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JOSEPH BALLARD
In July 1692, Joseph Ballard brought the afflicted girls to Andover (present-day North Andover) to determine the cause of his wife’s (Elizabeth) illness. She reported suffering from strange pains and pressures. Plan a visit to the home to learn more about Joseph THOMAS CHANDLER HOMESTEAD, SITE OF Thomas Chandler died in Andover in 1703. A memorial stone for his father William and Chandler descendants is in the Old North Cemetery in Concord, NH. Listed on the stone are Thomas (with incorrect birth and death dates) and three other Chandler descendants, including fifth generation Captain John Chandler who settled in Penny Cook, NH, today MARGARET SCOTT HOME, SITE OF Widow Margaret Scott was in her early-mid 70s in 1692, and had been a widow for more than twenty years. She married her husband Benjamin Scott in 1642, and never remarried after he died in 1671. Like several other women accused of witchcraft, she was a perfect target – an elderly widow whose circumstances reduced her to begging to survive. ROBERT AND SARAH PEASE HOME, SITE OF Robert and Sarah Pease Home, Site of. Sarah Pease, wife of weaver Robert Pease, was accused of witchcraft in 1692. The Peases lived on Central Street. Today, this is a private residence, not open to the public. 62 Central Street, Peabody, MA, USA. 62 Central Street,Peabody, MA, USA.
ANN PUDEATOR HOME, SITE OF Ann Pudeator Home, Site of. On May 12, 1692 accuser-turned accused Mary Warren was questioned by the magistrates in Salem jail, during which she named the wealthy 70-year-old widow Ann Pudeator as a user of witchcraft. Observing the Warren examination were the WITCHCRAFT VICTIMS' MEMORIAL Erected in 1992, the Danvers Witchcraft Victims’ Memorial pays tribute to the twenty-five innocent people who died during the witchcraft hysteria of 1692: nineteen hanged, one pressed to death, and five who perished in jail. The memorial was dedicated on May 9, 1992 before an audience of more than 3,000 people. It was designed REVEREND FRANCIS DANE HOME, SITE OF Francis Dane was the minister of Andover from 1649 until his death in 1697. He is buried in an unmarked grave in the First Burial Ground. Reverend Dane’s son, Lieutenant Francis Dane Jr., was one of the original members of the South Church of Andover. Lieutenant Dane’s grandson was the deacon of the South Church for thirty-nine years. THE 1692 SALEM WITCH MUSEUM The Salem Witch Museum is a museum in Salem, MA about the Witch Trials of 1692. The museum is based on the actual documents of the trials. Plan a visit to check out the scenes, and listen to the accurate narration from the history of the Salem Witch Hunt. Enjoy the self-guided tours in one of the most historic places of New England. VISIT THE SALEM WITCH MUSEUM Visit the Salem Witch Museum in Salem, MA to explore the history of the Salem Witch Trials. You will experience the true happenings of the Witch Hunt through our exhibits and narration. Learn about the trials, accusations, and lies during one of the most enduring and emotional times in American History. COVID-19 information PHILIP AND MARY ENGLISH HOME, SITE OF Philip and Mary English Home, Site of. According to historian James Duncan Phillips, Philip English had built “quite a conspicuous house on the easterly corner of English Lane. It seems to have been a combination of counting house, shop, and mansion. It was a many-gabled structure like several others in town, with overhanging second storiesJOSEPH BALLARD
In July 1692, Joseph Ballard brought the afflicted girls to Andover (present-day North Andover) to determine the cause of his wife’s (Elizabeth) illness. She reported suffering from strange pains and pressures. Plan a visit to the home to learn more about Joseph THOMAS CHANDLER HOMESTEAD, SITE OF Thomas Chandler died in Andover in 1703. A memorial stone for his father William and Chandler descendants is in the Old North Cemetery in Concord, NH. Listed on the stone are Thomas (with incorrect birth and death dates) and three other Chandler descendants, including fifth generation Captain John Chandler who settled in Penny Cook, NH, today MARGARET SCOTT HOME, SITE OF Widow Margaret Scott was in her early-mid 70s in 1692, and had been a widow for more than twenty years. She married her husband Benjamin Scott in 1642, and never remarried after he died in 1671. Like several other women accused of witchcraft, she was a perfect target – an elderly widow whose circumstances reduced her to begging to survive. ROBERT AND SARAH PEASE HOME, SITE OF Robert and Sarah Pease Home, Site of. Sarah Pease, wife of weaver Robert Pease, was accused of witchcraft in 1692. The Peases lived on Central Street. Today, this is a private residence, not open to the public. 62 Central Street, Peabody, MA, USA. 62 Central Street,Peabody, MA, USA.
ANN PUDEATOR HOME, SITE OF Ann Pudeator Home, Site of. On May 12, 1692 accuser-turned accused Mary Warren was questioned by the magistrates in Salem jail, during which she named the wealthy 70-year-old widow Ann Pudeator as a user of witchcraft. Observing the Warren examination were the WITCHCRAFT VICTIMS' MEMORIAL Erected in 1992, the Danvers Witchcraft Victims’ Memorial pays tribute to the twenty-five innocent people who died during the witchcraft hysteria of 1692: nineteen hanged, one pressed to death, and five who perished in jail. The memorial was dedicated on May 9, 1992 before an audience of more than 3,000 people. It was designed REVEREND FRANCIS DANE HOME, SITE OF Francis Dane was the minister of Andover from 1649 until his death in 1697. He is buried in an unmarked grave in the First Burial Ground. Reverend Dane’s son, Lieutenant Francis Dane Jr., was one of the original members of the South Church of Andover. Lieutenant Dane’s grandson was the deacon of the South Church for thirty-nine years. FOUNDATION OF SALEM VILLAGE PARSONAGE Down a path between 67 and 69 Centre Street is the site of the Salem Village parsonage, where the spark that ignited the witch hysteria of 1692 was struck. Joseph Houlton gave five and a half acres of land in the center of the village for the use of the minister, on which theparsonage
WELCOME TO BOSTON
Philip English, the wealthiest merchant in Salem, fled to a friend’s Boston house to hide when English was accused of witchcraft. Two important skeptics of the whole affair, merchants Thomas Brattle and Robert Calef, also lived in Boston. Before the witchcraft hysteria of 1692, Goody Glover was hanged as a witch on Boston Common in 1688. ANN PUDEATOR HOME, SITE OF Ann Pudeator Home, Site of. On May 12, 1692 accuser-turned accused Mary Warren was questioned by the magistrates in Salem jail, during which she named the wealthy 70-year-old widow Ann Pudeator as a user of witchcraft. Observing the Warren examination were the ROBERT AND SARAH PEASE HOME, SITE OF Robert and Sarah Pease Home, Site of. Sarah Pease, wife of weaver Robert Pease, was accused of witchcraft in 1692. The Peases lived on Central Street. Today, this is a private residence, not open to the public. 62 Central Street, Peabody, MA, USA. 62 Central Street,Peabody, MA, USA.
MARY AND ISAAC EASTY HOME, SITE OF Mary and Isaac Easty Home, Site of. Near the intersection of South Main Street and Salem Road, where the Essex County Co-Op is located today, was the homestead of Mary Easty (alternate spellings Esty, Estey, Eastey) and her husband Isaac in 1692. When Mary, was arrested on April 21, just short of her 58 th birthday, it meant all three ofthe
REVEREND FRANCIS DANE HOME, SITE OF Francis Dane was the minister of Andover from 1649 until his death in 1697. He is buried in an unmarked grave in the First Burial Ground. Reverend Dane’s son, Lieutenant Francis Dane Jr., was one of the original members of the South Church of Andover. Lieutenant Dane’s grandson was the deacon of the South Church for thirty-nine years. COLONIAL BURYING GROUND Colonial Burying Ground, 24 Beach Rd, Salisbury, MA 01952. On August 8, just weeks after Martin and four others were hanged on Proctor’s Ledge at Gallows Hill, Pike wrote a letter and accompanying essay to Judge Jonathan Corwin, eloquently arguing that basingREDD’S POND
This pond was posthumously named after Wilmond Redd, a woman accused of witchcraft, tried, and hanged on September 22, 1692. During the trial, Susannah Sheldon claimed that she was afflicted by Wilmond Redd and convulsed in court when ordered to approach the accused. Wilmond Redd’s house used to be near the pond. SALEM JAIL IN 1692, SITE OF Salem Jail in 1692, Site of. In 1692, the Salem jail was located on Prison Lane, today known as St. Peter Street. The building, at the corner of Prison Lane and County Street (present-day Federal Street) measured “thirteen feet stud, and twenty feet square, accommodated with a yard” when built as the county jail in 1684. THE NOT SO GOOD LIFE OF THE COLONIAL GOODWIFE Binge-watch Vikings, Turn, or Frontier, and you’ll see people being disemboweled, tortured, and decapitated – but you won’t see anything about menstruation, chamber pots, birth control, breastfeeding, or poopy babies. It’s 2021! Even though Google cars have been invented and women won the vote 101 years ago, these “unsanitary” subjects still make people uncomfortable and THE 1692 SALEM WITCH MUSEUM The Salem Witch Museum is a museum in Salem, MA about the Witch Trials of 1692. The museum is based on the actual documents of the trials. Plan a visit to check out the scenes, and listen to the accurate narration from the history of the Salem Witch Hunt. Enjoy the self-guided tours in one of the most historic places of New England. VISIT THE SALEM WITCH MUSEUM Visit the Salem Witch Museum in Salem, MA to explore the history of the Salem Witch Trials. You will experience the true happenings of the Witch Hunt through our exhibits and narration. Learn about the trials, accusations, and lies during one of the most enduring and emotional times in American History. COVID-19 information PHILIP AND MARY ENGLISH HOME, SITE OF Philip and Mary English Home, Site of. According to historian James Duncan Phillips, Philip English had built “quite a conspicuous house on the easterly corner of English Lane. It seems to have been a combination of counting house, shop, and mansion. It was a many-gabled structure like several others in town, with overhanging second stories ANN PUDEATOR HOME, SITE OF Ann Pudeator Home, Site of. On May 12, 1692 accuser-turned accused Mary Warren was questioned by the magistrates in Salem jail, during which she named the wealthy 70-year-old widow Ann Pudeator as a user of witchcraft. Observing the Warren examination were the ROBERT AND SARAH PEASE HOME, SITE OF Robert and Sarah Pease Home, Site of. Sarah Pease, wife of weaver Robert Pease, was accused of witchcraft in 1692. The Peases lived on Central Street. Today, this is a private residence, not open to the public. 62 Central Street, Peabody, MA, USA. 62 Central Street,Peabody, MA, USA.
MARGARET SCOTT HOME, SITE OF Widow Margaret Scott was in her early-mid 70s in 1692, and had been a widow for more than twenty years. She married her husband Benjamin Scott in 1642, and never remarried after he died in 1671. Like several other women accused of witchcraft, she was a perfect target – an elderly widow whose circumstances reduced her to begging to survive. WITCHCRAFT VICTIMS' MEMORIAL Erected in 1992, the Danvers Witchcraft Victims’ Memorial pays tribute to the twenty-five innocent people who died during the witchcraft hysteria of 1692: nineteen hanged, one pressed to death, and five who perished in jail. The memorial was dedicated on May 9, 1992 before an audience of more than 3,000 people. It was designed WITCH TRIALS MEMORIAL This area serves as a memorial to those accused who were tried and executed for having practiced witchcraft. Tourists can walk through the memorial, staying on the path to reflect upon the happenings of the Salem Witch Trials, and can pay their respects by leaving flowerson the stones of
SALEM JAIL IN 1692, SITE OF Salem Jail in 1692, Site of. In 1692, the Salem jail was located on Prison Lane, today known as St. Peter Street. The building, at the corner of Prison Lane and County Street (present-day Federal Street) measured “thirteen feet stud, and twenty feet square, accommodated with a yard” when built as the county jail in 1684. CHARTER STREET CEMETERY Many people associated with the Salem Witch Trials are buried at the Charter Street Cemetery between Lafayette and Liberty Streets. Some of these important figures include Magistrate John Hathorne, Bartholomew Gedney, Mary Corry, and Reverend Nicholas Noyes. THE 1692 SALEM WITCH MUSEUM The Salem Witch Museum is a museum in Salem, MA about the Witch Trials of 1692. The museum is based on the actual documents of the trials. Plan a visit to check out the scenes, and listen to the accurate narration from the history of the Salem Witch Hunt. Enjoy the self-guided tours in one of the most historic places of New England. VISIT THE SALEM WITCH MUSEUM Visit the Salem Witch Museum in Salem, MA to explore the history of the Salem Witch Trials. You will experience the true happenings of the Witch Hunt through our exhibits and narration. Learn about the trials, accusations, and lies during one of the most enduring and emotional times in American History. COVID-19 information PHILIP AND MARY ENGLISH HOME, SITE OF Philip and Mary English Home, Site of. According to historian James Duncan Phillips, Philip English had built “quite a conspicuous house on the easterly corner of English Lane. It seems to have been a combination of counting house, shop, and mansion. It was a many-gabled structure like several others in town, with overhanging second stories ANN PUDEATOR HOME, SITE OF Ann Pudeator Home, Site of. On May 12, 1692 accuser-turned accused Mary Warren was questioned by the magistrates in Salem jail, during which she named the wealthy 70-year-old widow Ann Pudeator as a user of witchcraft. Observing the Warren examination were the ROBERT AND SARAH PEASE HOME, SITE OF Robert and Sarah Pease Home, Site of. Sarah Pease, wife of weaver Robert Pease, was accused of witchcraft in 1692. The Peases lived on Central Street. Today, this is a private residence, not open to the public. 62 Central Street, Peabody, MA, USA. 62 Central Street,Peabody, MA, USA.
MARGARET SCOTT HOME, SITE OF Widow Margaret Scott was in her early-mid 70s in 1692, and had been a widow for more than twenty years. She married her husband Benjamin Scott in 1642, and never remarried after he died in 1671. Like several other women accused of witchcraft, she was a perfect target – an elderly widow whose circumstances reduced her to begging to survive. WITCHCRAFT VICTIMS' MEMORIAL Erected in 1992, the Danvers Witchcraft Victims’ Memorial pays tribute to the twenty-five innocent people who died during the witchcraft hysteria of 1692: nineteen hanged, one pressed to death, and five who perished in jail. The memorial was dedicated on May 9, 1992 before an audience of more than 3,000 people. It was designed WITCH TRIALS MEMORIAL This area serves as a memorial to those accused who were tried and executed for having practiced witchcraft. Tourists can walk through the memorial, staying on the path to reflect upon the happenings of the Salem Witch Trials, and can pay their respects by leaving flowerson the stones of
SALEM JAIL IN 1692, SITE OF Salem Jail in 1692, Site of. In 1692, the Salem jail was located on Prison Lane, today known as St. Peter Street. The building, at the corner of Prison Lane and County Street (present-day Federal Street) measured “thirteen feet stud, and twenty feet square, accommodated with a yard” when built as the county jail in 1684. CHARTER STREET CEMETERY Many people associated with the Salem Witch Trials are buried at the Charter Street Cemetery between Lafayette and Liberty Streets. Some of these important figures include Magistrate John Hathorne, Bartholomew Gedney, Mary Corry, and Reverend Nicholas Noyes. VISIT THE SALEM WITCH MUSEUM Visit the Salem Witch Museum in Salem, MA to explore the history of the Salem Witch Trials. You will experience the true happenings of the Witch Hunt through our exhibits and narration. Learn about the trials, accusations, and lies during one of the most enduring and emotional times in American History. COVID-19 information FOUNDATION OF SALEM VILLAGE PARSONAGE Down a path between 67 and 69 Centre Street is the site of the Salem Village parsonage, where the spark that ignited the witch hysteria of 1692 was struck. Joseph Houlton gave five and a half acres of land in the center of the village for the use of the minister, on which theparsonage
SOURCES - SALEM WITCH MUSEUM Tituba, Reluctant Witch of Salem: Devilish Indians and Puritan Fantasies. New York, NY: New York University Press, 1996. Brown, David C. A Guide to the Salem Witchcraft Hysteria of 1692. Washington Crossing, PA: David C. Brown, 1984. Brown, Edward. Thieves, Cow Beaters and Other True Tales of Colonial Beverly. COST OF ENTRY TO THE SALEM WITCH MUSEUM The cost of entry for Adults is $15, for Senior Citizens is $13.50, and for children ages 3-14 is $12. While you may be able to purchase your tickets at the door, we now offer tickets online, but you must make sure you are in Salem, MA and enable your cellphone location to be able to access our system. Do remember that certain months of the year can be very busy and so we advise that you makeJOSEPH BALLARD
In July 1692, Joseph Ballard brought the afflicted girls to Andover (present-day North Andover) to determine the cause of his wife’s (Elizabeth) illness. She reported suffering from strange pains and pressures. Plan a visit to the home to learn more about Joseph THOMAS CHANDLER HOMESTEAD, SITE OF Thomas Chandler died in Andover in 1703. A memorial stone for his father William and Chandler descendants is in the Old North Cemetery in Concord, NH. Listed on the stone are Thomas (with incorrect birth and death dates) and three other Chandler descendants, including fifth generation Captain John Chandler who settled in Penny Cook, NH, today JOHN AND MARY (NURSE) TARBELL HOUSE, SITE OF Rebecca Nurse’s daughter Mary and her husband, John Tarbell, lived “within the bounds of the estate,” as did the other Nurse children (according to historian Charles Upham’s 1867 work Salem Witchcraft).They couple was married in 1678. Tarbell was suspicious of the accusations lodged against his mother-in-law, and visited the Thomas Putnam household at the end of March, 1692, along with SALEM JAIL IN 1692, SITE OF Salem Jail in 1692, Site of. In 1692, the Salem jail was located on Prison Lane, today known as St. Peter Street. The building, at the corner of Prison Lane and County Street (present-day Federal Street) measured “thirteen feet stud, and twenty feet square, accommodated with a yard” when built as the county jail in 1684. THOMAS, ANN (SR.), AND ANN (JR.) PUTNAM HOME, SITE(S) OF Three principle accusers during the Salem witch trials in 1692 were members of the Putnam family: Sergeant Thomas Putnam (1652-1699), his wife Ann (Carr) Putnam (1661-1699), and their oldest daughter Ann Jr. (1680-1716). At the time of the trials, the Putnam clan owned hundreds of acres in the western part of Salem Village, on and around Hathorne Hill (originally settled by William Hathorne MARTHA AND THOMAS CARRIER / WIDOW ALLEN HOME, SITE OF Martha and Thomas Carrier / Widow Allen Home, Site of. The first person to be accused of witchcraft in Andover in 1692 was Martha Carrier. She was born in Andover circa 1653, one of six children born to two of the original founders of Andover, Andrew and Faith (Ingalls) Allen. Prior to her marriage, Martha lived with her sister Mary andMary
THE 1692 SALEM WITCH MUSEUM The Salem Witch Museum is a museum in Salem, MA about the Witch Trials of 1692. The museum is based on the actual documents of the trials. Plan a visit to check out the scenes, and listen to the accurate narration from the history of the Salem Witch Hunt. Enjoy the self-guided tours in one of the most historic places of New England. PHILIP AND MARY ENGLISH HOME, SITE OF Philip and Mary English Home, Site of. According to historian James Duncan Phillips, Philip English had built “quite a conspicuous house on the easterly corner of English Lane. It seems to have been a combination of counting house, shop, and mansion. It was a many-gabled structure like several others in town, with overhanging second stories ANN PUDEATOR HOME, SITE OF Ann Pudeator Home, Site of. On May 12, 1692 accuser-turned accused Mary Warren was questioned by the magistrates in Salem jail, during which she named the wealthy 70-year-old widow Ann Pudeator as a user of witchcraft. Observing the Warren examination were theBALCH HOUSE
Balch House. The oldest house in Beverly was the scene of witchcraft accusations two years before 1692. 448 Cabot Street, Beverly, MA, USA. 448 Cabot Street, Beverly, MA, USA.JOSEPH BALLARD
In July 1692, Joseph Ballard brought the afflicted girls to Andover (present-day North Andover) to determine the cause of his wife’s (Elizabeth) illness. She reported suffering from strange pains and pressures. Plan a visit to the home to learn more about Joseph MARGARET SCOTT HOME, SITE OF Widow Margaret Scott was in her early-mid 70s in 1692, and had been a widow for more than twenty years. She married her husband Benjamin Scott in 1642, and never remarried after he died in 1671. Like several other women accused of witchcraft, she was a perfect target – an elderly widow whose circumstances reduced her to begging to survive. ROBERT AND SARAH PEASE HOME, SITE OF Robert and Sarah Pease Home, Site of. Sarah Pease, wife of weaver Robert Pease, was accused of witchcraft in 1692. The Peases lived on Central Street. Today, this is a private residence, not open to the public. 62 Central Street, Peabody, MA, USA. 62 Central Street,Peabody, MA, USA.
INGERSOLL'S ORDINARY A short walk south down Centre Street from the site of the parsonage, at the corner of Hobart Street, is the site of Ingersoll’s ordinary (or tavern). Nathaniel Ingersoll was one of the most respected members of the Salem Village community. His tavern/inn was located at a JOSEPH HOULTON HOUSE Joseph Houlton House. In this house built circa 1671 lived Joseph Houlton (alternate spellings Holten, Holton), an important landowner and member of the Salem Village community. He was in his early 70’s during the time of the witchcraft trials. In 1679, Houlton gave five and a half acres in the center of the village for the new minister’s SECOND MEETINGHOUSE, SITE OF / FIRST CHURCH OF DANVERS Second Meetinghouse, Site of / First Church of Danvers. A new meetinghouse was built on this Centre Street site in 1701, located across from Ingersoll’s ordinary. It was here, fourteen years after the witch trials, that Ann Putnam Jr. stood in her pew as Reverend Joseph Green read her apology aloud to the Salem Village congregation. THE 1692 SALEM WITCH MUSEUM The Salem Witch Museum is a museum in Salem, MA about the Witch Trials of 1692. The museum is based on the actual documents of the trials. Plan a visit to check out the scenes, and listen to the accurate narration from the history of the Salem Witch Hunt. Enjoy the self-guided tours in one of the most historic places of New England. PHILIP AND MARY ENGLISH HOME, SITE OF Philip and Mary English Home, Site of. According to historian James Duncan Phillips, Philip English had built “quite a conspicuous house on the easterly corner of English Lane. It seems to have been a combination of counting house, shop, and mansion. It was a many-gabled structure like several others in town, with overhanging second stories ANN PUDEATOR HOME, SITE OF Ann Pudeator Home, Site of. On May 12, 1692 accuser-turned accused Mary Warren was questioned by the magistrates in Salem jail, during which she named the wealthy 70-year-old widow Ann Pudeator as a user of witchcraft. Observing the Warren examination were theBALCH HOUSE
Balch House. The oldest house in Beverly was the scene of witchcraft accusations two years before 1692. 448 Cabot Street, Beverly, MA, USA. 448 Cabot Street, Beverly, MA, USA.JOSEPH BALLARD
In July 1692, Joseph Ballard brought the afflicted girls to Andover (present-day North Andover) to determine the cause of his wife’s (Elizabeth) illness. She reported suffering from strange pains and pressures. Plan a visit to the home to learn more about Joseph MARGARET SCOTT HOME, SITE OF Widow Margaret Scott was in her early-mid 70s in 1692, and had been a widow for more than twenty years. She married her husband Benjamin Scott in 1642, and never remarried after he died in 1671. Like several other women accused of witchcraft, she was a perfect target – an elderly widow whose circumstances reduced her to begging to survive. ROBERT AND SARAH PEASE HOME, SITE OF Robert and Sarah Pease Home, Site of. Sarah Pease, wife of weaver Robert Pease, was accused of witchcraft in 1692. The Peases lived on Central Street. Today, this is a private residence, not open to the public. 62 Central Street, Peabody, MA, USA. 62 Central Street,Peabody, MA, USA.
INGERSOLL'S ORDINARY A short walk south down Centre Street from the site of the parsonage, at the corner of Hobart Street, is the site of Ingersoll’s ordinary (or tavern). Nathaniel Ingersoll was one of the most respected members of the Salem Village community. His tavern/inn was located at a JOSEPH HOULTON HOUSE Joseph Houlton House. In this house built circa 1671 lived Joseph Houlton (alternate spellings Holten, Holton), an important landowner and member of the Salem Village community. He was in his early 70’s during the time of the witchcraft trials. In 1679, Houlton gave five and a half acres in the center of the village for the new minister’s SECOND MEETINGHOUSE, SITE OF / FIRST CHURCH OF DANVERS Second Meetinghouse, Site of / First Church of Danvers. A new meetinghouse was built on this Centre Street site in 1701, located across from Ingersoll’s ordinary. It was here, fourteen years after the witch trials, that Ann Putnam Jr. stood in her pew as Reverend Joseph Green read her apology aloud to the Salem Village congregation.JOSEPH BALLARD
In July 1692, Joseph Ballard brought the afflicted girls to Andover (present-day North Andover) to determine the cause of his wife’s (Elizabeth) illness. She reported suffering from strange pains and pressures. Plan a visit to the home to learn more about Joseph RECOMMENDED ROUTE AROUND SALEM The Salem Witch Museum has created this recommended route to take a self-guided walk around Salem, where you will see various sites related to the witchcraft trials of 1692. Each site has a link to more information on our Online Sites Tour. If you walk the entire route,you
MARGARET SCOTT HOME, SITE OF Widow Margaret Scott was in her early-mid 70s in 1692, and had been a widow for more than twenty years. She married her husband Benjamin Scott in 1642, and never remarried after he died in 1671. Like several other women accused of witchcraft, she was a perfect target – an elderly widow whose circumstances reduced her to begging to survive. THOMAS CHANDLER HOMESTEAD, SITE OF Thomas Chandler died in Andover in 1703. A memorial stone for his father William and Chandler descendants is in the Old North Cemetery in Concord, NH. Listed on the stone are Thomas (with incorrect birth and death dates) and three other Chandler descendants, including fifth generation Captain John Chandler who settled in Penny Cook, NH, today REVEREND FRANCIS DANE HOME, SITE OF Francis Dane was the minister of Andover from 1649 until his death in 1697. He is buried in an unmarked grave in the First Burial Ground. Reverend Dane’s son, Lieutenant Francis Dane Jr., was one of the original members of the South Church of Andover. Lieutenant Dane’s grandson was the deacon of the South Church for thirty-nine years. THE NOT SO GOOD LIFE OF THE COLONIAL GOODWIFE Binge-watch Vikings, Turn, or Frontier, and you’ll see people being disemboweled, tortured, and decapitated – but you won’t see anything about menstruation, chamber pots, birth control, breastfeeding, or poopy babies. It’s 2021! Even though Google cars have been invented and women won the vote 101 years ago, these “unsanitary” subjects still make people uncomfortable and JOHN AND MARY (NURSE) TARBELL HOUSE, SITE OF Rebecca Nurse’s daughter Mary and her husband, John Tarbell, lived “within the bounds of the estate,” as did the other Nurse children (according to historian Charles Upham’s 1867 work Salem Witchcraft).They couple was married in 1678. Tarbell was suspicious of the accusations lodged against his mother-in-law, and visited the Thomas Putnam household at the end of March, 1692, along with SALEM JAIL IN 1692, SITE OF Salem Jail in 1692, Site of. In 1692, the Salem jail was located on Prison Lane, today known as St. Peter Street. The building, at the corner of Prison Lane and County Street (present-day Federal Street) measured “thirteen feet stud, and twenty feet square, accommodated with a yard” when built as the county jail in 1684. KING’S CHAPEL BURIAL GROUND King’s Chapel Burying Ground, originally called the Burying Place, was the only cemetery in Boston for close to thirty years.Copp’s Hill Burying Ground was established in 1659, followed by the Granary Burying Ground in 1660. The first cemetery was then called the Old Burying Ground until the mid-1750s, when it was re-named King’s Chapel Burying Ground, after the adjacent church. CHARTER STREET CEMETERY Many people associated with the Salem Witch Trials are buried at the Charter Street Cemetery between Lafayette and Liberty Streets. Some of these important figures include Magistrate John Hathorne, Bartholomew Gedney, Mary Corry, and Reverend Nicholas Noyes. Skip to main content Enable accessibility forvisually impaired
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We are open! To keep you and our staff safe, we require strict compliance with our mask and physical distance policy. We understand that you may have received both COVID vaccinations, but per state and local regulations, all must continue to wear 2 ply face coverings while in museums or in the downtown Salem area. As we are functioning at 45% capacity, you may need to wait outside on our front plaza for up to 15 minutes before entering the museum for your visit. Please plan accordingly especially during inclement weather. Tickets are sold ONLINE ONLY and we suggest you purchase them before you come to Salem. We look forward to welcoming you to the Salem Witch Museum. During our winter months, should we be expecting inclement weather, please call prior to your visit. Also note that we close for several weeks in January for painting and maintenance. Contact us prior to your visit to ensure that we are open.ADMISSION
Adults $15, seniors (65 and over) $13.50, Children (3-14) $12PLAN TO VISIT
Salem Witch Museum
19 1/2 Washington Square North Salem, Massachusetts 01970978.744.1692
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A DISCUSSION OF THE INTERNMENT OF JAPANESE AMERICANS Our museum’s mission is to be the voice of the innocent victims of the Salem witch trials of 1692 while also bringing awareness to how the lessons and patterns of… - Learn More Witch Trials Self Guided TourHistory & Education
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Salem Witch Museum Store The museum store offers a wide assortment of items from educational materials to attractive apparel. With an extensive collection of books on the Salem witch trials and many locally made treats, we offer tried, true and quirky products to appeal to young and old alike. Visit the Museum store onsite or online. We’re open year round.Previous
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19 1/2 Washington Square North Salem, Massachusetts 01970978.744.1692
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