The trials officially ended because once the queen was accused she demanded that the trials be stopped EDIT: The Queen was not accused. The wife of the Massachusetts governor was accused and the governor demanded a stop to the Trials and wrote to London for the power to pardon all the imprisoned.
Salem didn't really have long term effects. It was a localized event that spawned lawsuits and arguments for fifteen years. Today, aside from the continuing study of the trials, it doesn't effect life in America.
As far as I know, nobody ever questioned the Salem Witch Trails. The reason for this isprobably because, at the time of the Trials, mostly everybody believed in witches. The colonials believed that if someone got sick, it was because a witch was "bewitching" that person. Most Colonists would go to wits end to prevent an encounter with a witch or wizard. So when the witch trials began, naturally, all the colonists agreed to get rid of the "so called" witches immediately. If there was a person that didn't agree with the trials. Most likely that person would take care in hiding his\her feelings about it. Because, if you think about it, if so many believed in witches and so many wanted them dead and done with. What would happen to a person that told them that they should stop persecuting these men and women of being witches. I think the colonist would most likely think of that person as another witch, trying to stop the killings of his\her fellow minions. So as answer to your question. The person who criticized the Trials would probably be hanged, or served in jail for some time. EDIT: Solid reasoning, but incorrect. Martha Corey, George Jacobs, John Proctor, Mary Easty, Sarah Goode, and George Burroughs never hid their objections and they can all be found on the lists of the executed. Many of those who spoke out were imprisoned. That fact si often used to defend the theory that the girls' were covering something up or getting revenge. They took down any oppostionto protect themselves.
Propoganda was the main method used to deter communism in America. 'Witch Hunts' was also notoriously used to discourage people from Communism ideals.
The message that Miller is aiming to get across to the audience is that there is a parallel between the Salem society in 1692 and the American society in the 1950s. McCarthy was an American politician who served as a Republican U.S. Senator. During the Cold War, the people in America feared that the USSR would spread communism in the U.S.A. McCarthy used his senator power to accuse people he did not like for being communist. At first he accused artists, mainly actors and writers. They lost their jobs and nobody bought their books or watched their movies. The brave ones who tried to stop him were as well accused. Soon McCarthy gained lots of power over the U.S.A. but he made a big mistake when he used this power to accuse generals from the army that had more power than him. In the Crucible, Arthur Miller presents the exact same thing. Abigail gains power which is increasing just like McCarthy did. Everyone trusts her so she beguines accusing innocent people she does not like for witchcraft. McCarthy used his senator power to accuse people he did not like. If you opposed the Salem witch trials you were accused of being a witch. If you opposed the McCarthy investigations you were accused of being a communist. Arthur Miller clearly presents the parallel between Salem and the U.S. in the 1950s, and proves the readers that irrationality gets us nowhere.
Everyone accused tended to be on the normal side but some were more on the edge of society. When people who weren't average and everyday, people in power began to stop believing the accussations. And when a relative of the governor, William Phips, was accused, he halted the trials and wrote to London to get an order from Parliment and the Crown to dissolve the Trials' court and end the trials completly.
The Earliest English settlers took their fear of witches to the American colonies. In 1692 , a series of Notorious witch trials took place in Salem, Massachusetts. In all, 27 people were tried and convicted; of these 19 were hanged, and one man was pressed to death with stones. The gruesome trials, made the Americans to stop that, and the trials were condemned and the convictions are overturned. P.S : For more answers, please visit Wikipedia.
John Proctor was the first to openly criticize the girls actions during a court session. Before he was executed he wrote a letter asking the governor to stop the trials.
The trials officially ended because once the queen was accused she demanded that the trials be stopped EDIT: The Queen was not accused. The wife of the Massachusetts governor was accused and the governor demanded a stop to the Trials and wrote to London for the power to pardon all the imprisoned.
He accused people of being a witch and then put them on a trial and if they were still thought of as a witch they were hung
The trials officially ended because once the queen was accused she demanded that the trials be stopped EDIT: The Queen was not accused. The wife of the Massachusetts governor was accused and the governor demanded a stop to the Trials and wrote to London for the power to pardon all the imprisoned.
Salem didn't really have long term effects. It was a localized event that spawned lawsuits and arguments for fifteen years. Today, aside from the continuing study of the trials, it doesn't effect life in America.
In the late 17th century, Salem was a massively important port city. Most exports of the colonies would either go to Salem before being sent to Europe or taken south into the Caribbean by a ship whose home port was at Salem. Trade doesn't stop for witch trials.
John Proctor refuses to yield to the hysteria of the witch trials, and he refuses to give a false confession. John Proctor will not sign his name to lies. He dies an honest man, who tries to stop the nonsense that rules Salem during the trials.
Plattsburgh
no, just be a witch become one no one can stop u!
The last woman believed to be executed for witchcraft in Europe was Anna Göldi in Switzerland, 1782. If you are wondering about the Salem witch-trials then that started and ended in 1692. There are still witch-hunts that are reported to have occurred until the very recent past in some less developed areas of the world, however I am unsure of how true the accounts are. The modern witch-hunts are said to be committed by angry mobs and not in the form of any kind of trial.