Enlightenment · North America · Religion

1692

Salem Witch Trials Begin

March 1692

Two young girls in Salem Village began having fits and accused a Barbadian slave and two older women of bewitching them. The accusations spread. By autumn, twenty people had been executed and five had died in jail. The hysteria finally ended when accusers began naming the governor's wife, and the trials became a permanent cautionary tale about the dangers of unchecked moral panic.