A memorial marker found at Old Burial Hill in Marblehead, near Redd's Pond Wilmot Redd was one of the victims of the Salem witch trials of 1692. She was born in Marblehead, Massachusetts and executed by hanging on September 22, 1692. Her husband was Samuel Redd, a fisherman. She was known for her irritability, but she was given little serious attention and, to her neighbors, was "probably more bitch than witch."[1] Image File history File links Download high-resolution version (1800x1215, 2085 KB)[edit] Summary Taken by Keitei at Old Burial Hill in Marblehead with a Canon AE-1 program and 800 speed film. ...
Image File history File links Download high-resolution version (1800x1215, 2085 KB)[edit] Summary Taken by Keitei at Old Burial Hill in Marblehead with a Canon AE-1 program and 800 speed film. ...
1876 illustration of the courtroom; the central figure is usually identified as Mary Walcott The Salem witch trials, which began in 1692 (also known as the Salem witch hunt and the Salem witchcraft episode), resulted in a number of convictions and executions for witchcraft in both Salem Village and Salem...
Settled: 1629 â Incorporated: 1649 Zip Code(s): 01945 â Area Code(s): 339 / 781 Official website: http://www. ...
Suicide by hanging. ...
Wilmot Redd was apprehended on May 28, 1692, by local constable James Smith. The warrant was signed by Magistrates Jonathan Corwin and John Hathorne. The charge brought against her was one of having "committed sundry acts of witchcraft on bodys of Mary Wolcott & Mercy Lewis and others in Salem Village to their great hurt."[1] Witchcraft, in various historical, religious and mythical contexts, is the use of certain kinds of alleged supernatural or magical powers. ...
A preliminary examination took place on May 31, 1692 at Nathan Ingersoll's house in Salem Village. This was Redd's first meeting with the children she allegedly bewitched. They promptly fell into fits, and when asked what she thought ailed them, Redd said, "I cannot tell."[2] Urged to give an opinion, she stated, "My opinion is they are in a sad condition."[2] Indicted as a witch, Wilmot Redd was accused of "detestable arts called Witchcraft and Sorceries wickedly, mallitiously [sic] and felloniously used, practiced & exercised at the Towne of Salem."[2] She was executed on September 22. yo peoples of the world hi snapple it tastes like apple /) yo wasup i got icecream in my cup. ur team has a soccer game onwednesday 18. [edit] References
- ^ a b Gamage, Virginia Clegg, Priscilla Sawyer Lord (1972). The Spirit of '76 Lives Here: Marblehead. Radnor, Pennsylvania: Chilton Book Company, 52. ISBN 0-8019-5596-3.
- ^ a b c Gamage, Virginia Clegg, Priscilla Sawyer Lord (1972). The Spirit of '76 Lives Here: Marblehead. Radnor, Pennsylvania: Chilton Book Company, 53. ISBN 0-8019-5596-3.
| Salem witch trials | | Authorities | Thomas Danforth | John Hale | Increase Mather | Samuel Parris | William Phips | William Stoughton | | Accusers | Elizabeth Hubbard | Mercy Lewis | Betty Parris | Ann Putnam, Jr. | Susannah Sheldon | Mary Walcott | Abigail Williams | | Accused | John Alden | Edward Bishop | Sarah Bishop | Mary Black | Mary Bradbury | Sarah Cloyce | Rebecca Eames | Mary English | Phillip English | Abigail Faulkner | Dorcas Good | William Hobbs | Mary Lacy | Sarah Morey | Benjamin Proctor | Elizabeth Proctor | Sarah Proctor | William Proctor | | Confessed and Accused Others | Dorcas Hoar | Abigail Hobbs | Deliverance Hobbs | Margaret Jacobs | Tituba | Mary Warren | | Executed | Bridget Bishop | George Burroughs | Martha Carrier Martha Corey | Mary Eastey | Sarah Good | Elizabeth Howe | George Jacobs, Sr. | Susannah Martin | Rebecca Nurse | Alice Parker | Mary Parker | John Proctor | Ann Pudeator | Wilmot Redd | Margaret Scott | Samuel Wardwell | Sarah Wildes | John Willard | | Died in Prison | Lydia Dustin | Ann Foster | Sarah Osborn | Roger Toothaker | | Died During Interrogation 1876 illustration of the courtroom; the central figure is usually identified as Mary Walcott The Salem witch trials, which began in 1692 (also known as the Salem witch hunt and the Salem witchcraft episode), resulted in a number of convictions and executions for witchcraft in both Salem Village and Salem...
Thomas Danforth was a famous judge of the Salem Witchcraft Trials in early colonial America. ...
John Hale (3 June 1636-15 May 1700) was the pastor of the Church of Christ in Beverly, Massachusetts during the Salem witch hunt in 1692. ...
Increase Mather, 1688, by John van der Spriett Increase Mather (June 21, 1639 â August 23, 1723) was a Puritan educator and clergyman, noted for being the father of Cotton Mather. ...
Reverend Samuel Parris (1653-1720) Samuel Parris (1653 â February 27, 1720) was the Puritan minister in the town of Salem Village (now Danvers, Massachusetts) during the Salem witch trials, as well as the father and uncle of two of the afflicted girls. ...
Sir William Phips (1651-1695) Sir William Phips (or Phipps) (February 2, 1651 or 1650 â February 18, 1694 or 1695), colonial governor of Massachusetts, was born at Woolwich, Maine, near the mouth of the Kennebec River. ...
William Stoughton (30 September 1631 â 7 July 1701) acted as judge and prosecutor during the Salem Witch Trials. ...
Elizabeth Betty Parris (November 28, 1682 â March 21, 1760) was the nine-year-old daughter of the Salem villages reverend Samuel Parris (1653â1720) and was the first to become ill after being bewitched as most people thought. ...
Ann Putnam (October 18, 1679 â 1716). ...
Mary Walcott (July 5, 1675 â after 1719) was one of the witnesses at the Salem Witch Trials of Salem, Massachusetts in the years 1692 and 1693. ...
Abigail Williams testimony against George Jacobs, Jr. ...
Edward Stanley Bishop, Baron Bishopston (3 October 1920 - 19 April 1984) was a British Labour Party politician. ...
Rebecca Blake Eames According to Essex County Mass. ...
Dorcas (or Dorothy) Good was the four-year-old daughter of Sarah Good (executed by hanging for the crime of witchcraft) who was also accused of being a witch during the Salem witch trials. ...
William Herbert Hobbs, Ph. ...
Elizabeth Proctor was an indirect victim of the Salem Witch Trials whose husband, John Proctor, was executed; however, Elizabeth herself was not actually hanged because she was pregnant at the time. ...
Tituba was the first woman to be accused of witchcraft in the Salem Witch Trials of 1692. ...
Mary Warren is a character in the play The Crucible by Arthur Miller. ...
Bridget Bishop was the first person executed for witchcraft in Salem, Massachusetts, during the Salem Witch Trials of 1692. ...
George Burroughs (ca. ...
1876 illustration of the courtroom; the central figure is usually identified as Mary Walcott The Salem witch trials, which began in 1692 (also known as the Salem witch hunt and the Salem witchcraft episode), resulted in a number of convictions and executions for witchcraft in both Salem Village and Salem...
To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
Sarah Good was one of the first three people to be accused and then convicted of witchcraft at the Salem Witch Trials. ...
Rebecca Nurse (February 21, 1621 - July 19, 1692) was an accused witch in the Salem witch trials. ...
John Proctor (1632 â 1692) was a Puritan who was victimized during the Salem Witch Trials. ...
John Willard was an Australian politician, elected as a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly. ...
Ann Foster (born Ann Alcock, 1617-1693), was the widow of Andrew Foster. ...
| Giles Corey | |