In the Salem witch trials poor people accuced the rich people of witch craft. Also in Salem 1692 people where scared of being accuced or hanged. The people where scared to death. The girls did not want to be told what to be told and these girls where crazy also the poor people blamed the rich people.
ESCAPING SALEM: The Other Witch Hunt of 1692 In Richard GodBeers novel “Escaping Salem: The Other Witch Hunt of 1692” he tells of a witch trial that took place in Stamford Connecticut in 1692. GodBeer starts readers off with the setting taking place in Daniel and Abigail Wescots household. He tells of a dilemma going on in the household pertaining to their servant; Katherine Branch. She was experiencing hallucinated fits that caused her to convulse and scream in pain.
During the Kent State shooting four kids died. People were going on strikes to make changes due to this horrible event. The Salem Witch Trials and The Kent State shooting are two tragic events that should not have happened( Salem witch trials) . During the Salem Witch Trials a lot of people were killed(salem witch trials).Twenty people were killed because they were accused of being bewitched(salem
What does the Salem Witch Trials and, and Kent State Shooting have in common? The Kent State Shooting, and the Salem Witch Trials happened, during different time periods, but had so many things in common such as a lot of people died, and a lot of people got mad. The Salem Witch Trials started, during the spring of 1692 in Massachusetts. (Salem Witch Trials)
Salem witch trials and the kent state shooting. What do two events that occured hundreds of years apart have in common? Innocent lives were lost due to selfish people who didn’t care about other life’s that they harmed. The Salem Witch Trials happened in 1692 and several lives were lost (Salem Witch Trials). It started by a group of girls in the woods dancing and the next morning one of the girls came up sick (Salem Witch Trials).
Throughout history, there have been many “witch hunts” that have created mass hysteria. Two of which were called the Salem Witch Trials and the Scottsboro Case. The two trials have many similarities to each other and so have many other trials. The Scottsboro Trials, in summary, was about nine young black men being accused of raping two young white women.
The Salem Witch Trials and The Holocaust were very similar in many ways even though they happened at different times. They both had a lot of killing but yet the Holocaust had even more killings than the Salem Witch Trials. The Salem Witch Trials in 1692 it was a dark time in American history (Salem Witch Trials). Over 200 people were accused of doing witchcraft and it started because of some teenage girls (Salem Witch Trials).
According to Roark, Johnson, Cohen, Stage and Hartman (2014), hundreds of people faced accusations of witchcraft, while dozens had to stay and suffer in jail for months without trials. This was known as the Salem Witch Trials. This signaled the erosion of the religious confidence and assurance. Witchcraft was defined as “entering into a compact with the devil in exchange for certain powers to do evil” (Sutter, 2000). During this time period, Puritans believed in witches and that they had the ability to harm others.
REVIEW OF LITRATURE A.) SUMMARY SOURCE A Although the whole book had information on the Salem witch trials. The introduction, chapter 1 and 2 and the conclusion had information regarding the research needed • Introduction: states what the Salem witch trials where and who they accused.
The crime of raping white women was an explosive accu- sation. ( Scottsboro Boys) These two trials were similar in the fact that both of these head people that were put on trial and falsely accused for crimes they did not commit. In the Salem Witch Tri- als there were girls and women accused of being possessed by the devil and were do- ing bewitchment because of their actions. ( Granchi) (Elizabeth)They discovered
Both were religious communities, but the town of Salem was strictly Puritan. They believed women and men had certain roles within the community, everyone should go to church, and if they sinned they would go to hell. One of the biggest sins one could commit in this society was to be accused of working for the Devil. The punishment for this was hanging, after they had been found guilty at their “trail” of course. I say “trial” because the witch trials were merely a formality, if one was accused they could expect to be hanged soon.
The Salem Witch Trials were a series of events that occurred within the 1690's. The numerous allegations lead to hearings and prosecutions of people accused of witchcraft in colonial Massachusetts. The trials resulted in the executions of twenty people, most of them women. Additionally, the accusations lead to community wide hysteria and blood thirst for the death of nearly all the accused witches.
People are afraid of things they do not know and it moves them to act hysterical. During the Salem Witch Trials and the Rosewood Massacre, people were wrongly attacked because of false accusations made by others because they were afraid of the unknown. In the Salem Witch Trials, a group of girls were caught doing something they weren’t supposed to do and to get out of it, they coped by accusing people of witchcraft: a crime punishable by death(Weiser). In the Rosewood Massacre, blacks were attacked wrongfully in their own town(Bentley).The Salem Witch Trials and the Rosewood Massacre have an abundance of similarities.
In Salem, Massachusetts, Puritans were strong believers in the Bible. The Bible states, “Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live.” The Puritans beliefs led to them accusing 20 innocent people of being a witch, this resulted in their deaths in 1692. Even though the Puritans couldn’t see it at the time, their accusations were really based off jealousy, lies, and Salem being divided into two parts. One cause of the Salem witch trial hysteria was jealousy.
Tenement districts in Brooklyn throughout the early 1900s provided challenges that entire families were forced to handle. A Tree Grows In Brooklyn, by Betty Smith, depicts the Nolan family facing difficulties that even children had to overcome while they lived in one of these districts. Francie Nolan, the main character of the novel, is faced with the greatest difficulty of them all: growing up. Poverty was one aspect of Francie’s life that caused her to lack certain fundamental features of a regular child’s life. This is shown through Francie consistently being without food due to poverty, and having to discover for herself in a very difficult way that hunger was a painfully real issue.