Salem Witch Trials Daily
June 28, 1692: Sarah Good Convicted as the Court Targets Its Next AccusedWe take you inside the Salem townhouse on June 28, 1692, as the Court of Oyer and Terminer moves decisively against Sarah Good—three “true bill” indictments, a witness list packed with familiar accusers, and testimony ranging from spectral assaults to bound hands, vanishing objects, and dead cattle—ending in her conviction for witchcraft. Our story then turns to rare moments of resistance: Rebecca Nurse petitions for a new, qualified examination to challenge alleged physical evidence, while 94-year-old James How Sr. testifies to Elizabeth How’s long Christian character and pleads for judges to distinguish “prejudice and conscience,” even as her case continues to build. We also track the widening hunt with fresh summonses, new arrests including Mary Bradbury and Sarah Davis, and parallel Connecticut accusations involving Katherine Branch and Elizabeth Clawson.00:00 Court Convenes Again00:27 Indictments Against Good01:01 Witnesses And Evidence Types01:30 Spectral Attacks Described02:20 Bound Hands And Vanishing Objects02:58 Dead Cattle Accusations03:47 A Deposition Left Unused04:32 Nurse Petitions For Reexam05:52 Statement For Elizabeth How07:10 Next Targets And Arrests08:06 Day's Verdict Recap
101 episoder
Kommentarer
0Vær den første til at kommentere
Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af Salem Witch Trials Daily-fællesskabet!