Executed for witchcraft by hanging were:
Bridget Bishop - June 10th, 1692
Rebecca Nurse - July 19th, 1692
Susannah Martin
Elizabeth Howe
Sarah Good
Sarah Wilds
George Jacobs Sr. - August 19th, 1692
Martha Carrier
George Burroughs
John Willard
John Proctor
Martha Cory - September 22nd, 1692
Margaret Scott
Mary Esty
Alice Parker
Ann Pudeator
Wilmott Redd
Samuel Wardell
Mary Parker
Died in Jail:
Sarah Osborne
Roger Toothaker
Ann Foster
Lydia Dastin
Died from torture:
Giles Cory - September 21st, 1692
(Giles Cory was pressed to death by having large rocks placed upon a board, upon his chest. His famous last words were, "More...Weight...)
Executed for witchcraft by hanging were:
Bridget Bishop - June 10th, 1692
Rebecca Nurse - July 19th, 1692
Susannah Martin
Elizabeth Howe
Sarah Good
Sarah Wilds
George Jacobs Sr. - August 19th, 1692
Martha Carrier
George Burroughs
John Willard
John Proctor
Martha Cory - September 22nd, 1692
Margaret Scott
Mary Esty
Alice Parker
Ann Pudeator
Wilmott Redd
Samuel Wardell
Mary Parker
Died in Jail:
Sarah Osborne
Roger Toothaker
Ann Foster
Lydia Dastin
Died from torture:
Giles Cory - September 21st, 1692
(Giles Cory was pressed to death by having large rocks placed upon a board, upon his chest. His famous last words were, "More...Weight...)
I believe that the first victim of the Salem witch trials was a slave called Tituba. She was telling some stories almost like fairy tales to some girls that visited her. This was a social no no because the Puritan church did not accept change. Later, after the story telling, the girls began to "act strangely" and this was drawn back to Tituba. She was singled out most likely because she was a slave as well as the fact that she was "being different". Nothing much has been proven about the Salem Witch trials, so please don't only take my word for it.
EDIT:
There is no proof, in fact it has mostly been disporven, that Tituba tols stories and that's why the girls went crazy. Tituba can not be considered a victim because she survived. The first person to die in the Trials was Sarah Osbourne, because of the terrible conditions in prison. The first executed was Bridget Bishop.
Key Figures
Samuel Parris (1653-1720), Puritan pastor of Salem Village
Tituba (1648?-1692), West Indian slave in the Parris household
William Phips (1651-1695), royal governor of Massachusetts, 1692-1694
William Stoughton (1631-1701), deputy governor and presiding justice at the witch trials
Samuel Sewall (1652-1730), Massachusetts magistrate and a judge at the witch trials
John Hathorne (1641-1717), assistant of the Massachusetts General Court who conducted examinations of accused witches
Jonathan Corwin (fl. 1692-1693), Massachusetts General Court examiner and judge
Nicholas Noyes (1647-1717), Puritan pastor of Salem Town
Simon Bradstreet (1603-1697), provisional governor of Massachusetts after the fall of the Dominion of New England
Increase Mather (1639-1723), pastor of the Boston Puritan church and president of Harvard College
Cotton Mather (1663-1728), Puritan minister who both criticized and defended the judges at the trials
The Convicted and Executed: 19 Victims Who Did Not Survive:
Bridget Bishop
Sara Good
Elizabeth How
Rebecca Nurse
Sarah Wildes
Rev. George Burrough
Martha Carrier
George Jacobs, Sr.
John Proctor
Martha Cory
Mary Esty
Ann Pudeator
Samuel Wardell
Alice Parker
Mary Parker
John Willard
Wilmot Redd
Margaret Scott
The Puritans held the Salem Witch Trails in 1692.
Massachusetts
Giles Corey, who was around 80
Giles Corey, who was approximately 80.
The famous Salem tavern where some examinations of accused witches was owned by the Ingersoll family.
The Puritans held the Salem Witch Trails in 1692.
Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts.
Salem, Massachusetts.
Massachusetts Bay
1693
1692
The Witch trails happened.
The Salem Witch Trials were performed in civil court, meaning no lawyers.
eduation
He didnt
Governor Phipps ended the Salem witch trials.
Salem, Massachusetts, which is located near the New Hampshire Border.