Suddenly people seemed very paranoid and soon residents were placing blame on one another and accusing each other of witchcraft. In a fifteen month period between 1691 and 1692 nearly twelve dozen people were accused of witchcraft in or near Salem (Norton, p8). Although witch trials were not uncommon in Puritanical New England, none had reached such epidemic proportions as Salem. In 1691 the mass hysteria began when several young girls dabbled in witchcraft and began acting strange. When villagers took notice the girls were seriously questioned and so they began naming people, mainly woman, who had supposedly bewitched them (Boyer, p66). Several other who had been accused were woman displayed unfeminine ' behavior and those who stood to inherit more economic power than most men in the area (Boyer, p66). By 1692 the young girls had continued to make false accusations of townspeople. Many of those accused were townspeople who were more prominent than others. Villagers, such as the young girls, who envied others, would often accuse people because of a personal abhorrence. Eventually, those accused of witchcraft could be anyone regardless of social standing. Relationships between people and families seemed to crumble in the light of hysteria as children accused parents and friends pointed out friends (Boyer, p67). Some confessed to witchcraft and saved their own lives, others refused to tarnish their names and proclaimed innocence to their grave. The fact that these people did not have freedom of speech
Cited: Boyer, Paul S., Clark, Clifford E., et. Al., The Enduring Vision: Ahistory of the American people. 5th edition. Volume I to 1877. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2004 Marcus, Robert & Anthony, Eds. On Trial: American History Through Court Proceedings & Hearings. St. James, New York: Brandywine Press, 1998, volume I Norton, Mary Beth. "Witchcraft in the Anglo American Colonies," [Organization of American Historians] Magazine of History, 17 (July 2003): 5-10.