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  • Anatomy of a Witch Trial: The Case Against Bridget Bishop
    Jun 14 2026

    We dig into original Salem Witch Trials documents to map, step by step, how Bridget Bishop moved from first mention to execution—and how “evidence” worked in 1692. Using the arrest warrant (April 18, 1692), competing examination records by Ezekiel Cheever and Samuel Parris, and a trail of statements, depositions, and jail paperwork, we trace the case built on spectral evidence, old grievances framed as supernatural harm, and accusations drawn from other prisoners’ confessions. We follow Bridget through transfers between Salem and Boston jails, the June 2 physical search for “witches’ teats,” five indictments for afflicting the core afflicted girls, and the death warrant ordering her hanging on June 10. We also track the long aftermath, from missed restitution efforts to her eventual naming in Massachusetts’ 2001 exoneration act.

    00:00 Anatomy of a Trial

    01:02 Arrest Warrant Breakdown

    02:47 Preliminary Examination

    05:19 Spectral Evidence Claims

    06:49 Past Harm Testimony

    08:52 Confessions Implicate Bridget

    09:31 Jail Transfers and Records

    10:43 Witch Marks and Indictments

    12:42 Death Warrant and Execution

    16:39 Costs and Restitution

    17:53 Exoneration in 2001

    19:06 Subscribe and Closing

    Links:

    • Salem Witch-Hunt Facebook Page: https://facebook.com/salemwitchhunt

    • High Quality Scans of Original Court Documents - Peabody Essex Museum Salem Witch Trials Collection: https://pem.quartexcollections.com/collections/salem-witch-trials-collection

    • Bernard Rosenthal, ed., Records of the Salem Witch-Hunt: https://bookshop.org/a/90227/9781107689619⁠

    • Salem Witch Trials History YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCliis4vjMIUgg3wcA0pXeYQ/

    • ⁠Salem Witch Trials Daily Hub: https://aboutsalem.com/salem-witch-trials-daily/⁠

    • ⁠The Thing About the Salem Witch Trials: https://aboutsalem.com⁠

    • ⁠The Thing About Witch Hunts: https://aboutwitchhunts.com⁠

    • ⁠Mary Beth Norton, In the Devil’s Snare: The Salem Witchcraft Crisis of 1692: https://bookshop.org/a/90227/9780375706905⁠

    • ⁠Emerson W. Baker, A Storm of Witchcraft: The Salem Trials and the American Experience:

    • https://bookshop.org/a/90227/9780190627805⁠

    • ⁠Marilynne K. Roach, The Salem Witch Trials: A Day-by-Day Chronicle of a Community Under Siege: https://bookshop.org/a/90227/9781589791329⁠

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    19 Min.
  • Bridget Bishop: The First Person Executed in the Salem Witch Trials
    Jun 7 2026

    Step into Salem in 1692 as we follow Bridget Bishop from her life in Salem Town to the courtroom that condemned her. She was the first person executed in the Salem Witch Trials, convicted on testimony about specters, poppets, an “unnatural mark,” and long-running neighborhood quarrels—despite insisting she had never harmed the accusers and did not even know them. We trace her documented history from England to Massachusetts, her three marriages, earlier accusations that faded for lack of evidence, and the legal machinery that made her case the opening death sentence for the Court of Oyer and Terminer. We also confront how Bridget has been misremembered, explore modern portrayals like Cry Innocent and screen adaptations, and highlight memorials, exoneration, and the living legacy of her descendants.

    00:00 Bridget Bishop Introduced

    00:40 Life Before 1692

    02:24 Arrest And Examination

    04:47 Spectral Evidence Piles Up

    06:08 Trial And Execution

    07:04 Myths And Mixups

    07:36 Remembering Bridget Today

    09:02 Stage And Screen Portrayals

    09:57 Memorials And Exoneration

    10:49 Legacy And Descendants

    End Witch Hunts: https://endwitchhunts.org

    The Thing About The Salem Witch Trials: https://aboutsalem.com

    The Thing About Witch Hunts: https://aboutwitchhunts.com

    Salem Witch Trials History: https://youtube.com/@aboutwitchhunts

    Buy A Book About The Salem Witch Trials: https://bookshop.org/lists/the-salem-witch-hunt-collection-curated-by-the-thing-about-salem-podcast

    ⁠Salem Witch Trials Daily Hub: https://aboutsalem.com/salem-witch-trials-daily/⁠

    ⁠Mary Beth Norton, In the Devil’s Snare: The Salem Witchcraft Crisis of 1692: https://bookshop.org/a/90227/9780375706905⁠

    Bernard Rosenthal, ed., Records of the Salem Witch-Hunt: https://bookshop.org/a/90227/9781107689619⁠

    ⁠Emerson W. Baker, A Storm of Witchcraft: The Salem Trials and the American Experience:

    https://bookshop.org/a/90227/9780190627805⁠

    ⁠Marilynne K. Roach, The Salem Witch Trials: A Day-by-Day Chronicle of a Community Under Siege: https://bookshop.org/a/90227/9781589791329⁠

    High Quality Scans of Original Court Documents - Peabody Essex Museum Salem Witch Trials Collection: https://pem.quartexcollections.com/collections/salem-witch-trials-collection

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    11 Min.
  • Salem Witch Trials Court: How the Court of Oyer and Terminer Worked in 1692
    May 31 2026

    Why did the 1692 Salem witch trials require an entirely new court, and how did that court reach a 100 percent conviction rate? This episode examines the Court of Oyer and Terminer, the special tribunal that prosecuted witchcraft accusations across colonial Massachusetts, and lays out the legal machinery, the magistrates, and the evidentiary standards that decided who lived and who died.

    When Sir William Phips took office, the province faced overcrowded jails, an invalidated court system, and dozens of pending witchcraft charges with no legal venue to resolve them. The court he created relied on spectral evidence and a bench of prosperous, legally untrained men, a combination that shaped one of the most consequential criminal proceedings in early American history.

    Chapters

    00:00 Welcome and Overview

    00:32 Why a Special Court

    02:06 Meet the Judges

    03:43 Earlier Witch Trial Experience

    05:10 Spectral Evidence Explained

    06:26 Ministers Weigh In

    06:49 Oyer and Terminer Results

    08:01 Superior Court Replaces It

    11:04 Reprieves and Stoughton Fury

    12:29 Aftermath and Next Episode

    What you will learn:

    • Why a special court became necessary in 1692

    • How the new Massachusetts charter dismantled the old court system

    • Who sat on the bench

    • What legal training the magistrates actually possessed

    • How spectral evidence functioned as proof

    • Why Connecticut had foreclosed spectral evidence decades earlier

    • How conviction rates differed under the two successive courts

    • Which condemned prisoners avoided execution

    Hosted by Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack.

    End Witch Hunts

    The Thing About The Salem Witch Trials

    Buy A Book About The Salem Witch Trials


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    13 Min.
  • Salem Witch Trials Governor Sir William Phips: America's First Knight
    May 24 2026

    William Phips was the last person anyone should have trusted with one of the most consequential legal crises in American history. No formal education. No legal training. No political experience. The man who put him in charge of Massachusetts was Increase Mather, the most powerful Puritan minister in colonial New England.

    Phips arrived at the Salem witch trials as governor of Massachusetts Bay with a life behind him that had nothing to do with governance. There was a Spanish shipwreck, a knighthood, a failed military campaign, and a financial disaster that forced the colony to print currency for the first time. By the time he sailed into Boston Harbor in May 1692, the jails were already full of the accused, the Court of Oyer and Terminer was waiting to be built, and the pressure to act was immense.

    Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack examine the full arc of William Phips, the contradictions he embodied, the power he held during the Salem witch trials of 1692, and what he did and did not do with it.

    What You Will Learn:

    • The kind of man Puritan New England handed its witch trials to

    • What it took to become the most powerful man in Massachusetts without ever learning to write

    • How a man who could not read until age 21 came to control the Salem witch trials

    • The Spanish shipwreck that launched a political career

    • Why New England's most powerful minister chose an illiterate treasure hunter for governor

    • The military disaster that forced Massachusetts to print money for the first time

    • What the ministers actually told Phips about the witchcraft cases

    • The accusation that landed inside his own home

    • Who Phips blamed when the Crown demanded answers

    Hosted by Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack.

    End Witch Hunts: endwitchhunts.org | aboutwitchhunts.com

    #WilliamPhips #SalemWitchTrials #Salem1692 #AmericasFirstKnight #ColonialAmerica #MassachusettsHistory #WitchTrialsHistory #IncreaseMather #RebeccaNurse #PuritanHistory #EndWitchHunts #ThingAboutSalemWitchTrials #NewEnglandHistory #AmericanHistory

    Links:

    Emerson W. Baker and John G. Reid, The New England Knight: Sir William Phips, 1651-1695: https://bookshop.org/a/90227/9780802081711

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    22 Min.
  • American Revolution: How Families of Salem Witch Trials Victims and Accusers United for Independence
    May 10 2026

    From Witch Trials to Revolution: Salem Village on the Front Lines

    We connect Salem’s darkest legacy to the opening clash of American independence with historian Dan Gagnon, Danvers resident and author of A Salem Witch: A Biography of Rebecca Nurse. Our conversation brings the Revolution into the very streets of Salem and Salem Village (today’s Danvers), where coercive acts, a moved provincial capital, troops on the Salem Common, and General Gage’s presence near the Rebecca Nurse Homestead turned imperial policy into daily reality. Tensions surge as the Massachusetts legislature outmaneuvers Gage in Salem, town meetings defy his bans, and crowds force him to release arrested patriots. The action escalates with Leslie’s Retreat—an armed standoff over a raised bridge—and then the Lexington Alarm, as Danvers militia (including descendants of witch-trial families) race to Menotomy for some of the day’s most savage fighting.

    00:00 Welcome and Introductions

    00:12 Dan Gagnon Background

    01:06 Witch Trials to Revolution

    02:34 Rights and Rising Tensions

    03:05 Salem Becomes Capital

    05:14 Defying General Gage

    06:26 Town Meetings and Protests

    08:15 Leslie's Retreat in Salem

    11:00 Lexington Alarm Response

    14:05 Menotomy Bloody Fighting

    17:07 Losses and Legacy


    Links:

    Rebecca Nurse Homestead: rebeccanurse.org

    A Salem Witch: A Biography of Rebecca Nurse by Dan Gagnon: www.bookshop.org/Shop/endwitchhunts

    End Witch Hunts endwitchhunts.org

    About Witch Hunts aboutwitchhunts.com

    Salem Witch Trials History YouTube: https://youtube.com/@aboutwitchhunts

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    18 Min.
  • Walpurgis Night, Salem Witchcraft, and the Maypole at Merrymount
    May 3 2026

    Every April 30, bonfires burn across Europe on the same night witches were said to gather on a mountaintop and make their covenant with the devil. That image did not stay in Europe. It crossed the Atlantic, embedded itself in colonial New England theology and law, and by 1692 it was being sworn to in witchcraft trials that sent nineteen people to their deaths. In this episode, hosts Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack follow that thread from a German mountain to a Danvers pasture — and the path runs straight through a Maypole, a folk magic discovery hidden inside a colonial home, a decades-old grudge over rancid butter, and a pear tree that has been standing since before the trials began and is still standing right now.

    In this episode, you will learn:

    • Why Walpurgis Night and the Salem witchcraft sabbath descriptions share the same historical roots

    • How one colonial settler's May Day celebration became a theological threat to Puritan authority

    • What a single word in William Bradford's writing reveals about how Puritans understood folk magic and social control

    • Why witchcraft gathering testimony carried such evidentiary weight in colonial Massachusetts courts — decades before Salem

    • How one man's actions in the 1620s left a thread running directly through the 1692 witch trials

    • What a 400-year-old pear tree in a Danvers parking lot has to do with the Salem witch trials

    The Thing About the Salem Witch Trials is part of the End Witch Hunts podcast network. Learn more at endwitchhunts.org.

    #SalemWitchTrials #Witchcraft #FolkMagic #WalpurgisNight #ColonialHistory #AmericanHistory #WitchHunts #1692 #Puritans #NewEnglandHistory #MayDay #ThomasMorton #JohnEndicott #EndWitchHunts #SalemHistory

    Salem Witch Trials History YouTube

    The Thing About the Salem Witch Trials

    Salem Witch Trials Daily

    The Thing About Witch Hunts

    Support Our Work, Buy a Salem Witch Trials History Book!

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    20 Min.
  • When ESPN Covered the Salem Witch Trials: Ergot Theory at 50
    Apr 26 2026

    ESPN has a history podcast, and they used it to cover the Salem Witch Trials on the 50th anniversary of the ergot theory. Hosts Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack, descendants of Salem Witch Trial victims, respond to Stupiracy's April 2nd episode on whether moldy rye bread caused the accusations of 1692.

    What you will learn:

    • What the ergot theory is and why it has circulated for 50 years
    • How the historical symptoms from Salem do not match ergotism
    • Who was executed and who died in jail during the Salem Witch Trials of 1692
    • Why the devil, not bread mold, was the legal framework driving the prosecutions
    • The witch legends and actual 1692 witch trials in ESPN's own backyard in Connecticut

    Hosted by Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack of The Thing About Witch Hunts Podcast. Learn more at www.aboutwitchhunts.com

    #SalemWitchTrials #WitchTrials #ErgotTheory #Salem1692 #SalemHistory #WitchHistory #RebeccaNurse #MaryEasty #GilesCory #ESPN #Stupiracy #ConnecticutWitchTrials #AmericanHistory #WitchHunts

    Links

    Margo Burns on Moldy Bread Theory

    Best Books on The Salem Witch Trials

    The Thing About the Salem Witch Trials

    Salem Witch Trials Daily

    The Thing About Witch Hunts

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    26 Min.
  • Salem Witch Trials Judge Coerces Confessions from Teens: The April 19, 1692 Story
    Apr 19 2026

    On April 19, 1692, Salem witch trials magistrates conducted their busiest day of examinations yet. Four accused witches appeared before the court in colonial Massachusetts. Two confessions were recorded. And the Puritan legal proceedings that would lead to nineteen executions shifted into a dangerous new phase.

    In this episode of The Thing About the Salem Witch Trials, Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack break down the examinations of Giles Cory, Abigail Hobbs, Mary Warren, and Bridget Bishop using the firsthand courtroom notes of Samuel Parris and Ezekiel Cheever. If you love American history, colonial history, or the true story behind one of the most dramatic legal crises in Puritan New England, this episode is for you.

    In this episode you'll learn:

    • What Giles Cory said under examination, why his answers about a cow house drew the magistrates' suspicion, and how the afflicted responded to Giles Cory's every movement in the courtroom

    • How Abigail Hobbs became the first confessor since Tituba, what her confession revealed about life on the colonial Maine frontier, and why Abigail Hobbs' testimony produced the first legal accusation against Sarah Wildes of Topsfield

    • What Mary Warren claimed about the afflicted accusers that the Salem witch trial court chose to ignore, and why Mary Warren's examination collapsed across four separate appearances before the magistrates

    • How Bridget Bishop defended herself against charges of witchcraft in 1692, what the cuts in Bridget Bishop's coat had to do with spectral evidence, and why her answer about not knowing what a witch was became a trap that led to her hanging

    The Thing About the Salem Witch Trials is hosted by Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack of End Witch Hunts nonprofit and The Thing About Witch Hunts podcast. For day-by-day coverage of the 1692 Salem witch trials, follow Salem Witch Trials Daily podcast.

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    The Thing About Salem Website

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    Massachusetts Witch-Hunt Justice Project

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    27 Min.