Like all of the accusing girls of Salem, Betty's life after the trials fades into the unknown.
Betty Parris was one of the main accusers in the Salem witch trials. She was born in Salem, MA on November 28, 1682 and died in Salem on March 21, 1760.
Samuel Parris was a Puritan minister in Salem during the Salem witch trials. He was the father of one of the supposedly afflicted girls during the witch trials, and was the uncle of another.
Reverand Parris was the minister of Salem Village, He fed the hysteria, preaching that there was witchcraft, some say, to keep the people from firing him.
Elizabeth (Betty) Parris was nine years old when the witchcraft epidemic broke out in Salem, and she actively participated in its beginning.
He is an expert on witchcraft.
1700's
Betty Parris was one of the main accusers in the Salem witch trials. She was born in Salem, MA on November 28, 1682 and died in Salem on March 21, 1760.
Dr, Griggs was the physician who diagnosed Betty Parris as suffering from bewitchment in the 1692 Salem Witch Trials.
Betty Parris was the first to be afflicted and made the fewest accusations. It is clear to modern historians that even if the girls were lying, Betty had a legitimate illness that possibly gave the others the idea for their act.
Betty Parris, Abigail Williams, Elizabeth Hubbard, Ann Putnam.
The first accusations came from Betty Parris, Abigail Williams, Elizabeth Hubbard and Ann Putnam, four girls under 20 from Salem Village.
Samuel Parris was a Puritan minister in Salem during the Salem witch trials. He was the father of one of the supposedly afflicted girls during the witch trials, and was the uncle of another.
betty parris and Abigail Williams accused the ministers wife and then they found out that Abigail Williams and betty parris were lying so that they would be noticed because of the book that a guy wrote on witches they had every single thing that witches do to them happen to them
the person who accused a people
Two young girls started the whole thing through their strange behaviors: the daughter, Betty, and the niece, Abigail Williams, of the Salem Village minister, Reverend Samuel Parris. In saying "thought of", you suggest that the Salem trials are a work of fiction. They are in no way thought up.
Betty Parris, 9, and Abigail Williams, 11-12,
Betty Parris, 9, and Abigail Williams, 11-12,