The Salem Witch Trials
The year, 1692, the place, Salem, Massachusetts, with children in the area acting weird, townspeople banded together and went on a witch-hunt. Many societies over the years have accused people of studying witchcraft and lurking in dark places however, several innocent people lost their lives that year in what would be known as the Salem Witch Trials. Before we get too into detail lets examine the details involved in tracking down the wrongly accused. The focus will mainly be on a woman named Sarah Good, her life before, during the trial, and her emotions up until the day she was executed, as well as the charges against her, how she defended herself, and the evidence found to convict her. Sarah Good, wife of William Good of Salem, and daughter of a prosperous Wenham innkeeper, John Solart, never had it good to begin with. After her father took his own life, when she was just 17, her widowed mother quickly remarried, leaving her without a share of her father's estate. Later on she married a man named Daniel Poole, who died a short while later, leaving her only in debt. Her second and final husband, William Good, had to help her pay her debt leaving them homeless in the end when she was brought to trial.
Those remarks must have been due in part to the fact that some of the hard evidence against Good was known to be false at the time of her examination. Tituba was another lady accused of witchcraft, though she was the most different. When she stated this, she was quoting a psalm from the bible. She also kept with the fact that she was not dealing with the devil, and that the god she served was the God that made the heavens and earth. She never gave into the pressure to confess, and showed no remorse at her execution. Upon examination, a broken knife was found on the girl. Her trial was harsh to the highest degree. In fact, in response to an attempt by Minister Nicholas Noyes to gain a confession, Good called out from the scaffolding, "You are a liar. The mock trials the accused witches went through were cruel and harsh and they never had a chance to a fair trial. She was presumed guilty from the start. " She has been called "an object for compassion rather than punishment. Despite the seemingly effectiveness of her curse, it likely just further convinced the crowds of her guilt.
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