PLYMOUTH — The Pemigewasset Valley Chapter Daughters of the American Revolution will present “The Capital Crime of Witchcraft: What the Primary Sources Tell Us” on Saturday, Jan. 3, at 10:30 a.m., at the Pease Public Library in Plymouth.
On first impression, the witchcraft trials of the Colonial-era may seem to have been nothing but a free-for-all, fraught with hysterics. Margo Burns explores an array of prosecutions in 17th-century New England, using facsimiles of primary source manuscripts, from first formal complaints to arrest warrants, indictments of formal charges to death warrants, and the reversals of attainder and rescinding of excommunications years after the fact; demonstrating how methodically and logically the Salem Court worked.
This program focuses on the Salem witchcraft trials of 1692 and 1693, when 19 people were hanged and one crushed to death, but also examines a variety of other cases against women in New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Connecticut.
This is a New Hampshire Humanities to Go Program. This program is free and open to the public. For more information, contact Cathleen Hargreaves at 865-567-8487 or pemivalleyNHDAR@gmail.com.


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