The Salem Witch Trials of 1692 - Part 8 - Reckoning, Remorse, and the Long Shadow of Salem
Trials That Shaped Us by Judge Stephen Sfekas
Episode notes
Part VIII follows the collapse of the witch trials and traces how Massachusetts tried to live with the knowledge that it had shed innocent blood. Competing narratives emerged right away, with Cotton Mather defending the proceedings in print and Boston merchant Robert Calef dismantling them in a meticulous critique that helped fix public judgment against the trials. Key participants stepped forward with formal apologies: Judge Samuel Sewall publicly confessed his guilt, the entire grand jury expressed sorrow for condemning the innocent, and years later Anne Putnam Jr. stood before the Salem Village church and admitted that her accusations, especially against Rebecca Nurse and her sisters, had been the product of a “great delusion.” Even as some leaders like Stoughton never apologized, gaps in official records and missing pages from diaries suggest ...