In late seventeenth-century New England, the eternal battle between
God and Satan was brought into the courtroom. Between January 1692
and May 1693 in Salem, Massachusetts, neighbors turned against
neighbors and children against parents with accusations of
witchcraft, and nineteen people were hanged for having made pacts
with the devil.
Peter Charles Hoffer, a historian long familiar with the Salem
witchcraft trials, now reexamines this notorious episode in
American history and presents many of its legal details in correct
perspective for the first time. He tells the real story of how
religious beliefs, superstitions, clan disputes, and Anglo-American
law and custom created an epidemic of accusations that resulted in
the investigation of nearly two hundred colonists and, for many,
the ordeal of trail and incarceration. He also examines life during
this crisis period of New England history--a time beset by Indian
wars, disease, severe weather, and challenges to Puritan
hegemony--to show how an atmosphere of paranoia contributed to this
outbreak of persecution.
Hoffer examines every aspect of this history, from accusations
to grand jury investigations to the conduct of the trials
themselves. He shows how rights we take for granted today--such as
rules of evidence and a defendant's right to legal counsel--did not
exist in colonial times, and he demonstrates how these cases relate
to current instances of children accusing adults of abuse.
"The Salem Witchcraft Trials," a concise history written
expressly for students and general readers, contains much new
material not found in the author's earlier work. It sheds important
light on the period and shows that our horror of these infamous
proceedings must be tempered with sympathy for a people who gave in
to panic in the face of a harsh and desolate existence.
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