No, none of them were killed. One of the girls eventually confessed that they all were just lying and that they were never controlled by any witches (this happened many years after the whole witch trials ended).
Hanging
Whole bunch of people and Villingers. the afflicted and the acused were the main people.
The Salem witchcraft trials were held in Salem, Massachusetts in 1692. 140 were accused, 20 were killed.
19 people were hanged in the Salem Witch Trials and 1 (an old man) was killed by "pressing" because he refused a trial.
Ann Putnam jr
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.
Hanging
Rev. Samuel Parris (1653-1720) was the Puritan minister in Salem Village, Massachusetts during the Salem witch trials, as well as the father to one of the afflicted girls, and uncle of another.
During the Salem Witch Trials in Salem Massachusetts in 1692, 19 were hanged, 1 was pressed to death and as many as 13 died in prison.
The convicted were executed by hanging.
Abigail Williams was an accuser during the Salem Witch Trials. There was gossip that Abigail was afflicted by witchcraft by a doctor.
Samuel Paris was the Puritan minister in Salem Village, Massachusetts during the Salem witch trials, as well as the father to one of the afflicted girls, and uncle of another.
Betty Parris, Abigail Williams, Elizabeth Hubbard, Ann Putnam.
Elizabeth Booth, Ann putnam, abigal wiliams,
Whole bunch of people and Villingers. the afflicted and the acused were the main people.
Abagail Williams was the 12ish niece of the Salem Village Reverand. She was the second person to became "afflicted." She had more voice in earlier the Trials. We lose track of her after the Trials end.
Nineteen people were hanged during the Salem witch trials.