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Rethinking the Salem witch trials 400 years on

The Massachusetts Witch-Hunt Justice Project is hoping to persuade the state to take a fuller reckoning of its early history.

The first death penalty for witchcraft, in what would become the United States, took place in 1648 in Massachusetts where Margaret Jones was executed as a witch. The midwife was the first person to receive the death-penalty for the alleged crime but she sadly wasn’t the last.

Over the next few decades, hundreds of people were accused, tried and executed for witchcraft – culminating in the infamous Salem witch trials. Well nearly four centuries later, the Massachusetts Witch-Hunt Justice Project is hoping to persuade the state to take a fuller reckoning of its early history.

The group’s leader, Josh Hutchinson, who has a personal stake in the project, told Newsday why there were so many people accused of witchcraft in colonial Massachusetts:

“There were over 200 people accused of witchcraft… there was a lot of economic uncertainty, political and military instability, even religious conflict within Massachusetts and that was putting a lot of pressure on communities that were also experiencing neighbourly discord.â€

(Pic: Engraved illustration depicting witchcraft trials in Salem, Massachusetts; Credit: Getty Images)

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5 minutes