
kind of doing your own thing a little bit and maybe just kept to yourself. Maybe you didn't
like hanging out in the village as much as the rest of the villagers did. You marched to the
beat of your own drum. You had a target on your back basically. Right. Yeah. And also apparently
one of the things that they were well known for, these people who were accused of witches, would
be like, like they needed things from their neighbors. So they would extract them by threatening
to curse them. So they would actually use like witchy threats. They were probably also into
folk magic. So there was like, it wasn't just completely baseless other than the fact that
like witches in that kind of puritanical conception don't exist. But it wasn't just totally out of
the blue. Like they still, like if you, a modern person saw the person that they were originally,
that they traditionally accused of being witches, you'd be like, oh my gosh, a real life witch.
There's one right there. It would fit the bill for you. You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, for sure. So, you know, these accusations start flying around. They start mounting.
The jails start filling up. The conditions in the jail were not good. It got so crazy early on.
And this is sort of the first part, this before the like trials and hangings and everything.
This is when you were just like jailed and shackled and then charged for your shackles,
I guess, like a rental fee. But they arrested a four-year-old named Dorothy Good. And she was
eventually released, but a four-year-old. Like it's crazy. Me as a father, having gone through life
with a four-year-old, that you could accuse a four-year-old of being anything other than a
four-year-old. Right, exactly. But she wasn't. She was held for months. I think she was arrested
in March and released in May. And like this wasn't like a pleasant December. Oh my goodness. Okay,
so she was there for almost a year, just under a year, for the intents and purposes of exaggerating
just how bad this was. She was in there for basically a year. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. Sarah Osgood
died in jail, right? She died in jail. Yeah, this is the thing. Like these jails were like dirt floors.
You were chained like you're saying. Like it was just a place where like a life could just be lost
way too easily. So to keep a four-year-old in there for almost a year is just horrible. There
was a woman who gave birth in jail and they just left her infant daughter in there with her. So
the infant didn't survive. She died in jail just from being born in jail, somebody who was accused
of being witches. And this was before the trials had even started, Chuck. Like this was just the
initial phase of the panic, which was accusation, accusation, accusation. And then suddenly the
jails were overflowing with more than a hundred people who were accused of being witches. And
the court was totally backed up when increased Mather and the new governor that he was coming back
with William Phipps, who'd he'd gotten appointed, showed back up in Salem and were like, what is
going on here? And they had a choice, Chuck. They could have been like, have you all lost your mind?
What are you doing? Stop this right now. Let all these people out. They didn't go that route. They
went the exact opposite route. At that moment when they decided which way to go, they chose
incorrectly, basically. Yeah. And it was also a pretty bad time. It was kind of the, what's the
word? Conflagration. Man, you nailed it. And it sounded so confident. Confident? It was a
configuration of a bunch of things happening politically and legally. It was a very bad time
because by the time the trials rolled around, they eventually got this new charter. But previous to
that, they were, the charter of the colony was temporarily suspended. Right. And a new charter
did arrive in May of 1692 in the hands of the elder Mather. But it was brand new. And the court
didn't create laws. They didn't have time to create any new laws that is. So they basically said,
all right, we need to, we got all these people in jail. We need to quickly establish a special
court for this. And we'll call it the court of Euler and Terminer to hear and determine. And
we're going to get this, these people out of jail or kill them so they're no longer in jail,
but they're getting out one way or another. Right. So there, Ed helps us out with this. We
should say we failed to mention so far. But he points out that William Phipps, the new governor,
possibly went along with this idea of creating a new court to get rid of this backlog of
witchcraft accusations, to get these people out of jail, to get this over and done with.
And that may have happened, actually. But he was very much focused on dealing with the constant
threat that the colonists lived under of being attacked by Native Americans, King Philip's war,
King Philip being the guy that Punks Tawny Phil was named after, that I got way,
way wrong in our Groundhog episode. That had just ended. There was another war that included the
French and the Native Americans to the North sweeping down all the way into Massachusetts and
staging raids. So they've lived under like constant threat of death, which definitely
didn't help their mindset during the witchcraft panic. But that's what Phipps was worried about.
That's what he was working on. So he threw the job of seeing this court through to his
Lieutenant Governor, a guy named, what was his name? William, what?
William Stoughton.
William Stoughton, I mentioned like some of the lesser known people who were actually villains.
This guy was a bad, bad man. And he made a decision that changed the course of everything.
I think Phipps's initial idea that this would have just moved the backlogs out and freed
everybody from jail would have come true. Had it not been for Stoughton, and Stoughton's radical
decision to include what's called spectral evidence, that changed everything. That is what
led to people being executed. Yeah. So before we get into spectral evidence,
I just wanted to point out that William Stoughton was such a bad guy, they named a town after him
and they named a college dorm at Harvard after him.
I believe, well, increased matter was the Harvard president for a while too.
So yeah, Stoughton went to Harvard, but I think it's still, one of the dorms is still Stoughton.
And I think Stoughton Mass is most well known now for having an Ikea.
Wow. It's quite a claim to fame.
So yeah, spectral evidence. Let's talk about this because this changed everything.
There were different kinds of evidence that would be accepted in these courts.
One was the spectral, which we'll talk about. One was confession,
two eyewitness testimonies. And then there were, we won't get really into all the tests,
but there are all kinds of different tests, including the, you know, does she float? Can she
swim from Monty Python, the Holy Grail? I think they were still doing some of that.
There was the witch's teat, which was, it's basically if they found a mole on a woman,
they would call it a witch's teat, which was supposedly a third nipple used to feed her
animal familiar. That's what my dad always told me. My moles were when I was growing.
Witch's teats. Yeah. He was dead serious too. So there were certain tests and all,
but spectral evidence was the big one because this was basically, you could kind of make up
anything. And you could be in court and say, as an accuser and say, this person is being,
has been possessed or their possessor is in the courtroom right now. Your honor,
this ghost, this specter is sitting on your lap right now. You just can't see it. And it's,
and it would freak people out. There was nothing you could really say to defend it because it was
made up to begin with. Right. And supposedly Cotton Mather said it should be used more sparingly.
Like at the end of the day, he was like, it's enough to indict, but not to convict.
Oh, really? Was that cotton or increase? That was cotton, supposedly. Okay. And then
in the end, I think they verified that nobody was convicted solely on the basis of spectral
evidence. Oh, okay. Okay. Well, then my hypothesis is kind of out the window that none of these
people would have been executed without it. Well, it was, you know, if you need two out of three
things and that's one of them, then you're right, you know? One of the other things, one of the
more practical problems that spectral evidence presented for somebody accused of witchcraft is
that it destroyed any alibi you had. Like your neighbor could be like, no, he couldn't have been
bewitching this person. He was out working with me in the fields all day. They could say, no,
no, it was a spirit. He sent his spirit to bewitch this poor person who's accusing him.
And then boop, there goes your alibi. So it was like you said, you just can't defend yourself
against that kind of thing. And that was like the level of stuff that they were, that they were,
that was how they were accusing people. There was one guy I read about, Philip English, who will
come up again later. He was accused of witchcraft by somebody who said that they got a nose bleed
while they were discussing a lawsuit they had against Philip English to with somebody else
so that it must be that Philip English had bewitched them. Like this was the kind of accusations
that they were making against one another and they were holding up in court. That is something that
you cannot look past. It's so easy to look back 300 years and be like, yeah, this whole collective
group lost their mind. No, there were plenty of people who did lose their mind, but the people
who were supposed to be in charge, the people who were in a position to put a stop to this
actually allowed it. In some cases, fan the flames of it even further. That was the true
breakdown at the Salem witchcraft trials. The grownups did not step in and halt it before it
got out of hand. Yeah, another thing that someone might do if you had a pet that you really liked,
not good. They could say that, well, no, no, no, they have an animal familiar. It could be anything
like take Black Philip from the witch. I mean, that's taken kind of straight from this time period.
Sure. But if you had a pet that you enjoyed hanging out with, they could accuse you of having a
familiar. If they found a folk magic or folktale book in your library, that could be evidence.
And that was pretty common too. I mean, like these people didn't have, you know, local hospitals to
go to to heal themselves. Or anything that any, like you said, with the nosebleed or whatever,
anything bad that happened to you, if your crop failed, or if one of your cows died,
you could say it was my neighbor and they're a witch and they put a hex on me.
Right. So they established, okay, we can use spectral evidence and we're going to use spectral
evidence. And this court of Euler and Terminer got, it was established, I think they held their
first trial on June 2nd and they were profoundly efficient at, at convicting and killing people.
Bridget Bishop was the first person hanged and she was hanged on June 10th,
just over a week after the first trials began. And that kicked off like this new phase where
this, this idea to like clear the, the jails of the accused was actually now
diverting them to the gallows and for being witches. We can't forget that either. Like for
being witches, even though witches in this conception don't exist. Yeah. And I think
it's that efficiency and the speed that all this happened was a big part of it because it was,
the train was moving so fast that once people, the more level headed people of the town realize
what was going on, like, wait a minute, we're actually hanging people for this. Certain people
started to come forward and say, no, no, no, I'm recanting my confession or let me stand up for
someone's good character. But it happened so quickly that, you know, before you know it,
there's, you know, a couple of dozen people have died. Yeah. And like people got wrapped up in it
too. Like there's the case of Giles Corey, I believe. Oh man. He testified against his wife.
And then later he recanted it. And after he recanted it, the Puritans apparently viewed
perjury so suspiciously that that was enough to get him accused of witchcraft and he ended
up paying for his life with, which we'll talk about a little more later. But like he testified
against his wife. And to this day, historians are like, we have no idea why Giles Corey testified
against his wife. He didn't seem to have a grudge. They seem to have a fine marriage, whatever.
Like, it just doesn't make sense. The only way that you can explain that, at least from my perspective,
is that it was, like you said, just this thing that people got whipped up in. And it just happened
so fast that it was just easy to lose yourself into that degree. I mean, the whole thing happened
over the course of what, four to six months? Yeah, I think the first things were in January,
but yeah, the first trials were June 2nd. And they ultimately, I think, stopped the following
like winter. So yeah, I mean, it was not a very long, prolonged thing, but it was just like this
weird orgy of mind loss and death, you know? Oh man. That sounds like some kind of album
descriptor. Fiona Apple. Album title. The other weird thing about this was that
the social order was completely knocked out of whack. The Puritans, if there's one thing they
didn't like, it was hearing from children about anything. Kids were just, they were meant to
work and to shut up, basically, and do what they were told. And kind of like full stop.
And you had a situation here where children, young girls, were accusing these middle-aged men and
women of witchery. And it worked. Like, people listened to them and people were hanged because
these kids were speaking up at a time when kids were barely allowed to even, you know,
have any agency or speak. Yeah. Which is another thing that perplexes historians,
because they're like, something happened. Like, there was something that was, that this
witch panic fulfilled. Maybe it was to let off steam from being constantly afraid of being
murdered by a Native American attack. Maybe it was living too close proximity,
too far away from where you called home. Like, who knows. But there was something about it that
was worth turning the social order on its head. And that was, that was just one example. There
are other examples of how the social order just totally broke down. And that was in how, who,
some of the people who were accused and executed were. Because it wasn't just the marginal women
who were your prototypical witches living, you know, on the outskirts of society who were accused.
That was just that first. It started to become extended to really surprising people like Rebecca
Nurse was maybe one of the most upstanding Puritan women that town, the colony had to offer.
And she was accused, tried and executed as a witch. And that I think really kind of opened
a lot of people's eyes in two ways. One, it was like, what is going on here? This could not be
the case. And then to other people is like, if Rebecca Nurse could be a witch, then anybody
could be a witch. And I think that was kind of the thread that the witch trial followed.
But it also is a, like a really good explainer about how just completely the society broke
down for these handful of months that anybody was, was at risk of being murdered by their fellow
townspeople for being a witch, no matter what kind of background you had. I'm picturing a,
I'm picturing a Puritan, like the only Puritan that actually went on vacation that summer.
And they come back, you know, they leave in early June, they come back in late September,
and they're like, so what's been going on everybody? Right. And then they, they,
they get the sight of what's going on. They drop their Mickey Mouse ears to the ground.
Oh boy. All right. Well, let's take another break and we'll come back and talk about sort of
the finality of this, how it ended, and a little bit more about Giles Corey's crazy, crazy story
right after this. Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new I Heart podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance
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All right. So in the end, I don't think they have the final, final number. I've seen 22.
I've seen 25. 19 people were hanged. Giles Corey, who we're going to talk about in a minute,
was pressed to death via torture. Five people died in prison. I think the number
sort of depends on what you count as like a fallout death and not a direct death.
Right. Like the one lady who couldn't repay. I think she just couldn't pay her debt to get
out of jail. So she died in jail. That's such a sad story. Yeah. Lydia Dustin, she was,
she outlived the witch trials. Like they had ended a few months before. And she had actually been
personally exonerated and yet she couldn't pay her shackle fees. So they just kept her in jail
and she ended up dying there in March of 1693, even though she was exonerated. I mean, that
certainly counts. Yeah, for sure. Yeah. Because she otherwise would not have been killed or died
had it not been being placed in jail after being accused of a witch for sure.
But they did this in mass hangings. It wasn't just like one at a time. There was a hanging on
July 19th, August 19th, and September 27th. After they died, they were stripped and put in
a big mass grave. Supposedly there are stories that families would come and get them out of the
mass grave at night, bury them in unknown, probably on parts of their land. And they tried
for many years to find out exactly where these hangings took place and they ended up at a place
called Proctor's Ledge. And I don't, I mean, there's a memorial there and people go there and
basically they treat that as though that is definitely the place. But I don't think they have
like hard, hard evidence other than just trying to like take eyewitness accounts in place where
they were, right? Yeah. Supposedly there was a study in 2016 that where they took those eyewitness
accounts, took into account what the people said they could or couldn't see in like the
background or whatever, and then plotted them. Right. And then figured out that most of these
points were standing in around the same place around that ledge where they think that, yes,
this happened. Yeah, but they never found like, and then underneath the ground they dug and
they found the gallows bowl. Right. No, they never found any physical evidence. So whatever.
So the story of Giles Corey, if you know the Crucible, you know it well. If you've seen
the movie, you know it. He is the man that was, was pressed to death. He was crushed basically.
Pressing is when they would lay you down, they would put boards on top of you and then just
start adding weight over the course of time, more and more weight until you eventually die.
I had heard this story before because supposedly Giles Corey said more weight because he refused to,
he was standing mute and he refused to, to say whether he was guilty or innocent. The one thing
I didn't know is that Giles Corey was 81 years old. Yeah, he was an old guy. He was like the old guy
from that Metallica video. That's what I always imagined Giles Corey to have looked like.
Man, what a story though. One thing standing mute would do would allow your estate to be
passed on to your heirs rather than being convicted where that wouldn't happen. But
I saw that this wasn't the reasoning behind him standing mute because most of his
stuff had already been taken and that he even wrote down that he was standing mute to protest
the sham proceedings. Yeah. So yeah, it sounds like just the way he's been kind of lionized by
history that that was his motivation for sure. Yeah. But you said something about how most of his
stuff had been taken. There's another villain in all this beyond Stoughton and the Mathers.
There was a guy named George Corwin and he was the sheriff of Essex County, which is where
this witch panic took place. And he was basically taking advantage of the fact that
a lot of people were suddenly way more vulnerable than they had been the year before, a few months
before. And so when he would arrest them and take them, he would also take possession of
their property officially, their stuff, their land, all that. And he and his deputies would
divvy it up. So he had every incentive to arrest as many people as possible and throw them in jail.
And he did that and he took a lot of people's land. And I guess he took Giles Corey's land
as well. And Giles Corey cursed the town and the sheriff as he died. And supposedly, George
Corwin, actually, I shouldn't say supposedly, George Corwin definitely did die less than three
years later, at age 30 of a heart attack. And there's a local legend that every Essex County
sheriff from Corwin onward either died or resigned while in office because of a heart condition.
I didn't have time to go look through the records of Essex County's sheriffs,
but I thought that was a pretty interesting local legend.
So this dude was in his 20s when he was doing this?
Yeah. He was in his mid to late 20s. And he was one of the worst of the worst.
And so there's one more story about when he died, that guy, Philip English that I mentioned before,
who was accused because of the guy getting the nose bleeding.
He was a very, very wealthy merchant in Salem town. And Corwin took his stuff,
like his land, a lot of his ships just took a lot of his stuff while English was on the run,
evading capture. And when English came back after the Salem witch trials were over and found what
Corwin had done, he tried to get his money back from Corwin, tried to get his money, his land,
his ships, all that stuff. And Corwin wouldn't give it to him. Well, Corwin dies of a heart attack
and Philip English placed a lien basically on this guy's body and said, you're not
burying him until I get paid back. The family was like, we're not listening to you. We're
going to go bury him. So Philip English hired a bunch of guys and they went out and stopped the
funeral procession, took possession of the body and held at hostage until Corwin's family paid
Philip English back for what Corwin had confiscated from him. And then Philip English gave them the
body to bury. Wow. Not a nice guy. Who, Philip English? No, no, no, Corwin. Okay, yeah, I was
going to say, I totally side with Philip English on that one. All right, so Corwin dies and the
sort of the long and short of his death was that it was sort of a final straw. And this is when
Phipps comes back in and says, you know what, things are getting really out of hand.
Increase Mather says, yeah, this spectral evidence thing is gotten way out of hand and it's probably
not real. And people started to sort of stand up more and more. And it was clear that Governor Phipps
had to kind of halt things. He said he did it under the context of, you know, this is a
contravention of English law. We can't do this. I'm dissolving the court of Euler and Terminer.
And I'm going to create a new court where we can't use spectral evidence. And what do you know?
In January and February of 1693, there were dozens of people released.
Grand juries weren't inditing people. They were found not guilty. He pardoned some. And by the
end of May that next year, the jails had no more quote unquote, witches. Right. Because they found
when you take away the spectral evidence, what you have for the most part is personal grudges,
land disputes, land grabs. People just trying to take advantage of this situation to get back
at somebody they don't like and haven't liked for a really long time. And that was-
What a weird, weird, scary time.
It was very scary. And I can't imagine like living during that time. Actually,
it's not true. I can't imagine it. But it was just basically another example of like
a time when a group of people became fascist together and people died as a result.
Yeah. And that, you know, the term witch hunt is still used. The crucible was written because
of McCarthyism. It's been thrown around a lot in recent years, maybe not as accurately, but it's
still a term for that reason. Yeah. I've got one little nice button to put on the end of this,
Chuck. There was at least one guy who was a judge in the court of lawyer and terminator named Samuel
Sewell. And within a year or two after the witch trials, he was standing in front of the Boston
congregation of Puritans having a petition read by the local reverend there asking for their
forgiveness and admitting that this was a huge, huge mistake and he regretted participating in it
and would they forgive him? And I believe they did. So the whole thing ended well.
You got anything else? I got nothing else. Man, if you want to go down a rabbit hole,
start researching the Salem witchcraft trials. You could do a lot worse than going to the historic
present, the New England Historical Society and the history of Massachusetts.org. Or just hit
Ed Grabinowski up. He'll tell you all about it. Go to Salem. Yeah, you could do that too.
Walk around and they're trying to take your money in all kinds of ways.
Yeah. Essex County Mass is one of the most beautiful places on earth, if you ask me.
Sure. Okay. Well, since I said that, it's time for Listener Mail.
I'm going to call this cool kid. I want to read emails from the cool kids. Hey guys, my dad introduced
me to your show when I was barely a teenager and I've been listening ever since. In that time,
my family has gone through a lot of changes and my dad and I haven't always been on the best terms.
I wanted to reach out, let you know that stuff you should know is the only thing
that we have consistently been able to talk about when we reconnect after being apart.
We can go months without seeing each other and I can just ask if you listen to your latest episode
to have something to talk about. That's cool. It helps keep things lighthearted and it's something
we feel like it's just for the two of us. Hope we can see you live and Austin soon. Furthermore,
this is mostly for Chuck. You are so much like my dad. It's actually freaky sometimes.
We always make jokes that you two would be best friends if you met in real life.
Your voices even sound a little bit the same. I'll be honest, sometimes it's comforting to
listen to y'all when I miss my dad. I've been meaning to send this email for a while just to
tell you guys how much you mean to me and my family. Thanks for being there for us. Also,
I don't know if my dad listens to the end of the episodes or just the factual content.
We'll find out. If he's listening this far in, tell him I said hi. Warm regards. CJ Kerbo
and says we come to Austin. They treat us to dinner at their favorite fried catfish seafood
restaurant. Nice. Very nice. That was very nice, CJ. What a great email and thank you very much
for the invite. We probably will be in Austin again sometime. It was. CJ, you should know
that we cut it out, but I accidentally said fried cat food. It was hilarious. Josh got a good laugh
out of it. Yeah, so thanks for that too. Yeah, you're welcome. If you want to be like CJ and
write a very nice email, we want to hear it. You can send it to us at stuffpodcast.ihartradio.com.
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Bye bye bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology
is way more widespread than any of us want to believe. You can find in major league baseball,
international banks, K-pop groups, even the White House. But just when I thought I had a handle on
this subject, something completely unbelievable happened to me and my whole view on astrology
changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, give me a few minutes because I think your ideas
are about to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.