What are 3 ways that Miller's play differs from the actual Salem witch trials?
== == * Betty Parris' mother was not dead, but very much alive at the time. She died in 1696, four years after the events.
* Soon after the legal proceedings began, Betty was shuttled off to live in Salem Town with Stephen Sewall's family. Stephen was the clerk of the Court, brother of Judge Samuel Sewall.
* The Parris family also included two other children -- an older brother, Thomas (b. 1681), and a younger sister, Susannah (b. 1687) -- not just Betty and her relative Abigail, who was probably born around 1681.
* Abigail Williams is often called Rev. Parris' "niece" but in fact there is no genealogical evidence to prove their familial relationship. She is sometimes in the original texts referred to as his "kinfolk" however.
* Miller admits in the introduction to the play that he boosted Abigail Williams' age to 17 even though the real girl was only 11, but he never mentions that John Proctor was 60 and Elizabeth, 41, was his third wife. Proctor was not a farmer but a tavern keeper. Living with them was their daughter aged 15, their son who was 17, and John's 33-year-old son from his first marriage. Everyone in the family was eventually accused of witchcraft. Elizabeth Proctor was indeed pregnant, during the trial, and did have a temporary stay of execution after convicted, which ultimately spared her life because it extended past the end of the period that the executions were taking place.
* The first two girls to become afflicted were Betty Parris and Abigail Williams, not Ann Putnam, and they had violent, physical fits, not a sleep that they could not wake from.
* There never was any wild dancing rite in the woods led by Tituba, and certainly Rev. Parris never stumbled upon them. Some of the local girls had attempted to divine the occupations of their future husbands with an egg in a glass -- crystal-ball style. Tituba and her husband, John Indian (absent in Miller's telling), were asked by a neighbor, Mary Sibley, to bake a special "witch cake," -- made of rye and the girls' urine, fed to a dog -- European white magic to ascertain who the witch was who was afflicting the girls.
* The Putnam's daughter was not named Ruth, but Ann, like her mother, probably changed by Miller so the audience wouldn't confuse the mother and the daughter. In reality, the mother was referred to as "Ann Putnam Senior" and the daughter as "Ann Putnam Junior."
* Ann/Ruth was not the only Putnam child out of eight to survive infancy. In 1692, the Putnams had six living children, Ann being the eldest, down to 1-year-old Timothy. Ann Putnam Sr. was pregnant during most of 1692. Ann Sr. and her sister, however did lose a fair number of infants, though certainly not all, and by comparison, the Nurse family lost remarkably few for the time.
* Rev. Parris claims to Giles Corey that he is a "graduate of Harvard" -- he did not in fact graduate from Harvard, although he had attended for a while and dropped out.
* The judges in The Crucible are Samuel Sewall, Thomas Danforth, and John Hathorne. The full panel of magistrates for the special Court of Oyer and Terminer were in fact named by the new charter, which arrived in Massachusetts on May 14, 1692 were William Stoughton, John Richards, Nathaniel Saltonstall, Wait Winthrop, Bartholomew Gedney, Samuel Sewall, John Hathorne, Jonathan Corwin and Peter Sergeant. Five of these eight had to be present to form a presiding bench, and at least one of those five had to be Stoughton, Richards, or Gedney. Thomas Danforth the Deputy Governor, joined the magistrates on occasion as the presiding magistrate.
* The events portrayed here were the examinations of the accused in Salem Village from March to April in the context of a special court of "Oyer and Terminer." These were not the actual trials, per se, which began later, in June 1692. The procedure was basically this: someone would bring a complaint to the authorities, and the authorities would decide if there was enough reason to send the sheriff or other law enforcement officer to arrest them. While this was happening, depositions -- statements people made on paper outside of court -- were taken and evidence gathered, typically against the accused. After evidence or charges were presented, and depositions sworn to before the court, the grand jury would decide whether to indict the person, and if so, on what charges. If indicted, the person's case would then go to a petit jury, or to "trial" something like we know it only much faster, to decide guilt or innocence. Guilt in a case of witchcraft in 1692 came with an automatic sentence of death by hanging, as per English law.
* Saltonstall was one of the original magistrates, but quit early on because of the reservations portrayed as attributed to Sewall's character in the play. Of the magistrates, only Sewall ever expressed public regret for his actions, asking in 1696 to have his minister, Rev. Samuel Willard, read a statement from the pulpit of this church to the congregation, accepting his share of the blame for the trials.
* Rebecca Nurse was hanged on July 19, John Proctor on August 19, and Martha Corey on September 22 -- not all on the same day on the same gallows. And the only person executed who recited the Lord's Prayer on the gallows was Rev. George Burroughs -- which caused quite a stir since it was generally believed at the time that a witch could not say the Lord's Prayer without making a mistake. They also would not have been hanged while praying, since the condemned were always allowed their last words and prayers.
* Reverend Hale would not have signed any "death warrants," as he claims to have signed 17 in the play. That was not for the clergy to do. Both existing death warrants are signed by William Stoughton.
* The elderly George Jacobs was not accused of sending his spirit in through the window to lie on the Putnam's daughter -- in fact, it was usually quite the opposite case: women such as Bridget Bishop were accused of sending their spirits into men's bedrooms to lie on them. In that period, women were perceived as the lusty, sexual creatures whose allure men must guard against!
* The hysteria did not die out "as more and more people refused to save themselves by giving false confessions," as the epilogue of the movie states. The opposite was true: more and more people gave false confessions to save themselves as it became apparent that confession could save one from the noose. What ended the trials was the intervention of Governor William Phips. Contrary to what Phips told the Crown in England, he was not off in Maine fighting the Indians in King William's War through that summer, since he attended governor's council meetings regularly that summer, which were also attended by the magistrates. But public opinion of the trials did take a turn. There were over two hundred people in prison when the general reprieve was given, but they were not released until they paid their prison fees. Neither did the tide turn when Abigail Williams accused Rev. Hale's wife, as the play claims -- although the "afflicted" did start accusing a lot more people far and wide to the point of absurdity, including various people around in other Massachusetts towns whom they had never laid eyes on, including notable people such as the famous hero Capt. John Alden (who escaped after being arrested).
* Abigail Williams probably couldn't have laid her hands on 31 pounds in Samuel Parris' house, to run away with John Proctor, when Parris' annual salary was contracted at 66 pounds, only a third of which was paid in money. The rest was to be paid in foodstuffs and other supplies, but he even then, he had continual disputes with the parishioners about supplying him with much-needed firewood they owed him.
* Certain key people in the real events appear nowhere in Miller's play: John Indian, Rev. Nicholas Noyes, Sarah Cloyce, and most notably, Cotton Mather.
* Giles Corey was not executed for refusing to name a witness, as portrayed in the movie. The play is accurate: he was accused of witchcraft, and refused to enter a plea, which held up the proceedings, since the law of the time required that the accused enter a plea. He was pressed to death with stones, but the method was used to try to force him to enter a plea so that his trial could proceed. Corey probably realized that if he was tried at all, he would be executed, and his children would be disinherited. (Interestingly, Miller wrote both the play and the screenplay... Who knows why he changed it to a less-accurate explanation for his punishment and execution?)
* "The afflicted" comprised not just a group of a dozen teenage girls -- there were men and adult women who were also "afflicted," including John Indian, Ann Putnam, Sr., and Sarah Bibber -- or anyone in Andover, where more people were accused than in Salem Village!
* There's a tiny scene in the movie with a goat getting into someone's garden and tempers flaring -- the actual history is that three years before the witchcraft accusations, a neighbor's pigs got into the Nurse family's fields, and Rebecca Nurse flew off the handle yelling at him about it. Soon thereafter, the neighbor had an apparent stroke and died within a few months. This was seen as evidence in 1692 of Rebecca Nurse's witchcraft.
What was the evidence used to convict the accused of Salem?
The afflicted believed to have seen the spectors of the accused and been tormented by them. Spectral Evidence is the girls' claims that the spectors harmed them that were heard in court. It's like witness testimony about ghosts.
What were the differences from the Salem witch trials to the Holocaust?
EDIT:
In Salem, the trials were caused by pure hysteria and panic and were legal precedings. The Holocaust was genocide and completely illegal everywhere but Nazi Germany.
I always have to make this point when comparing the two: During the Holocaust, people were killed for what they were and at Salem, that was in no way the case.
When did the witch trials start?
The Salem Witch Trials began on June 28th, 1692 and continued through October 29th 1692.
In January of 1692, the daughter and niece of a Reverend Samuel Parris began shouting obscenities and having convulsions. After examination by a physician, it was concluded that the girls were bewitched. The girls accused three women of witchcraft, and they were arrested. One of the women was a slave in the house of Rev. Parris. In the following months about seventy people were arrested for the crime of practicing witchcraft.
A court was convened June 28th at Salem, Massachusetts and twenty-six people where convicted and nineteen executed.
On October 29th Sir William Phips, Colonial Governor of Massachusetts, ordered the court at Salem dissolved, and sent all remaining cases to the state superior court. No one was convicted at the state level, and the court was adjourned in May 1693. About 150 people were tried through both courts.
What happened in the Salem witch trials?
Off the top of my head... When prominent people in the Salem community started being accused by those vicious little girls they sort of petered out. Wikipeadia has a good entry under "Salem Witch Trials" if you want more detail.
What caused the hysteria of the salem witch trials?
No. The trials have been linked by historians to the painful changes that Puritan society was experiencing at the time. Torn between the communal asceticism of their original goals and the commercial individualism that was starting to happen some responded with guilt and fear. They sought scapegoats that they could blame their moral loss. Salem Village had a history of bitter factionalism and resentment toward the more prosperous Salem Town which controlled the village politically. Many of the people chosen for trial were the outcasts and loners of the town/village. Many of the women were alone and had no male support.
When did Salem change its name?
Salem, Massachusetts was first named Salem in 1629. Before that, it was known as Naumkeag.
What was wrong with the girls accusing people of being witches during the Salem witch trials?
We don't really know. After the Trials, they lost any importance that they had so less records included. Abigail Williams vanished completely and Ann Putname apologized in aroun 1706 and died tenish years later.
How many witches burned at stake at Salem trials?
None. In the Puritan society, withcraft was a capital crime, and tied to others, and therefore punishable by hanging, not burning.
Who was the first victim of the Salem witch trails?
Executed for witchcraft by hanging were:
Bridget Bishop - June 10th, 1692
Rebecca Nurse - July 19th, 1692
Susannah Martin
Elizabeth Howe
Sarah Good
Sarah Wilds
George Jacobs Sr. - August 19th, 1692
Martha Carrier
George Burroughs
John Willard
John Proctor
Martha Cory - September 22nd, 1692
Margaret Scott
Mary Esty
Alice Parker
Ann Pudeator
Wilmott Redd
Samuel Wardell
Mary Parker
Died in Jail:
Sarah Osborne
Roger Toothaker
Ann Foster
Lydia Dastin
Died from torture:
Giles Cory - September 21st, 1692
(Giles Cory was pressed to death by having large rocks placed upon a board, upon his chest. His famous last words were, "More...Weight...)
What were Jacobean beliefs about witchcraft?
Jacobean beliefs about witchcraft were based on the Catholic Church's beliefs. They condemned witchcraft as evil and as of the devil.
How many men were executed during the Salem witch trials?
There were over 160 people accused of being involved in witchcraft - 19 were hanged and 1 was pressed to death. Also, there were five accused that died in the Salem Village jail (there may be as many as 13 more people who died in the Salem but the sources don't match, so no one knows), and there was one man who was crushed to death by having large stones pressed on him.
What religion was the Salem witch trials?
More women were accused of whitchcraft and making a pact with the devil in the witch trials. This is thought to be beleived because women were seen as inheriting the character flaw of Eve's original sin. Women were generally seen as lustful. They sat at different sides of the church from men and weren't aloud to speak. They were mostly of a Puritan sect in Salem. Puritans were against showy emotions, which women have been known to exhibit more due to estrogen. One way that one was thought to be a witch was strange behavior that included having fits. Two main young girls were involved in the first afflictions of witchcraft as well as the first accusations. Reverund Parris' 9 year old daughter, Betty Paris, and his neice, 11 year old Abigal Williams. They had been entertained along with a group of girls by Pariss' servand, Tituba. Tituba was from the West Indiea, Barbadoes. Tituba would tell the girls stories, performe fortuen telling, and horoscopes. All of these things were strictly forbidden by the puritans along with most any game playing and toys. These things took away from the Puritans strong work ethic. The girls accused Tituba and 2 other women of being witches and afflicting them. They accused one poor begger, and a women who had married her servant. Both were thought to be outcasts. In Puritan society, an outcast made for an easy target since differences were not tollerated. More accusations of women soured in and fewer of men. However, they began to accuse upstanding church going women which frieghtened anyone that they could be the next target. An infant girl even died while awaiting trial in prison. Women weren't involved in trying the cases, but they were spectators.
How many people were convicted and hanged during the salem witch trials?
19 were and they hanged, then they were later cleared of there crimes which they should have neer died for
What questions were accused people asked in the Salem trials?
Many questions were asked, but all of them assumed that the accused were guilty. Most often they were asked why they hurt the afflicted.
Who was the first person officially executed during the Salem witch trials?
Bridget Bishop, who was tried and convicted on June 2nd, 1692.
Who was the first women to be tried as a witch?
Since this question is in the Colonial America category, I will start with the First supposed Witch known in Colonial America. According to the Connecticut Judicial Branch Legal Library, "Alse Young (sometimes referred to as Achsah or Alice) of Windsor, Connecticut was the first person executed for *Witchcraft in America. Alse was hanged at Meeting House Square in Hartford on what is now the site of the Old State House." According to Wikipedia "Very little is recorded of Alse Young; her existence is only known through her reputation as a *Witch. She is believed to have been the wife of John Young, who bought a small parcel of land in Windsor in 1641, sold it in 1649, and then disappeared from the town records. She had a daughter, Alice Young Beamon, who would be accused of *Witchcraft in nearby Springfield, Massachusetts, some 30 years later." Whether or not Alse Young, was an actual Witch or merely an accused innocent person, is speculative. The first actual Witch to have ever existed, is unknown. Some people have theorized that Joan-of-arc was an early example of a "broom-closet" Witch in the Christian faith. But anthropologically speaking, some Witchcraft customs pre-date her by several centuries... so she could not have been the first, even if she was a Witch. *It is proper to capitolize the terms Witch, Witchcraft, when speaking of real Witchcraft customs (or the perception of what may have been real Witchcraft customs.) These sources left the terms non-capitolized.
How were Salem witch trials different to McCarthy trials?
they were similar because they both involved government sponsored persecution of innocent peoples using circumstantial, fabricated and fragmented evidence. they were both occurring in times of panic and mass hysteria, and lead to the destruction of hundreds of lives.
Who was the Salem minister during the Salem witch trail?
Salem Town: Nicholas Noyes
Salem Village: Samuel Parris
Beverly: John Hale
Boston: Cotton and Increase Mather
The sources of the witchcraft hysteria in Salem?
The witchcraft hysteria in Salem and other New England towns was a reflection of a the conflictions of gender in a community and its economic strains. Wealthy women were accused of witchcraft by poor women due to jealousy.
What would happen if you confessed to being a witch in a salem witch trials?
Sometimes but most of the time if you confessed you were spared. They did this so you could keep up accusations and this way the Salem witch craft trials continued.
Why did people die in prison during the Salem witch trials?
Giles Corey, September 19, 1692. According to legend, his last words were "More weight," as more stones were placed on him and he died.
Why does the Salem hysteria finally end?
in 1702 the general court of Massachusetts overturned the convictions for witchcraft and in 1711 they granted compensation to the relatives of the victims bringing the whole sorry episode ot an end
Why were people blamed for being witches in Salem?
During the Salem Witch Hunt and Trials, the Puritans were a very religious group, who actually believed in the supernatural, and took the idea of the Devil in the literal sense. Several teenaged girls were able to use this belief in the supernatural to convince the people of Salem that the village had been infiltrated by witches. Obviously not everyone believed the girls, however, people soon realized that the frenzy the girls had created made it possible to get rid of people they didn't like or envied. As a result, various people of the village were drawn into the hoax and executed prior to the realization that the entire episode was a lie..