Apr 25: This WEEK in Salem

Joining late? Need to catch up? Here’s a snapshot of where we are.

SUMMARY

The doors have blown open in Salem, and the witchcraft hysteria has exploded. In the last 7 weeks, 10 people were arrested. In the next 7 weeks, it’ll be 54. As a reader, it’s overwhelming. But it was also overwhelming to the real-life people at the time. My hope as a writer is to link the two, so today’s readers can experience the same confusion and even pain with those who lived through it. I hope you’ll choose to stay with it – just as they had to.

WHAT HAPPENED THIS WEEK

12 people were arrested, examined, and sent to jail. One of them was Giles Corey (the gospel woman’s husband). He’s bewildered and angry, and has written a new will, disinheriting the sons-in-law who turned against him and his wife, Martha. He also disinherited Martha – but why?

We also met a new accuser: Susannah Sheldon, a traumatized war refugee who’s lost her brothers and father, and is suddenly living in poverty. She’s accused the wealthiest couple in Salem.

13-year-old Ann Putnam, the most active accuser, has now cried out against Salem’s former minister, and a former deputy who quit because he thought he was arresting innocent people.

WHO’S WHERE

Accused

NEW – The Reverend George Burroughs – a minister in Maine who used to be the minister of Salem Village. He left a few enemies behind. (He doesn’t know he’s accused yet.)

NEW – John Willard – a former constable and deputy who quit when he became convinced he was arresting innocent people. (He doesn’t know he’s been accused yet.)

Arrested

12 people, but they were immediately sent to jail. See below.

In Jail (23 people)

NEW – Bridget Bishop (unruly) – an outspoken woman who’s been in and out of court for years.

NEW – Mary Esty (pious) – With the nervous Sarah Cloyce, another sister of the beloved Rebecca Nurse.

NEW – Sarah Wilds (flamboyant) – an aging, glamorous woman who’s left a trail of scandals in her wake.

NEW – Giles Corey (cantankerous) – the gospel woman Martha Corey’s husband.

NEW – Abigail Hobbs – a wild child who wanders through the woods at night, disobeys her parents, and claims she’s made a pact with the Devil. Her parents were arrested a few days later.

NEW – Mary Warren – the Proctors’ servant, who’s been afflicted, cured, accused, and is now afflicted again. The judges can’t figure out which side of the fence she’s on, so they’re keeping her in jail.

Sarah Cloyce (nervous) – Rebecca Nurse’s younger sister. She’d stormed out of church, which sparked people to question whether innocent people were being accused.

Martha Corey (gospel woman) – a slightly arrogant church member; Giles Corey’s wife.

Dorcas Good (4 years old) – the daughter of the beggar Sarah Good.

Sarah Good (beggar) – a vagrant who smokes a pipe and has a terrible temper. She has her baby in jail with her.

Rebecca Nurse (beloved) – a 70-year-old grandmother who is well-loved throughout the community.

Sarah Osborne (sickly) – a scandal-ridden woman who married her servant and is trying to take her sons’ inheritance.

Elizabeth Proctor (quarrelsome) – an opinionated tavern owner, married to the respected but harsh John Proctor.

John Proctor (harsh) – A farmer and tavern owner, opinionated and sometimes overbearing, but respected.

Tituba (slave) – the minister’s slave who was the first to be accused and the first to confess.

7 other people: A slave, a wealthy merchant’s wife, a woman in a nearby town, the unruly Bridget Bishop’s son and daughter-in-law, and the wild child Abigail Hobbs’s parents.

Tried & Sentenced

(No one … yet)

Died

(No one … yet)


Tomorrow in Salem: The resistance takes root

Apr 18: Summary: This WEEK in Salem

Things are about to get real in Salem. Need to catch up? Here’s a snapshot of where we are.

SUMMARY

Four people are accused but still free, and ten people are in jail, some of them in Boston because it’s so crowded in the Salem jail.

With the jails so crowded and more accusations rolling in, the judges are becoming even more alarmed. They cannot start trials and clear the jails until the governor returns.


WHAT HAPPENED THIS WEEK

The constable’s two-month-old baby died, his first and only child, and he and his wife are heartbroken. Why did this terrible thing happen? He can only think of one possible cause: he’d said he wasn’t surprised that the nervous Sarah Cloyce and her sister, the beloved Rebecca Nurse, were witches. Their specters must have wreaked revenge.

Three more people were accused: the Proctors’ servant Mary Warren, who used to be afflicted and has now called the other girls liars. Those same girls have now accused her.

The unruly Bridget Bishop was also accused. She’s disliked and disreputable, and has been in and out of court for fighting with her husband and stealing brass, among other things.

Last, we’ve met the wild child Abigail Hobbs, who’s 15, wanders through the woods at night, and claims she’s made a pact with the Devil. She’s also been accused.

WHO’S WHERE

Accused

NEW – Bridget Bishop – an unruly woman who’s been in and out of court for years

NEW – Abigail Hobbs – a wild child who wanders through the woods at night, disobeys her parents, and claims she’s made a pact with the Devil

NEW – Mary Warren – the Proctors’ servant, who’s been afflicted, cured, and is now accused

Giles Corey (cantankerous) – the gospel woman Martha Corey’s husband

Arrested

(No one new)

In Jail (10 people)

Sarah Cloyce (nervous) – Rebecca Nurse’s younger sister. She’d stormed out of church, which sparked people to question whether innocent people were being accused.

Elizabeth Proctor (quarrelsome) – an opinionated tavern owner, married to the respected but harsh John Proctor

John Proctor (harsh) – a farmer and tavern owner, opinionated and sometimes overbearing, but respected

Martha Corey (gospel woman) – a slightly arrogant church member

Dorcas Good (4 years old) – the daughter of the beggar Sarah Good

Sarah Good (beggar) with her baby – a vagrant who smokes a pipe and has a terrible temper

Rebecca Nurse (beloved) – a 70-year-old grandmother who is well-loved throughout the community

Sarah Osborne (sickly) – a scandal-ridden woman who married her servant and is trying to take her sons’ inheritance

Tituba (slave) – the minister’s slave who was the first to be accused and the first to confess

A woman in a nearby town, where the affliction has spread.

Tried & sentenced

(No one … yet)

Died

(No one … yet)


Tomorrow in Salem: A storm of accusations

Apr 13: This WEEK in Salem

Need to catch up? Here’s a snapshot of where we are in the story of Salem.

SUMMARY

Six women are sharing a single cell in the dark, lice-ridden jail, with one man in the men’s cell. It’s so crowded that they’re being transferred to the equally dismal jail in Boston, where three other prisoners have been for weeks. None of the ten prisoners has had a trial yet, though, and won’t until the governor arrives from London.
The witchcraft hysteria is beginning to spread to nearby towns, with several people afflicted, and one person in jail. So the judges have realized that the witchcraft problem is bigger than they can handle, and they’ve enlisted the help of legal assistants in Boston.


WHAT HAPPENED THIS WEEK

The jail keeper finally took pity on the beggar Sarah Good’s baby and pushed two thin blankets through the jail cell’s bars.

The harsh John Proctor and his quarrelsome wife Elizabeth put their bickering aside and said an intimate farewell before she was sent to jail. One day later, John was examined and sent to jail as well.

The nervous Sarah Cloyce was also examined and sent to jail, where she was reunited with her sister, the beloved Rebecca Nurse.

Salem jail is now so crowded that several people had to be transferred to the jail in Boston.


WHO’S WHERE

ACCUSED
Giles Corey (he doesn’t know it yet)

ARRESTED
• (No one new)

IN JAIL (10 people)
NEWSarah Cloyce (nervous) – Rebecca Nurse’s younger sister. She’d stormed out of church, which sparked people to question whether innocent people were being accused.
NEWElizabeth Proctor (quarrelsome) – an opinionated tavern owner, married to the respected but harsh John Proctor
NEWJohn Proctor (harsh) – A farmer and tavern owner, opinionated and sometimes overbearing, but respected

Martha Corey (gospel woman) – a slightly arrogant church member
Dorcas Good (4 years old) – the daughter of the beggar Sarah Good
Sarah Good (beggar) with her baby – a vagrant who smokes a pipe and has a terrible temper
Rebecca Nurse (beloved) – a 70-year-old grandmother who is well-loved throughout the community
Sarah Osborne (sickly) – a scandal-ridden woman who married her servant and is trying to take her sons’ inheritance
Tituba (slave) – the minister’s slave who was the first to be accused and the first to confess
• A woman in a nearby town, where the affliction has spread.

TRIED & SENTENCED
• (No one … yet)

EXECUTED
• (No one … yet)


Tomorrow in Salem: The constable’s baby sickens

Mar 22: Summary: This WEEK in Salem

Joining late? Catching up? Here’s a summary of what happened this WEEK in Salem:

WHAT HAPPENED

The gospel woman Martha Corey has been accused, arrested, examined, and sent to jail. Her husband, the cantankerous Giles Corey, is swaggering all over town spreading the accusations and contradicting her in her hearing. About Martha Corey


WHO’S WHERE

Accused

Rebecca Nurse (beloved)

About Elizabeth Proctor (quarrelsome)

Dorcas Good (4-year-old daughter of the beggar Sarah Good)

Arrested

(no one new)

Examined & sent to jail

NEW: Martha Corey (gospel woman) – In jail in Salem

Sarah Good (beggar) – Chained to a jail cell in Boston

Sarah Osborne (sickly) – Chained to a jail cell in Boston

Tituba (slave) – Chained to a cell in Boston

Tried & sentenced

(no one … yet)

Executed

(no one … yet)


Tomorrow in Salem: JAILED: the beloved Rebecca Nurse and 4yo Dorcas Good

Mar 15: SUMMARY: This WEEK in Salem

What happened:

Tituba, Sarah Osborne, and Sarah Good are still in jail in Boston. After their specters appear 20 miles away, the women are chained to the walls of the jail cell, which should also control their specters.

Rev Samuel Parris is feeling protective, and sends his 9yo daughter Betty away to live with a cousin.

We meet Martha Corey, a proud member of the church. She’s smug and disliked, and no one seems surprised when she’s accused. She torments Ann Putnam, and we meet the Putnam family servant Mercy Lewis. Mercy is badly afflicted herself, and may have severe PTSD from the Indian Wars in Maine.

Ann Putnam also accuses the beloved Rebecca Nurse, a saintly grandmother whose family has had land disputes with Ann’s father.

We’re also introduced to the 20yo servant Mary Warren, who says she’s afflicted either by her master John Proctor or by Martha Corey.


WHO’S BEEN ACCUSED

Two more women have been accused of witchcraft, but none has been to court:

Martha Corey is a self-professed gospel woman, disliked, and a member of the church. When she heard about the accusations she was smug and condescending at first, but now she’s bewildered and perhaps a little afraid. She hasn’t been arrested (yet). About Martha Corey

Rebecca Nurse is a beloved elderly woman and a long-time member of the church. She doesn’t know she’s been accused. About Rebecca Nurse

Carried over from last week, with no changes:

Elizabeth Proctor is a quarrelsome tavern owner and farm wife who uses healing herbs. She doesn’t know she’s been accused. About Elizabeth Proctor

Dorcas Good is 4 years old. Her mother is a beggar who’s already in jail. Dorcas has been only slightly accused, so nothing has been done yet. About Dorcas Good

Tituba is a slave. She’s confessed. Still in jail in Boston. About Tituba

Sarah Osborne is sickly and weak, and has denied the charges. Still in jail in Boston. About Sarah Osborne

Sarah Good is a pipe-smoking beggar who has her baby in prison with her. She’s denied the charges. Still in jail in Boston. About Sarah Good


WHO’S ACCUSING PEOPLE

The focus is shifting. The first accusers were young girls. Now three older girls, all servants (at least one of them a traumatized orphan), have chimed in.

18yo Mercy Lewis is a servant in the Putnam home. She is a traumatized orphan and refugee from the Indian Wars in Maine. About Mercy Lewis

20yo Mary Warren is a servant in the Proctor home. About Mary Warren

17yo Elizabeth Hubbard (an orphan who’s the doctor’s servant). About Elizabeth Hubbard

9yo Betty Parris is the minister’s little daughter and has been sent away. About Betty Parris

11yo Abigail Williams is a tomboy who’s the minister’s niece. She lives with his family. About Abigail Williams

12yo Ann Putnam is the girls’ unspoken leader. About Ann Putnam


WHO’S IN CHARGE

We’ve already met these people, but they’ll keep appearing throughout the story.

Reverend Samuel Parris is Salem Village’s Puritan Minister. About Samuel Parris

Thomas Putnam is an angry and powerful man, and one of the accuser’s father. About Thomas Putnam

John Hathorne is a cruel magistrate. About John Hathorne

Jonathan Corwin is a quiet magistrate. About Jonathan Corwin

William Phips is the ambitious and arrogant governor. About William Phips


HISTORICAL CONTEXT

All historical context can be found here.

This week’s additional context:

Why did Native Americans attack and destroy settlements in Maine?

Why did people believe that witches and their specters dressed alike? Why was that important?

Was there racism in Salem?

Why were there babies in jail?


Tomorrow in Salem: The cantankerous Giles Corey suspects his wife