John Indian was Reverend Parris's blackamoor (slave) also Tituba's husband.
John Indian was married to Tituba in the Salem witch trials. Tituba and John made the witch cakes for the dogs to eat and see if who ever urine was in the witch cake was a witch or not.
John Hathorne and Jonathon Corwin
ann rinaldi EDIT: The Salem Witch Trials is not an effin' book! They were a series of trials for witchcraft in 1692 Salem that condemned 19 innocent people. Ann Rinaldi has written fiction about the witch panic in Salem. Worthwhile books about the trials include: The Enemy Within by John Demos In the Devil's Snare by Mary Beth Norton Witch Hunt by Marc Aronson A Fever in Salem by Laurie Carlson.
No EDIT: Yes, he did. In his book that attacked the preceedings and biblical justification for the Trials.
Tituba and John Indian, Arawak slaves that Samuel Parries brought from Barbados when he went to Salem.
Most people did not. Two cases of people who did are known to exist. John Alden sailed to Plymouth and Duxbury, away from Esseex County and the trials. Mary Bradbury was smuggled out by people who did not believe the accusations.
John Proctor was accused and hanged during the Salem Witch Trials.
His great-great granfather was John Hathorne, judge in the Salem Witch Trials.
outside of Salem
In his mid-fifties
No. They don't have a connection. The Salem witch trials took place in Salem, Massachusetts in 1692-1693. The Bell Witch is Southern legend that is centered around John Bell and his family in Adams, Tennessee who came under the attach of a witch in 1817.
John Hathorne and Jonathon Corwin
One of his ancestors, John Hathorne, was a judge during the Salem Witch Trials so this connects him to the Salem Witch Trials and affects "The Scarlet Letter"
ann rinaldi EDIT: The Salem Witch Trials is not an effin' book! They were a series of trials for witchcraft in 1692 Salem that condemned 19 innocent people. Ann Rinaldi has written fiction about the witch panic in Salem. Worthwhile books about the trials include: The Enemy Within by John Demos In the Devil's Snare by Mary Beth Norton Witch Hunt by Marc Aronson A Fever in Salem by Laurie Carlson.
John Hale was a devout Christian and an expert in witchcraft.
He was between 50 and 52.
No EDIT: Yes, he did. In his book that attacked the preceedings and biblical justification for the Trials.
Tituba and John Indian, Arawak slaves that Samuel Parries brought from Barbados when he went to Salem.