Salem Witch Trials Daily

Mary Ireson, Mary Toothaker, and Job Tookey: June 4, 1692

3 min · I går
episode Mary Ireson, Mary Toothaker, and Job Tookey: June 4, 1692 cover

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June 4, 1692: Mary Ireson Arrest Warrant and Job Tookey ExaminedWe track the Salem Witch Trials on Saturday, June 4, 1692, as magistrates John Hathorne, Jonathan Corwin, and Bartholomew Gedney record accusations against Mary Ireson of Lynn for allegedly afflicting multiple Salem Village girls, leading to a warrant for her arrest and delivery to Thomas Beadle’s tavern. We follow constable Henry Collins as he takes Ireson into custody, and we also examine witness accounts tying Mary Warren’s fits to claims about the devil’s book and threats attributed to Mary Toothaker and Ireson. Our timeline then moves to Beverly with the examination of Job Tookey, reconstructed through testimony from afflicted witnesses and neighbors who allege he boasted of raising the devil, admitted to murder, and sought a leading role among witches—claims that trigger further reported afflictions and corroborating statements.00:00 Daily Introduction00:13 Warrant for Mary Ireson01:04 Mary Warren Fit Testimony01:52 Job Tookey Examined02:52 More Witness Statements03:23 Devil Talk and Ringleader Claim03:43 Afflicted Response and Wrap Up

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episode Good Men Described: June 5, 1692 cover

Good Men Described: June 5, 1692

Cotton Mather’s “Good Men Described” and a Quiet Day in SalemWe take you to June 5, 1692, a rare calm Sunday in Salem: the Court of Oyer and Terminer is not in session, and there are no reported afflictions from witch specters. Our focus shifts to Boston, where Governor Phips attends services at the North Church and Cotton Mather delivers his sermon “Good Men Described,” warning that people might sell their souls for “money or frolic” and equating rebellion with the sin of witchcraft. We connect Mather’s call to aspire to sainthood, imitate angels, and resist “following a multitude in the doing of evil” to the growing momentum of accusations during the Salem Witch Trials.00:00 Quiet Sunday in Salem00:18 Salem Witch Trials Daily Intro00:23 Cotton Mather Sermon in Boston00:42 Warning Against Following the Crowd

I går1 min
episode Mary Ireson, Mary Toothaker, and Job Tookey: June 4, 1692 cover

Mary Ireson, Mary Toothaker, and Job Tookey: June 4, 1692

June 4, 1692: Mary Ireson Arrest Warrant and Job Tookey ExaminedWe track the Salem Witch Trials on Saturday, June 4, 1692, as magistrates John Hathorne, Jonathan Corwin, and Bartholomew Gedney record accusations against Mary Ireson of Lynn for allegedly afflicting multiple Salem Village girls, leading to a warrant for her arrest and delivery to Thomas Beadle’s tavern. We follow constable Henry Collins as he takes Ireson into custody, and we also examine witness accounts tying Mary Warren’s fits to claims about the devil’s book and threats attributed to Mary Toothaker and Ireson. Our timeline then moves to Beverly with the examination of Job Tookey, reconstructed through testimony from afflicted witnesses and neighbors who allege he boasted of raising the devil, admitted to murder, and sought a leading role among witches—claims that trigger further reported afflictions and corroborating statements.00:00 Daily Introduction00:13 Warrant for Mary Ireson01:04 Mary Warren Fit Testimony01:52 Job Tookey Examined02:52 More Witness Statements03:23 Devil Talk and Ringleader Claim03:43 Afflicted Response and Wrap Up

I går3 min
episode Rebecca Nurse and John Willard Face the Grand Jury: June 3, 1692 cover

Rebecca Nurse and John Willard Face the Grand Jury: June 3, 1692

Grand Jury Indicts Rebecca Nurse and John Willard | Salem Witch Trials Daily (June 3, 1692)We head inside the Salem Court of Oyer and Terminer on June 3, 1692, as the grand jury—led again by foreman John Ruck—hears spectral testimony and older depositions against Rebecca Nurse and John Willard, with no physical evidence presented. Our focus is the turning point as Nurse is charged on four counts for allegedly afflicting Ann Putnam Jr., Mary Walcott, Elizabeth Hubbard, and Abigail Williams, while a handful of witnesses speak up for her before the jury returns billa vera on every count. Then the pressure shifts to Willard: accusations from multiple afflicted, “touch test” and Lord’s Prayer claims, and links to the Wilkins family case drive indictments on several affliction charges, with one count rejected. We also track surprising defense testimony for Elizabeth How, new spectral allegations against John Procter, and fresh arrests of Elizabeth Fosdick and Elizabeth Paine.00:00 Grand Jury Opens01:16 Rebecca Nurse Accusations04:49 Defense for Nurse05:54 Nurse Indicted06:27 Willard Evidence List09:17 Willard Folk Tests11:26 Willard Indictments12:22 Ministers Defend How13:44 More Arrests Reports

4. juni 202614 min
episode Bridget Bishop's Trial: June 2, 1692 cover

Bridget Bishop's Trial: June 2, 1692

Bridget Bishop on Trial: The Court of Oyer and Terminer Opens in Salem (June 2, 1692)The new Court of Oyer and Terminer opens at the Salem Town House as we follow Bridget Bishop through the first full force of Salem Witch Trials justice—oaths sworn by William Stoughton, Thomas Newton, and Stephen Sewall, preliminary actions in other accused witches’ cases, and a startling jailhouse body search for “witches’ teats” on Bridget Bishop, Rebecca Nurse, and Elizabeth Procter. We trace Bishop’s arraignment and five-count indictment for afflicting Mercy Lewis, Abigail Williams, Elizabeth Hubbard, Ann Putnam Jr., and likely Mary Walcott, then move into vivid witness claims: spectral attacks, poppets, a cursed pig, and a bizarre “monkey” creature offer drawn from demonology-fueled fear. The day ends with a guilty verdict and a second search where marks seem to vanish—raising sharp questions about evidence, credibility, and the machinery of the Salem witchcraft trials.00:00 Bridget Bishop On Trial00:31 Court Convenes First Time01:45 Jailhouse Body Searches03:26 Indictments And Arraignment05:34 Witness Stories Begin06:03 Louder And The Creature08:09 Shattuck Family Accusations09:50 Poppets And Bewitched Sow10:54 More Depositions And Doubts12:01 Guilty Verdict And Reexamination12:42 Rebecca Nurse Petition Wrap Up

3. juni 202613 min
episode Witches Sabbath and Trial Preparations: Salem Witch Trials Daily June 1, 1692 cover

Witches Sabbath and Trial Preparations: Salem Witch Trials Daily June 1, 1692

June 1, 1692: Spectral “General Meeting,” Perley Testimony vs. Elizabeth How, and Trials on the Brink Salem is at a breaking point on June 1, 1692, with the Court of Oyer and Terminer about to open and overcrowded Massachusetts jails feeding a steady transfer of witchcraft suspects from Boston to Salem. We follow magistrates John Hathorne and Jonathan Corwin as they question Abigail and Deliverance Hobbs, while Mary Warren describes a noisy parade of specters—George Burroughs, Rebecca Nurse, Elizabeth Procter, and others—offering a grisly “sweet bread and wine” feast at Mr. Parris’ house. Tension spikes with detailed testimony from Ruth and Samuel Perley against Elizabeth How, including years of alleged affliction, a child’s death, and strange livestock events. Confessions and counter-accusations collide as Sarah Churchill’s devil’s book claims are challenged as coerced, and jailed defendants push back by calling the accusers fraudulent—while summons go out for witnesses against Rebecca Nurse and John Willard on the eve of the first trials. 00:00 Trials About to Begin 01:21 Hobbs Hearing Specters 03:11 Perley Case Against How 06:09 Confessions And Poppets 07:19 Accusers Called Out 08:46 Jailhouse Pushback 10:13 Summons For Tomorrow 10:54 Wrap Up And Anniversary

2. juni 202611 min