Ann Putnam
Ann Putnam Jr. was the ringleader of the “circle girls” during the Salem Witch Trials. The “circle girls” were a group girls whom most of the accusations during the trials came from. Before the Salem Witch Trials Ann was treated like any other girl in the colony.
Ann was born on October 18, 1679 to Thomas and Ann Carr Putnam. She was born in the Salem Village in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. She was the oldest out of her ten siblings. Ann was a regular puritan child while growing up. She had to be respectful of others, perform chores around the house, and go to church on a regular basis. “Ann was intelligent, well educated, and had a quick wit.”
Before the trials began the “circle girls” all enjoyed going to secret gatherings that
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The girls that had been diagnosed with “fits” caused by witchcraft were asked to name the people who caused them to have these “fits”. The first people who were named by Ann included Sarah Good, the town beggar, Sarah Osborne, who had not been to church in almost a year , and, of course, Tituba. The people in the town quickly turned against these accused women and supported the accusers. The women that were accused were all found guilty and were hanged. The first group that were hanged included Sarah Good, Sarah Osborne, Sarah Wilds, Elizabeth Howe, and Susannah Martin. The next accusation shocked the townspeople. Ann accused the spirit of Martha Corey. She was a huge figure in the church and, even though there was not substantial evidence, was sent to prison and she was eventually hung. This accusation caused a scare throughout the village because it proved that anyone in the town could be a witch. The first set of trials ended but the girls’ “fits” did not. The girls were asked again to name the people who tormented them. Ann named Rebecca Nurse and her sisters. This accusation also shocked the town because Rebecca “ was the most religious woman in town.” Rebecca and her sisters were all found guilty and hung on Gallows Hill. Ann accused sixty-two people of practicing witchcraft and caused nineteen to be brutally executed. The end of Ann’s terror came after she accused the governor's wife, Lady Phips, of being a witch. Governor Phips ended the trials on October 29,
Option D With the incline of Hysteria throughout the village of salem the so called “Virtuous Puritans” became backstabbing in some cases greedy folk who were only in it for themselves. From Putnam to Parris they were profiting trying to gain something or save themselves from trial. Putnam himself would just outlandishly accuse many villagers most likely them all innocent just to gain land for his own greed gains. As a side note to keep himself from the danger of the trials.
Sarah Goode and Sarah Osborne were the other two girls they were the first three girls in Salem to be accused of witchcraft. Many people were accused mostly middle-aged women and some men but even a four-year-old boy was. In March some girls in the village accused Martha Corey. Martha Corey was different from the rest of the others that were accused she was upstanding in the puritan congregation which meant that the devil could reach to the core of the village which scared many people. During fall of March many were examined and sentenced with death.
The Crucible is a story that took place in Salem, Massachusetts during the witchcraft trials. At the time, the town was overflowing with hysteria and fear. The society forced many people to confess to the terrible act of witchcraft or be killed for not confessing. The court had many victims who suffered from lies and deceit. Though there were many victims, there were also many people who took advantage of the hysteria.
The Salem Witch Trials In March 1692, Rebecca Nurse, an elderly woman and respected member of Salem Village, was arrested on suspicion of witchcraft. She was accused based solely on the testimony of four young girls who claimed that the apparition of Rebecca Nurse had severely harmed them. Many witnesses testified in favor of her, but ultimately the "afflicted girls" prevailed. Nurse was executed on July 19, 1692.
About 124 years ago today, an important woman arrived at our colony, her name was Anne Hutchinson. She was one of our founders and a significant figure, not only known in this colony. Anne had a different interpretation of the Bible, this was against the Puritan rule in Massachusetts, and that’s why she was exiled to Rhode Island. While she lived in Massachusetts, Anne was recognized for holding church meetings in her own home. This was because of the way she interpreted the Bible.
One thing that might have caused the witch trials is profit, “ Mary Walcott ,Anns step cousin ,named an astonishing 69 witches”(page 56). This almost proves that she might have been accusing people for money/profit. “Abigail Williams, fingered 41 different witches for attacking her; Ann Putnam Jr. accused 53;her servant Mercy Lewis named 54; and a girl named Mary Walcott who was Ann’s step-cousin, named an astonishing 69 witches”(page 56). This means they were fervently,maliciously, wanted to abolish some of these people,and that most of the accusers stated accused more than 40 people. “Not all witches are human beings.
William O’Leary Mrs. Bowie HIS 101 3 November 2014 The Newton Courts Banishment of Mrs. Hutchinson The Trial of Mrs. Anne Hutchinson was a controversial case between 1636 and 1638. Mrs. Anne Hutchinson was a Puritan leader, and had a great following of people within the Boston colony. The church resented her for speaking ill against the ministers.
Rebecca Nurse was blamed for the death of all of Ann Putnam’s children, except for one. The events also caused numerous people to be convicted of witchcraft, some of them being executed. Two of the most notable people convicted in the play were John Procter, condemned for adultery and later hung, and Tituba, who confessed, saving her own life.
Anxiety was common from the very beginning of the settlements created in New England, Salem village in the 1690’s was the edge of the settled universe for the colonists. They feared death by starvation, death by savages, and death by the unknown. The strict religious tenants that brought them to this new world, feared that the devil and the Indians were allied with one another, yet also feared the supernatural such as witches. It was usually older women who were accused of witchcraft, mostly because people started to distrust one another because of noticeable behaviors. Everyone accusing these women believed they were doing the right thing by hanging them one by one, the judges, the townspeople, and even the little girls who were accusing the
People thought that she was a witch before being accused, and ended up getting hung. These women were accused of being witches by the circle girls, whose leader, Ann Putnam, was twelve years old. Ann is seen to be the person who started the Salem Witch Trials, and the creator of the hysteria. Since she was so little, she was obsessed with the power that she had acquired. She fabricated stories to watch others suffer.
However, she was still accused of a witch because her outstanding reputation as “Puritan perfection” intimidated the supremacy of male in the Puritan society. Rebecca’s success and prosperity, and links to those opposed to the Putnams and Parris also provoked her opponents’ jealousy, anger and revenge, and caused her to be the victim of witch hunt (Hill 90-91). In Salem society, women were discriminated, expected to be no authority and wealth, and viewed as easier to be controlled by the devil and inferior to men (Mammone). Therefore, even though Rebecca was an innocent and respectable woman, she could not prevail over men in a male dominated society.
The Crucible was created in 1953, which shows the story of the Salem witch trials. This event occurred in Massachusetts Bay around the time1692-1693. The plot of the crucible started when a group of girl claimed that they were dancing in the forest with Tituba (slave). The girls were caught by Reverend Parris (Minister). Parris’s daughter (Betty), ends up falling in a coma but we later found out that she was faking being in a coma because she was scared that she going to get in trouble.
Rebecca is accused for murdering the seven children of Ann Putnam who have died long before any questioning arose. Following this accusation, which is one of many that are false, Rebecca would go through the court process of either admitting to her actions as a witch or
In the play The Crucible, written by Arthur Miller, we learn several important concepts but the one that I can make the most connections with the story is the phrase, "Hell hath no fury like that of a women scorned", which the three major characters Abigail Williams, Elizabeth Proctor, and Ann Putnam can resemble this remark about being angry and seeking for vengeance more than the devil or hell could bring on this earth due to being hurt by a loved one or jealousy from an unfair event. The first example of a women showing these acts is Abigail Williams. Once in love with John Proctor and even had an affair with him, she has been seeking revenge since John Proctor does not share the same feelings for her and only used her
Bridget Bishop, a resident of Salem, was the first person to be tried as a witch. Surprisingly, Bishop was accused of witch craft by the highest number of witneses. After Bishop, more than two hundred people were tried of practicing witchcraft and twenty were executed. Many of these accusations arose from jealous, lower class members of society, especially towards women who had come into a great deal of land or wealth. Three young children by the names of Elizabeth, Abigail, and Ann were the first three people to be “harmed” by the witches.