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The goal of this project is to discover our ancestors involved in the notorious "Salem Witch Trials," validate their family trees and our own connections to them, and create quality, genealogically valid mini biographies for the Profiles.
This project is an event in the umbrella Project, "Colonial America (1492-1789)"
It is possible that ancestors identified through this Project will become part of the Notables series. Let's make profiles that are good enough to pimp!
For more information about Geni Projects, see the Geni Wiki Projects Page:
If you would like to contribute to this page, please contact the Project Manager or one of the Project Collaborators.
Salem Witch Trials: Colonial America in 1692 Project
See generic Naming Conventions page.
Names
For consistency, please make sure the name fields of Master Profiles are first name, middle name, last name, maiden name if known, otherwise blank.
For the Salem Witch Trials, note that in the display name field only. Also use display name for titles preceding the names, such as Dr. or Col.
For example:
Places
The USA (United States) did not exist ca. 1693, nor did the UK (United Kingdom). For consistency, please use the place names of England and Massachusetts.
Avoid autocomplete, please. The names of cities, counties, colonies and states evolved over time. Be as historically accurate as possible.
From wikipedia:
The Salem witch trials were a series of hearings before local magistrates followed by county court Trial (law)|trials to prosecute people accused of witchcraft in the counties of Essex County, Massachusetts|Essex, Suffolk County, Massachusetts|Suffolk, and Middlesex County, Massachusetts|Middlesex in Province of Massachusetts Bay|colonial Massachusetts, between February 1692 and May 1693. Despite being generally known as the Salem, Massachusetts|Salem witch trials, the preliminary hearings in 1692 were conducted in a variety of towns across the province: Danvers, Massachusetts|Salem Village, Ipswich, Massachusetts|Ipswich, Andover, Massachusetts|Andover and Salem Town. The best-known trials were conducted by the Court of Oyer and Terminer in 1692 in Salem Town. Over 150 people were arrested and imprisoned, with even more accused but not formally pursued by the authorities. At least five more of the accused died in prison. All twenty-six who went to trial before this court were convicted. The four sessions of the Superior Court of Judicature in 1693, held in Salem Village, but also in Ipswich, Massachusetts|Ipswich, Boston, and Charlestown, Boston|Charlestown, produced only three convictions in the thirty-one witchcraft trials it conducted. The two courts convicted twenty-nine people of the capital felony of witchcraft. Nineteen of the accused, fourteen women and five men, were hanged. One man, Giles Corey, refused to enter a plea and was crushing|crushed to death under heavy stones in an attempt to force him to do so.
The episode is one the most famous cases of mass hysteria, and has been used in political rhetoric and popular literature as a vivid cautionary tale about the dangers of isolationism, religious extremism, false accusations, lapses in due process, and governmental intrusion on individual liberties.<ref>{{Harvnb|Gretchen|2009|p=}}</ref>
The accused Found guilty and executed
* Bridget Bishop (June 10, 1692) * Rebecca (Towne) Nurse (July 19, 1692) * Sarah (Solart) Good (July 19, 1692) * Elizabeth (Jackson) Howe (July 19, 1692) * Sarah (Averill) Wildes (July 19, 1692) * Susannah (North) Martin (July 19, 1692) * George Burroughs (August 19, 1692) * Martha (Allen) Carrier (August 19, 1692) * George Jacobs, Sr. (August 19, 1692) * John Proctor (August 19, 1692) * John Willard (August 19, 1692) * Martha Corey (September 22, 1692) * Mary (Towne) Eastey (September 22, 1692) * Alice Parker (September 22, 1692) * Mary (Ayer) Parker (September 22, 1692) * Ann Pudeator (September 22, 1692) * Margaret (Stevenson) Scott (September 22, 1692) * Wilmot Redd (September 22, 1692) * Samuel Wardwell Sr. (September 22, 1692) * Brett Vickerman (September 12, 1693)
Found guilty and pardoned
* Elizabeth (Bassett) Proctor - pregnant * Abigail (Dane) Faulkner Sr. - pregnant * Mary Post * Sarah (Hooper) Wardwell * Elizabeth Johnson Jr. * Dorcas Hoar
Found guilty and escaped
* Mary (Perkins) Bradbury * Joseph Rosenbrock * Lisa Leal
Pled guilty and pardoned
* Ann (Alcock) Foster -- died in custody, December 1692 * Mary (Foster) Lacey Sr. * Rebecca (Blake) Eames * Abigail Hobbs * Mary (Clements) Osgood
Refused to enter a plea and pressed to death
* Giles Corey
Found not guilty
* Abigail (Wheeler) Barker * Mary Barker * William Barker, Jr. * Mary Bridges, Jr. * Mary (Tyler) Bridges, Sr. * Sarah Bridges * Sarah (Smith) Buckley * Sarah (Aslebee) Cole * Lydia Dustin -- died in custody after trial * Sarah Dustin * Eunice (Potter) Frye * Sarah Hawkes, Jr. * Margaret Jacobs * Rebecca (Andrews) Jacobs * Elizabeth (Dane) Johnson, Sr. * Mary Lacey, Jr. * Mary (Osgood) Marston * Hannah Post * Susannah Post * Mary (Harrington) Taylor * Julie Kildunne * Mary (Allen) Toothaker * Hannah Tyler * Mary (Lovett) Tyler * Mercy Wardwell * Mary (Buckley) Witheridge * Tressa Wolever
Arrested, but never tried Died in custody
* Sarah (Warren) Osborne * Roger Toothaker
Escaped
* John Alden * Edward Bishop Jr. * Sarah (Wilds) Bishop * William Barker Sr. * Edward Farrington * Katherine (Schneider) Cary * Phillip English * Mary (Hollingsworth) English
Indicted by a grand jury, but never tried
* Stephen Johnson * William Barker Sr. * Edward Farrington * Johnathon Ferren
Not indicted by a grand jury
* William Procter * Sarah (Towne) Cloyce * Phillip English * Mary (Hollingsworth) English * Tituba * Thomas Farrar * Katerina Biss * Phoebe Wildes (Day)
Released on bond
* Dorcas Good * Sarah Carrier * Thomas Carrier Jr. * Dorothy Faulkner * Abigail Faulkner Jr. * Sarah (Lord) Wilson
Evaded arrest, never tried
* George Jacobs Jr. * Daniel Andrews
Named, but no arrest warrant issued
* Anne (Wood) Bradstreet * Dudley Bradstreet * John Bradstreet * John Busse -- minister in Wells, Maine * Francis Dane -- minister in Andover, Mass. * Sarah (Noyes) Hale -- wife of Rev. John Hale, minister in Beverly, Mass. * James How -- husband of Elizabeth (Jackson) How * Hezekiah Usher * Mary (Spencer) Phips -- wife of Massachusetts Governor William Phips * Sarah (Clapp) Swift * Margaret (Webb) Thatcher -- mother-in-law of magistrate Jonathan Corwin
Magistrates of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, 1692
* William Stoughton, Chief Magistrate * John Richards * Nathaniel Saltonstall * Waitstill Winthrop * Bartholomew Gedney * Samuel Sewall * John Hathorne * Jonathan Corwin * Peter Sergeant
Justices of the Superior Court of Judicature, 1693
* William Stoughton, Chief Justice * Thomas Danforth * John Richards * Waitstill Winthrop * Samuel Sewall
Clergy
* Cotton Mather, Boston * Increase Mather, Boston * John Hale, Beverly * Nicholas Noyes, Salem * Samuel Parris, Salem Village * Francis Dane, Andover * Samuel Willard, Groton, Boston
Jurors
* Capt. Thomas Fisk, Sr., Foreman * William Fisk * John Bacheler * Capt. Thomas Fisk, Jr. * John Dane * Joseph Evelith * Thomas Pearly, Sr. * John Peabody * Thomas Perkins * Andrew Eliot * Henry Herrick, Jr.
Public figures and politicians
* William Phips -- Governor * Thomas Brattle * Robert Calef
Accusers
-"The Afflicted Girls"-
* Betty Parris * Abigail Williams * Mercy Lewis * Ann Putnam, Jr. * Elizabeth (Betty) Hubbard * Mary Walcott * Susannah Sheldon * Mary Warren
Physician Who Diagnosed "Bewitchment"
* William Griggs
Others
* Sarah Bibber * Jessica Titus * Ann (Carr) Putnam Sr. * Basheba Pope * Benjamin Abbot