Category: Salem Witch Trials Daily

  • Salem Witch Trials Daily Course Week 2: Salem Village Divided

    January 5-11, 2026

    Week 2 complete! This week explored the fractures that made Salem Village uniquely vulnerable to witch panic. We’re still building the context and examining the factors that will lead to the first arrests in February. You learned why this particular community, at this particular moment, became ground zero for America’s most notorious witch hunt.


    This Week’s Content

    Daily Videos (Salem Witch Trials Daily YouTube Playlist)

    • January 5: Salem Town, Salem Farms, and Salem Village
    • January 6: Rev. Samuel Parris in Salem Village
    • January 7: Religion in Massachusetts
    • January 8: Myths
    • January 9: Witches and the Diabolical Pact
    • January 10: Warfare
    • January 11: Massachusetts Economy

    Recommended Podcast Episode

    The Thing About Tituba: Explore Tituba’s story, the witch cake incident, and debunking myths


    Three Salems: Geography as Destiny

    Salem was more than one community in 1692. It was three distinct worlds existing in tension. Salem Town sat on the peninsula as a prosperous port where merchants grew wealthy from Atlantic trade. To the west stretched Salem Farms, agricultural land originally granted to colonial elites like Governor John Endicott. Further west lay Salem Village, where families struggled and desperately wanted independence.

    Those elite landholders didn’t stay to work the soil. They leased or sold their property, often in parcels. The families who moved in became the players in 1692. John Putnam’s son, Sergeant Thomas Putnam, settled there. Daniel Rea, Richard Hutchinson, and Bray Wilkins also settled there. John Proctor leased Emmanuel Downing’s land in 1666. Francis and Rebecca Nurse rented part of the Endicott farm in 1678. These families were building Salem Village, not knowing it would tear itself apart.

    As early as 1666, Salem Farms residents petitioned for their own minister. Salem Town refused. They also asked for exemption from night watch duties, and that request was also rejected. When Beverly successfully split off in 1668, it encouraged Salem Villagers to push harder. In 1669, when Salem Town raised taxes for a new meetinghouse, 28 farmers refused to pay for a building they would never use.

    The General Court finally allowed Salem Village to hire a minister in October 1672. But they could only form a parish, not a church. All sacraments still had to be performed in Salem Town. This half measure created lasting resentment.

    Joseph Hutchinson donated land for a meetinghouse, built in spring 1673. This structure would later host the witch examinations. What followed was twenty years of ministerial chaos. James Bayley served until 1679 when Bray Wilkins and Nathaniel Putnam forced him out. George Burroughs lasted from 1680 to 1683 before the committee stopped paying him. Deodat Lawson sparked such controversy that Joseph Hutchinson fenced in the meetinghouse in protest. Lawson left in 1688.

    Samuel Parris and the Breaking Point

    Samuel Parris, a failed Boston merchant formerly a plantation owner in Barbados, was invited to preach a  sermon in November 1688. After months of negotiations over his aggressive salary demands, he began preaching in July 1689. That October, at a meeting possibly organized by Putnams, villagers voted to give Parris the ownership of the parsonage and two acres. Only one objection was recorded, suggesting not all villagers knew about the meeting. This land transfer was disputed.

    On November 16, 1689, twenty-seven people joined Parris’s church. Twelve were Putnams. Four more were their allies. The factional nature was immediate.

    Then came the silent revolt. From March 30, 1690 to July 23, 1693, not a single man in Salem Village joined Parris’s church. In a Puritan society where male church membership was central, this collective refusal sent an unmistakable message. By December 1689, 38 families had not paid his salary. By early 1692, only 61 members had joined, 35 of them women. In a village of 500 people, about 400 had never been baptized or joined any church.

    In October 1691, Joseph Porter, Joseph Hutchinson, Daniel Andrew, Joseph Putnam, and Francis Nurse were all elected to the committee. They voted not to collect Parris’s salary. By November, Parris was out of firewood. Church members sued the committee. The committee planned to air grievances: his contract was illegal, he should not have the parsonage. This was Salem Village as 1692 began.

    Religion in Massachusetts

    When we think about religion in colonial Massachusetts, we think Puritans. While they did represent the majority, they were hardly the only Christian denomination in New England. If one looked hard enough, one could find Catholics, Quakers, Baptists, and Anglicans.

    Puritanism was born in England in the late 1500s. Puritans were Calvinists who wanted to remove all traces of Roman Catholicism from the Church of England. The term “Puritan” was a pejorative term used to deride the drive to purify the church. As Calvinists, Puritans believed in predestination, that God had predetermined who would go to heaven. Massachusetts Puritans were congregationalists. They believed local churches should make decisions about how to handle their own affairs, rather than having matters decided for them by a bishop or the Pope.

    Massachusetts was technically not a theocracy, as ministers were prohibited from holding civil offices. However, the Puritan ministers certainly had the ear of the government and were highly influential in legislative affairs.

    Early on, the Massachusetts Bay Colony was quick to banish, jail, or even execute non-Puritans or Puritans who were not sufficiently orthodox in their beliefs and practices. In 1635, Massachusetts banished Salem minister Roger Williams for unorthodox beliefs. In 1660, Massachusetts hanged four Quakers for promoting their faith. Mary Dyer was one of the unfortunate victims of this atrocity.

    In 1684, King Chalres II revoked the 1629 charter, which had given Puritan Massachusetts the license to be a mostly self-governed colony. Toleration came with the Dominion of New England in December 1686. Anglicans, Baptists, and even Quakers were allowed to worship freely in a move that threatened to lure good Puritans to heretical faiths.

    In 1691, King William granted a new charter to Massachusetts. This charter forced toleration to continue and removed the 1629 charter requirement that freemen be Puritans. Quakers, once banned from public life, could now vote for their own representatives to the Massachusetts legislature.

    By 1692, preachers like Cotton Mather feared backsliding by the third generation. They revered the founding generation, the ones who arrived in the 1620s and 1630s to establish the colony. They worried the newer generations did not have the faith of the founders.

    One thing that contributed to the fears of some ministers happened back in 1657, when an assembly of ministers from both Connecticut and Massachusetts met to talk about church membership. They recommended the Half-Way Covenant, which was slowly adopted by many Puritan congregations over the next several decades. When it was adopted by a church, the Half-Way Covenant allowed children whose parents had been baptized to themselves be baptized, whether or not their parents were full church members. By 1692, this measure had been adopted in Salem Town, but not in Samuel Parris’s Salem Village Church.

    Salem Village lagged behind in church membership. As we noted, when the witch panic began, only 61 residents had joined Reverend Parris at the Village Church. Some had retained their membership in churches of neighboring towns like Salem, Topsfield, and Beverly. But Dr. Emerson Baker estimates about 400 residents of the village of about 500 people had never been baptized or joined a church.

    Witch trials were not a uniquely Puritan project, and the Puritans were no more likely than other religious groups to execute people for witchcraft at this point in time. Virtually all Christians believed in witches and various Christian denominations led witch hunts in Europe. During the trials, the judges, some of whom occasionally preached, looked to the ministers for advice on how to proceed. Minister Cotton Mather counseled the judges to proceed with caution and be leery of spectral evidence, but to prosecute evildoers at a vigorous pace. On the other hand, Reverend Samuel Willard opposed the trials, published a tract against them in secret, and may have helped some of the accused escape. Ultimately, Cotton Mather’s father, Increase Mather, may have had the most ministerial influence on ending the trials, having published Cases of Conscience Concerning Evil Spirits Personating Men, which criticized the use of spectral evidence, in October 1692.

    Myths and Misconceptions

    Every possible explanation has been invented for the true cause of the Salem Witch Trials, overlooking the obvious one. This is just what witch hunts look like, and not like the myths and folklore that have been developed about the witchcraft panic.

    The accused were not witches. They were innocent, and they had not signed a contract with the devil. So far it has been 334 years since these witch trials and nobody has come up with the devil’s book that they talked about all the time. Another thing about the so-called witches is that they were not all old hags. That is a stereotype about what witches were, when in reality all ages of girls and women and boys and men were arrested.

    Using the word hysteria doesn’t describe what was happening and using that label minimizes the real human behavioral factors and decision making involved. They called it a delusion of Satan. Now we blame their minds, saying that they were all hysterical, that there was a mass hysteria. Really, they were just like us. They were simply people who were afraid, afraid for their safety and their children’s safety.

    There is no single magic bullet theory to explain the Salem Witch Trials. There were many factors.

    There were no neighbor land grabs. No accusers got the land of the people they were accusing. The afflicted people were not afflicted by ergot fungus or anything like LSD. They had a mysterious affliction that may have been psychological. It is most important to understand what was causing the behavior of the adults that were making the decisions to pursue these cases and hang people.

    In the colonial period, there was a believed distinction between demon possession and bewitchment. The words were not at all interchangeable. Bewitchment involved the belief that a human was attacking other people with diabolical witchcraft, and therefore that human had to be dealt with to stop the problem.

    The accused were hanged, not burned, because it was a felony, not heresy. Another thing about the accusations is that this was Puritans making accusations against other Puritans. This is mostly people who went to the meetinghouse together to worship services and turned on each other.

    Tituba was an enslaved woman in Samuel Parris’s household. She is not known to have practiced any magic, except the documented time she helped bake a witch cake under the instructions from an English neighbor, Mary Sibley. She did not even know how to do this She never taught kids magic. There was not a circle of girls that met in the woods.

    The Crucible is an important piece of literature because it introduces people to the witch trials. Unfortunately, it has a few factual errors. It was not intended to be a statement of fact.Abigail Williams was not a teenager as she is in the movie. She was actually 11 years old and she was not a maid for John Proctor. She  lived in the Samuel Parris household. John Proctor was not a 30-something man. He was actually in his sixties, There is no evidence at all of any kind of inappropriate relationship between 60-something John Proctor and 11-year-old Abigail Williams.

    Witches and the Diabolical Pact

    What was a witch to 17th century Massachusetts residents? A witch was a person who made a pact with the devil and received the ability to do harmful magic, witchcraft. They were believed to harm their neighbors and community with the help from the devil. In reality, no one accused of witchcraft had made a devil pact or done any harmful magic. They were all 100% innocent.

    It was believed that chaining witches would keep them from doing any harm, and people accused of witchcraft were actually charged fees for their own shackles. They even chained up 4-year-old Dorothy Good, making small shackles for her little wrists. But often the stories of spectral attacks from accused witches continued even after people were chained up in jail.

    The devil was mentioned right from the very start and all the way through the saga. They believed the devil was among them and witches were his servants, and the community viewed the alleged witches as traitors against God’s church. The satanic pact was mentioned at the beginning of the first court procedure of the witch hunt, the examination of Sarah Good. The first question was, “what evil spirit have you familiarity with?” The second question was, “have you made no contract with the devil?” The devil pact had originated centuries before in Europe, and by the 17th century, was widely believed by ministers across the continent and in the European colonies.

    The devil supposedly branded a new witch with a witch mark or teat from which a familiar would suckle. New witches went on to recruit more witches, and  it was said in the records that there were 700 witches in New England.

    The Devil’s book was also featured throughout the Salem Witch trials. It was first mentioned in Tituba’s second examination, the day after the contract was first brought up in Sarah Good’s examination. These encounters were described differently depending who was being questioned. Sometimes it seemed like they believed the book was physical, and other times it seemed to be a spectral event. A spectral witch would come and bring a spectral book that would be signed magically. Some people confessed to signing the book and having a friendly relationship with the devil, saying that they could even talk to him as easily as anybody else.

    According to testimony, many witches were baptized by Satan. Mary Lacey Sr. testified to witnessing the devil baptize six witches at Falls River, and other confessors claimed to have been baptized in the Shawshin River or at Newbury Falls. Some were even baptized in accused witch Martha Carrier’s well.

    During the Salem Witch trials, several accusers and confessors claimed to have witnessed or participated in witch meetings. These were sabbats, and they were described as mocking Christian worship services. They involved witches meeting with the devil and receiving a wicked communion of red bread and blood wine. The meetings were usually called to order by men, often Christian ministers like alleged witch George Burroughs, and they even had deacons to pass out the sacrament.

    There are several devil descriptions in the historical record, including calling him a man, referring to him as a black man, meaning a man with a dark countenance or dark hair. Sometimes, he was referred to as a tawny man, referring to Native Americans. He was also a horse, a dog, a hog, or another animal.

    Reverend Samuel Parris, in his very infamous sermon on March 27th, 1692, said, “our Lord Jesus Christ knows how many devils there are in his church and who they are. There are devils as well as saints in Christ’s church.” Of course, he was alluding to the people who had been accused of witchcraft, including people like Rebecca Nurse. Her sister, Sarah Cloyce, stormed out of the meetinghouse that day.

    Warfare and Economic Collapse

    One of the key factors that shaped the Salem Witch Trials was warfare, both in America and back in England. A vacuum created by lack of central leadership during the English Civil War enabled Matthew Hopkins to conduct witch trials in East Anglia. Hopkins, historically known as the Witchfinder General, a title he gave himself, operated primarily in Eastern England during the English Civil War, from 1645 to 1647. Along with his associate, John Stearne, Hopkins led a massive series of trials across seven counties that resulted in between 200 and 300 suspects being accused and possibly as many as 200 executions.

    This period serves as a direct historical mirror to the Salem Witch trials, as both events were fueled by a breakdown in central government and legal authority. Just as the Civil War disrupted English courts, Salem operated in a legal limbo following the revocation of the Massachusetts charter. Both societies were gripped by siege mentality caused by warfare and economic devastation. In these destabilized environments, communities turned on themselves, viewing neighbors as the enemy within, allied with the Devil. In both instances, the fervor eventually waned as the human and financial costs became too high to sustain.

    King Philip’s War was a conflict fought in New England between 1675 and 1678, pitting the English settlers against Native Americans. According to Professor Emerson Baker, “King Philip’s war ended the dream of collaboration between English settlers and Native Americans.” During this war, some 1,000 colonists died. However, the Native Americans were utterly decimated, losing an estimated 3,000 lives. In economic terms, this was New England’s costliest colonial war. Many towns had been completely destroyed, so the Massachusetts economy did not fully recover to pre-war levels until the 19th century.

    In 1692, another war was being waged in New England. Started in 1688, King William’s war was the North American front of a major European conflict called the Nine Years War. In New England and New France, the Wabanaki Confederacy sided with the French versus the English. This combined force was large and powerful, so it made for a difficult fight for Massachusetts. In this war, most of northern New England’s frontier settlements were destroyed, driving refugees south to Massachusetts. As the northernmost county in Massachusetts, the bulk of the refugee load was borne by Essex County, where Salem was, contributing to social tensions.

    Several of the afflicted people of the witch trials were refugees and had seen grisly violence, sometimes watching their own parents or other kin be killed before their very eyes. People’s connections to the colonial wars sometimes led to accusations during the Salem Witch trials. Individuals like Capt. John Alden were targeted because of rumors that they betrayed Massachusetts.


    Conclusion

    Week 2 reveals Salem Village as a community under siege from every direction. Geographic isolation bred resentment against Salem Town. Twenty years of ministerial turnover culminated in Samuel Parris, whose land grab split the village into warring factions. Wars devastated the economy and brought traumatized refugees south. Religious anxiety about the third generation’s faith collided with a mere 12% church membership rate. Meanwhile, 17th-century beliefs about the devil’s book, spectral witches, and satanic baptisms provided the theological framework to interpret coming events.

    These weren’t myths causing the trials. They were real people making real decisions under extraordinary pressure. The powder keg was packed. In mid-January, the fuse would be lit.

    Where We Are

    Week 2 of ~75 weeks | ~3% Complete | January 2026 – May 2027

    January 5 through 11, 1692. The village is divided, the economy is collapsing, wars rage, and the minister is hated. Next week: mid-January when afflictions intensify.

    Week 2 workbooks

    Salem Witch Trials Daily Week 2 Jan 5-11 Standard Workbook Download

    Salem Witch Trials Daily Week 2 Jan 5-11 Youth Workbook Download


    Key People This Week

    Samuel Parris was the controversial minister whose land grab and unpopularity created division
    Joseph Hutchinson led the opposition and fenced the meetinghouse in protest
    Thomas & Nathaniel Putnam were pro-Parris faction leaders
    Matthew Hopkins was the English “Witchfinder General” during the 1640s
    Increase Mather published Cases of Conscience, criticizing spectral evidence


    Key Terms

    Parish vs. Church means Salem Village could have a minister but not perform sacraments
    Parsonage was the minister’s house, illegally given to Parris
    Halfway Covenant was a policy allowing baptism for grandchildren of members
    Spectral Evidence was testimony about what a person’s spirit allegedly did
    Witch’s Mark or Teat was a mark supposedly left by the devil on a witch’s body
    Sabbat was a witch meeting mocking Christian worship


    Sources & Further Reading

    Francis J. Bremer, Puritanism: A Very Short Introduction
    Emerson W. Baker, A Storm of Witchcraft: The Salem Trials and the American Experience
    Bernard Rosenthal, ed., Records of the Salem Witch-Hunt
    Marilynne K. Roach, The Salem Witch Trials: A Day-by-Day Chronicle of a Community Under Siege
    Mary Beth Norton, In the Devil’s Snare: The Salem Witchcraft Crisis of 1692
    Increase Mather, Cases of Conscience

    Salem Witch Trials Daily Hub
    Week 1 Course Work
    People Accused of Witchcraft in 1692


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  • Where Can I Learn More About the Salem Witch Trials?

    Where Can I Learn More About the Salem Witch Trials?

    Show Notes

    Salem Witch Trials Daily Course – How It Works | Day-by-Day History Education

    Description:

    Welcome to our YouTube channel! Discover a revolutionary way to learn about the Salem Witch Trials through our daily video series. This comprehensive course follows the actual 1692-1693 timeline, bringing you history as it happened day by day. In this informational episode, learn how our unique course structure works and see a sample daily lesson.

    Subscribe to our YouTube channel for daily videos throughout 2026-2027 as we follow the historical timeline!

    What You’ll Get on This Channel: ✅ Daily bite-sized video lessons (just a few minutes each) ✅ 75-week journey through the complete 1692-1693 timeline ✅ Watch on YouTube as we release them or binge full weeks ✅ Companion resources at AboutSalem.com

    Beyond YouTube: 📚 Weekly workbooks with activities and challenges 📝 Blog posts recapping each week’s content 🎙️ The Thing About Salem podcast 🏆 Achievement badges to track your progress

    Course Features: 📚 Researched from primary sources 📝 Fill-in-the-blank summaries and reflection questions ✍️ Citation practice and character journal prompts 📖 Vocabulary building and quote analysis 🎯 Four weekly challenges to grow your expertise ⏱️ Watch at your own pace as all YouTube videos remain available

    The Salem Witch Trials by the Numbers: • 156+ formal accusations • 30 convictions • 20 executions • Started January 1692 in Minister Samuel Parris’s household • Legal proceedings: February 1692 – May 1693

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    Transcript

  • Salem Witch Trials Daily Course Week 1: Setting the Stage for Salem

    January 1-4, 2026

    Welcome to Week 1 of Salem Witch Trials Daily! Whether you’re working through the full course or just following along, this is where it all begins.

    We’re covering the events of 1692-1693 day by day, following the actual timeline. This week sets the foundation for understanding how America’s largest witch panic could happen.


    This Week’s Content

    Daily Videos (Salem Witch Trials Daily YouTube Playlist)

    • January 1: Introduction to Salem Witch Trials Daily
    • January 2: Five Contributing Factors
    • January 3: The History of Massachusetts
    • January 4: Salem’s Founding
    Salem Witch Trials Daily YouTube Playlist

    Weekly Podcast

    The Thing About Salem: “What harm were Salem’s supposed witches actually accused of causing?”


    The Scope of the Salem Witch Trials

    The Salem Witch Trials produced at least 156 formal accusations, 30 convictions, and 20 executions. Some sources suggest accusers named more than 200 people as witches, though not all were prosecuted. It started in mid-January 1692 in the household of Salem Village Minister Samuel Parris. His nine-year-old daughter Betty and eleven-year-old niece Abigail Williams began behaving strangely. They barked like dogs, quacked like ducks, and flapped around like geese pretending to fly. Doctors couldn’t diagnose what was wrong. Strangely, Betty and Abigail were the only ones in a household of eight to exhibit these symptoms. The parents didn’t get sick. Betty’s siblings didn’t get sick. One of the enslaved individuals in the household, John Indian, eventually showed symptoms, but not right away. This mysterious illness in the minister’s house would spark a panic that consumed the colony.


    Five Factors That Created the Perfect Storm

    Universal Belief in Witchcraft: Belief in witchcraft was nearly universal in 1692. Even trial critics didn’t refute the existence of witches. Those defending accused witches believed in witchcraft. This wasn’t just a Puritan thing or a Massachusetts thing. It was universal across Europe and the colonies, regardless of denomination.

    War and Sickness: King Philip’s War in the 1670s was the deadliest war per capita in what is now the United States. King William’s War was being fought in the 1690s in northern New England. War brought trauma, death, and displacement. A smallpox outbreak accompanied King William’s War. Soldiers attempting to invade Quebec came home sick, bringing smallpox with them. This epidemic would later factor into witchcraft accusations.

    Economic Collapse: The wars ravaged the economy. Colonial debt was massive. Massachusetts started printing money for the first time to pay war costs. Taxes were high, burdening residents already suffering direct financial losses from the wars. Property destruction, loss of income, and economic precarity created anxiety.

    Social Tensions: War refugees flooded into Massachusetts, particularly Essex County where Salem is located. This influx of displaced people heightened existing tensions between neighbors. Economic precarity amplified conflicts.

    Religious Anxieties: Many Massachusetts ministers felt the colony was spiritually backsliding. By 1692, this was the third and fourth generation since the founders. Ministers believed the current generation lacked the strong faith of those who first settled in the 1620s and 1630s. Locally in Salem Village, intense controversy surrounded Minister Samuel Parris. For two decades, the community squabbled over ministers. No one lasted more than a few years. In 1692, at least half the community opposed Parris.

    These five factors created an environment ripe for panic.


    Massachusetts: From Native Land to Colonial Crisis

    For more than 10,000 years, Native Americans occupied what is now Massachusetts. In the 16th century, Europeans came to fish and trap game. A series of epidemics from 1616 to 1619 decimated the coastal native population where contact with disease-carrying Europeans was common. English colonists tried several settlements before the Mayflower pilgrims successfully established Plymouth Colony in 1620. In 1626, Roger Conant founded Salem at Naumkeag, a former Native American settlement. The name means “fishing place.”

    In 1628, the Massachusetts Bay Company founded Massachusetts Bay Colony. King Charles I issued a charter in 1629 allowing the colony to govern itself. Boston was founded in 1630 and became the colonial capital, displacing Salem. The 1630s brought massive immigration. About 20,000 Europeans poured into New England, creating new towns around Salem. Between 1648 and 1691, Massachusetts prosecuted many witchcraft cases. Eight people were convicted, five were executed, and two women were jailed or placed under house arrest.

    In 1684, King James II revoked Massachusetts’s charter, throwing the colony into disarray. Two years later, he established the Dominion of New England, a supercolony running from New Jersey to Nova Scotia under one royal governor, Edmund Andros. Andros was unpopular and harsh. When the Glorious Revolution happened in England in 1688 (King William and Queen Mary taking the throne from James II), colonists stormed Boston’s capitol, arrested Andros, and sent him back to England. From 1688 to 1692, Massachusetts operated under an interim government. Courts couldn’t function properly, leading to jail overcrowding as suspects couldn’t be tried.

    Massachusetts finally got a new charter in 1691, but it was controversial. The colony had to tolerate other religious beliefs besides Puritanism. They had to accept Anglicans, Baptists, and Quakers. Previously, they had persecuted these groups, even executing Quakers. The charter was issued in October 1691 but didn’t arrive until February 1692. The new governor didn’t arrive until mid-May. By then, jails were already packed with witchcraft suspects.


    Salem: From Capital to Divided Town

    Salem was founded in 1626 by Roger Conant, who led 20 families from Cape Ann to settle at Naumkeag. You can see a statue of Conant outside the Salem Witch Museum today. In 1628, the Massachusetts Bay Company bought out the previous holdings. John Endicott was appointed governor and sailed to New England with 100 colonists, establishing his government in Salem. Roger Conant was granted 200 acres in exchange for surrendering leadership. After this peace was forged, the community was renamed Salem, from shalom, the Hebrew word for peace.

    The First Church in Salem formed in August 1629. In colonial Massachusetts, a church was a body of people, not a building. Members met in private homes until 1635 when the first church building was constructed. In 1629, John Winthrop succeeded Endicott as governor. In 1630, Winthrop and 700 colonists reached Salem in 11 ships. But Winthrop didn’t stay. He and most new arrivals relocated to found Boston, making it the new capital.

    As immigration exploded, new towns were created around Salem. Salem itself originally included what are now Beverly, Marblehead, Manchester, Wenham, Topsfield, Danvers, Middleton, Peabody, and Swampscott. These communities gradually split off. Most of Salem’s population lived near the bustling port. Others resided to the west in Salem Farms, which included a small settlement called Salem Village. Salem Village’s history and disagreements with the town of Salem are crucial for understanding the local dynamics during the witch hunt.


    This Week’s Podcast: What Witches Were Accused of Doing

    The Thing About Salem: “What harm were Salem’s supposed witches actually accused of causing?”

    Understanding what people believed witches could do is essential for understanding why accusations were believed. According to 17th century belief, witches were recruited by Satan. This diabolical witchcraft theory developed in 15th century Europe. All witchcraft was believed to come from Satan. All powers granted to witches came from him. Witches betrayed God by abandoning his church for Satan’s church. Satan marked his recruits with a witch’s mark or teat hidden on their body. Several Salem accused were physically inspected and found to have supposed marks. New witches signed the devil’s book in their own blood, echoing how Puritan church members signed covenants. Witches were baptized by Satan in rivers. They gathered at sabbats where they drank blood wine and ate red bread, mocking Christian sacrament.

    In New England, Satan’s purpose was tearing down the Christian Church. The witches supposedly wanted to begin in Salem Village where conflict was rampant. They intended to spread across New England and return the land to the devil. Witches attacked Christ’s kingdom by creating chaos. They afflicted people through maleficium (harmful magic), causing sickness like Betty Parris and Abigail Williams experienced. Many murders were blamed on witches. Witnesses reported seeing ghosts of murder victims dressed in winding sheets, demanding justice. Witches spoiled food, destroyed crops, attacked livestock, and raised storms. They could separate their specters from their bodies. These spirits traveled great distances to harm people, animals, and property. Accused witches were shackled in jail because colonists believed metal prevented specters from roaming free. It apparently didn’t work.

    Witches had familiar spirits, usually animals or strange amalgamations. These familiars assisted witches and fed through witch’s teats. Witches could shapeshift, know the future, read private conversations, and use poppets to inflict pain on enemies. The devil promised rewards like money and fashionable clothing to recruits. He never delivered and utterly failed to protect his servants from trial and execution.


    Where We Are in the Timeline

    Week 1 of ~75 weeks | 1% Complete | January 2026 – May 2027

    We’re in the setup phase. January 1-4, 1692. All the conditions are in place, but the trials haven’t started yet. This is the calm before the storm.

    Next week, we dive deeper into Salem Village’s conflicts and Minister Samuel Parris’s controversial ministry. We move closer to mid-January when Betty and Abigail’s symptoms become impossible to ignore.


    Key People to Remember

    Betty Parris (age 9): Minister’s daughter whose symptoms started the panic

    Abigail Williams (age 11): Minister’s niece who exhibited the same symptoms

    Samuel Parris: Salem Village’s controversial minister facing opposition from half his congregation

    Roger Conant: Salem’s founder who surrendered power for land and peace

    John Endicott: First governor who established Massachusetts Bay Colony’s government in Salem


    Join the Course

    This isn’t just a video series. It’s a comprehensive course researched from primary sources by Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack.

    Course students get:

    • Weekly workbooks with activities, exercises, and challenges
    • Fill-in-the-blank summaries and reflection questions
    • Citation practice and character journal prompts
    • Vocabulary building and quote analysis
    • Achievement badges tracking your progress
    • A special descendant track for those with ancestral connections

    Everyone can:

    • Watch the daily videos
    • Read these weekly blogs
    • Listen to the podcast
    • Follow along at your own pace

    Whether you dive deep or follow casually, you’re welcome here.

    Week 1 workbooks


    Share Your Progress

    Course students: Post your badges!

    #SalemStudent (started the course)
    #SalemWeek1 (completed Week 1)
    #SalemDescendantPathStudent (if you have ancestral connections)

    Use #SalemDailyStudent #SalemWeek1 #ThingAboutSalem #SalemDailyYoutube #SalemDescendantPath to connect with others on this journey.


    Join the Conversation

    What do you think happens next? When doctors can’t explain Betty and Abigail’s symptoms, and the community is dealing with war trauma, economic collapse, social tensions, and religious anxiety, what does Salem Village do?

    Drop your predictions in the comments.

    See you next week.

    #SalemDailyStudent #SalemWeek1 #ThingAboutSalem #SalemDailyYoutube


    Sources & Further Reading

    This week’s content draws from primary sources and the following recommended books:

    Bernard Rosenthal, ed., Records of the Salem Witch-Hunt
    https://bookshop.org/a/90227/9781107689619

    Emerson W. Baker, A Storm of Witchcraft: The Salem Trials and the American Experience
    https://bookshop.org/a/90227/9780190627805

    Marilynne K. Roach, The Salem Witch Trials: A Day-by-Day Chronicle of a Community Under Siege
    https://bookshop.org/a/90227/9781589791329

    Mary Beth Norton, In the Devil’s Snare: The Salem Witchcraft Crisis of 1692
    https://bookshop.org/a/90227/9780375706905

    Sidney Perley, The History of Salem, Massachusetts
    https://archive.org/details/historyofsalemma01perl/page/80/mode/2up

    Primary Sources:
    People Accused of Witchcraft in 1692: http://www.17thc.us/primarysources/accused.php

    First Church in Salem History:
    https://www.firstchurchinsalem.org/history
    https://www.firstchurchinsalem.org/the-long-history


    Connect & Support

    Watch & Listen

    Salem Witch Trials Daily (YouTube):
    https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLIz3vKHO9eBqIfjWd4e0mZpuXlrxzaE-3

    The Thing About Salem Podcast:
    https://aboutsalem.com
    Weekly episodes exploring Salem Witch Trials topics

    The Thing About Witch Hunts Podcast:
    https://aboutwitchhunts.com
    Historical witch trials and modern witch hunt news

    Take Action

    MA Witch Hunt Justice Project:
    Sign the petition for justice and exoneration
    www.change.org/witchtrials
    Learn more: https://massachusettswitchtrials.org/

    Support Our Work

    This course is created by the nonprofit End Witch Hunts. Your donations support primary source research, educational content, and advocacy for those facing witch accusations today.

    Donate: https://endwitchhunts.org/donate/