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What Caused the Salem Witch
Hunts?
In the year 1692 in Salem, Massachusetts almost
150 people were arrested and at least 20 people were executed as witches. It
all started with a group of young, unmarried women between the ages of nine
and twenty who began visiting a slave named Tituba at the home of Reverend
Samuel Parris and listened to her stories of West Indian lore. Two of the
younger girls became very emotionally excited by these stories and began
having convulsions and crying fits, and their behavior became mischievous.
After this, the eight older girls followed suit.
The climate was ripe for such hysterics, and the town officials
took these matters very seriously. "The Puritan New England mind was alerted
to devils and to their agents on earth, witches. Belief in the supernatural
was unquestioned. The Bible told about witches and demoniacal possession; the
Mosaic codes of Massachusetts turned legend into law. Witchcraft was part of
the Weltanschauung [world view] of the colonists, [which was]
especially strong since Massachusetts was not a monarchy or a republic, but a
theocracy. The party line of the church ministers became both the law of God
and the law of the colony. This religious control of the state accounts in
part for the panic in Massachusetts at a time when elsewhere the witchcraft
delusion was waning (the last witch had been executed in England in 1685)."[1]
The girls may have just been rebellious adolescents seeking attention or
independence by way of a prank but the local physician and the local ministers
decided that they were possessed and that witchcraft was responsible. "It may
be—motives are very elusive—they [the girls] initially hit upon the idea
of specters haunting them in order to escape punishment for their fantastic
behavior. When the question `Who torments you?' failed to produce names,
suggestive questions followed, and answers had to be given. So the girls
named first the obvious scapegoats of the community, the vulnerable and
weak—Tituba, the Negro slave; Sarah Good, the pipe-smoking beggar; and Sarah
Osbourne, a thrice-wedded cripple. Martha Cory, the fourth to be accused, had
an illegitimate half-caste son. Having taken the first steps in accusing
people and having seen their horrifying effects, the girls still more feared
to reveal the truth."[2]
On June 10, 1692 Bridget Bishop became the first of those accused at Salem to
be executed as a witch. This illustrates how fear was employed both by the
girls and the authorities to control the other people. This also tells us of
how the deviants in their society were singled out, labeled as witches, and
ostracized.
The reasons and causes for the witch-hunts in Europe as well as
Salem are still unclear, but there are many different theories. It is, for
example, generally agreed upon that the witch trials were "born out of
hysteria and the church's bloody drive to root out all oppression and gain
complete obedience through persecution."[3]
Although this may sound somewhat severe, it is justified since, "the church,
seeking to convert all the peoples of Europe to Christianity, was particularly
hostile to witchcraft. This attitude, however, resulted in the spread of
witch lore and in an explosion of fear and mass hysteria. An accusation of
witchcraft became at times a means of destroying an enemy or of confiscating
an estate."[4]
This fanaticism found its way to Salem.
A slightly different
line of reasoning is given in Erikson's study of the Salem witch craze, which
shows that "the punishment of suspected witches served as a defense against
the weakening of Puritan society. By casting out the `witches', the Puritans
were reaffirming their community values: strict adherence to religious
devotion, fear of God, abstinence from the pleasures of secular society
(drink, sex, music, dance), and the like. The trial and punishment of the
so-called witches illustrates Emile Durkheim's earlier discovery that every
society creates its own forms of deviance and in fact needs those deviant
acts. The punishment of deviant acts reaffirms the commitment of a society's
members to its norms and values and thereby reinforces social solidarity. By
Durkheim's reasoning, the stark images of punishment—the guillotine, the
electric chair, the syringe, the wretched life behind bars—become
opportunities to let the population know that those who threaten the social
order will be severely judged."[5]
It can
be seen that the church needed a method of bringing the straying people back
and a scapegoat to fight against so that the people may turn to God for
protection. In Salem, however, there was no protection since the girls were
in the habit of making indiscriminate accusations whereby anyone may be
branded a witch, tried, and executed.
An interesting fact
about the Salem witch trials which may be worth making a note of is that
"those who beat the gun by confessing were the only accused against whom the
girls did not testify at length. The Salem victims were hanged not because
they admitted to being witches, but because they denied it. A
confession meant a reprieve, for then the accusers did not make a scene."[6]
Those that did confess and were thus reprieved were most likely ostracized and
fled the town. The paradoxical logic behind this method of freeing the
confessors and executing those that denied the accusations was probably the
fear of not knowing whether or not those accused were guilty. The inquisitors
probably reasoned that the "witches" who confessed would stop their witchery
because people now knew who they were and would automatically accuse them
should anything happen. The people who denied the accusations were probably
killed because it was better to be safe than sorry.
In respect to Salem
as a whole, "the actual behavior a crowd or mass generates depends largely on
the emotions evoked by particular situations, and Salem developed out of fear
and hysteria among the mass of Puritan New Englanders."[7]
According to Freud, "a group is extraordinarily credulous and open to
influence; it has no critical faculty, and the improbable does not exist for
it. The feelings of a group are always very simple and very exaggerated, so
that it knows neither doubt nor uncertainty. What it demands of its heros is
strength or even violence. It wants to be ruled and oppressed and to fear its
masters."[8]
This was certainly accomplished by the authorities of Salem in 1692 with its
population condoning the executions while still in fear of being accused of
practicing witchcraft.
Fear and the personal
motivations of its town's people aren't the only possible explanations for
what happened in Salem. According to Relethford's The Human Species
the Salem witch trials "raise several interesting questions. For one thing,
the timing of the accusations was strange, for the last `epidemic' of
witch-hunts had occurred in England 47 years earlier. Moreover, the New
England witchcraft persecutions remained confined to a rather small geographic
area—Essex County, Massachusetts, and Fairfield County, Connecticut. What
factors, social or otherwise, could explain this limited distribution in time
and space?
"Matossian (1982) suggests that food poisoning played a major role
in 1692. She notes that the symptoms of `witchcraft' match those of a disease
known as convulsive ergotism, which is caused by the ingestion of a fungus
known as ergot (also a source of the hallucinogenic drug LSD). This fungus
grows on rye, particularly when a cold winter is followed by a cool and moist
growing season. Matossian notes that the majority of recorded witchcraft
victims had the typical convulsions and prickly feelings characteristic of
ergot poisoning. She further notes that all the affected households in Salem
were located on or near the type of soil most conducive to ergot growth.
"Starting in 1590, the usual source of bread in England and North
America was wheat. During the 1660's, however, the spread of wheat disease in
New England led many farmers to substitute rye. Furthermore, climatic
analysis shows that the winters of 1690 to 1692 were cooler than average in
New England. Rye grows better than wheat in cool weather, so many farmers
became more dependent on the crop. Because of ecological factors, then,
ingestion of rye was more common during those years. The chances for
convulsive ergotism therefore increased.
"What does this have to do with the witchcraft accusations? Keep
in mind that the colonists did not interpret the symptoms of ergot poisoning
as poisoning. Given their cultural beliefs in witchcraft, they often
interpreted convulsions and other symptoms as possession or some other form of
sorcery. An outbreak of possessed individuals was seen as the work of
witches, who were found and punished. The hallucinations may have also led
the affected individuals themselves to believe they were witches."[9]
The
effects of ergot poisoning would explain the many various accounts of
possession (although mental disorders, neurological disorders, suggestion, and
repressed thoughts and feelings manifesting themselves in a violent and
physical manner may also be responsible).
While it is virtually impossible to determine the absolute cause(s)
of the witchcraft hysteria in Massachusetts, it is my opinion—based on the
data that I have compiled—that fear and the desire to control others against
their wills is ultimately the main cause of the witchcraft hysteria in Salem
or any other form of oppression, hostility, and violence on one group of
people by another. In the case of the witch-hunts at Salem, fear was
certainly an important factor, but it was not the only one. As I have stated
before, mental disorders and ergot poisoning may have also played a part in
spreading and/or initiating the hysteria.
It is my conviction that the people were manipulated by fear
perpetuated by the girls who made the accusations, the judges and ministers of
the Puritans who tried and executed the victims, their own beliefs in
witchcraft and, possibly, ergot poisoning which would have deluded the minds
of the people into believing such impossibilities. There is no evidence that
the hysteria was caused by people with mental disorders, although that theory
can't be discounted since it can neither be proven nor disproven. However, "Schoenman
(1984), in a thorough review of the literature, points out that `the typical
accused witch was not a mentally ill person, but an impoverished woman with a
sharp tongue and a bad temper....'"[10]
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
1. Carson, Butcher and Coleman. Abnormal
Psychology and Modern Life. 8th Ed. Scott, Foresman and Co. 1988.
2. Freud, Sigmund. Group Psychology and the
Analysis of the Ego. Standard Editions. 1960.
3. The New Columbia Encyclopedia.
4th Ed. Columbia University Press. 1975.
4. Haining, Peter. The Warlock's Book.
University Books Inc.
5. Kornblum, William. Sociology in a Changing
World 2nd Ed. Holt, Reinhart, Winston, Inc. 1991.
6. Relethford, John. The Human Species.
Mayfield Publishing Company. 1990.
7. Robbins, Rossell Hope. The Encyclopedia of
Witchcraft and Demonology. Crown. 1959.
Copyright © 2008 by Kevin Dunn
kbdunn@gmail.com
Last revised
April 16, 2008
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