The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

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The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years

Transcript of The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

Page 1: The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

The CrucibleAn introduction to what really

happened during the Salem Witchcraft years

Page 2: The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

•Betty Parris's mother was not dead!

• She died in 1696, four years AFTER the Salem Witch Trials.

Did you know?

Page 3: The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

•In addition to Betty and her cousin Abigail, the Parris family was comprised of two other children.

•Thomas

•Susannah

Did you know?

Page 4: The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

Did you know?

•Abigail was 11, not 17.

Page 5: The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

•John Proctor was 60, not 35.

•Elizabeth was his third wife.

•Proctor was not a farmer but a tavern keeper.

Did you know?

Page 6: The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

•Proctor’s children included

•a 15 year old daughter

•a 17 year old son

•John's 33-year-old son from his first marriage

Did you know?

Page 7: The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

Did you know?•The first to become afflicted with Betty was Abigail, not Ann Putnam.

•The girls had violent, physical fits, not a sleep that they could not wake from.

Page 8: The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

Did you know?•There never was any wild dancing rite in the woods led by Tituba.

•Tituba was married to John Indian, who never was mentioned in the play.

Page 9: The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

Did you know?•The Putnams’ daughter was not named Ruth, but Ann, like her mother.

•The mother was referred to as "Ann Putnam Senior" and the daughter as "Ann Putnam Junior."

Page 10: The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

Did you know?•Ann/Ruth was not the only Putnam child out of eight to survive infancy.

•In 1692, the Putnams had six living children, Ann being the eldest, down to 1-year-old Timothy.

Page 11: The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

Did you know?

•Rev. Parris claimed to Giles Corey that he was a "graduate of Harvard.“

•Parris did not graduate from Harvard, although he had attended for a while before dropping out.

Page 12: The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

Did you know?•Rebecca Nurse was hanged on July 19, John Proctor on August 19, and Martha Corey on September 22 -- not all on the same day on the same gallows.

•Since the condemned were always allowed their last words and prayers, they would not have been hanged while praying,

Page 13: The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

Did you know?

•The only person executed who recited the Lord's Prayer on the gallows was Rev. George Burroughs.

•This caused quite a stir since it was believed at the time that a witch could not say the Lord's Prayer without making a mistake.

Page 14: The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

Did you know?•Reverend Hale would not have signed any "death warrants," as he claims to have signed 17 in the play.

•That was not for the clergy, but the judiciary.

Page 15: The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

Did you know?•The elderly George Jacobs was not accused of sending his spirit in through the window to the Putnam's daughter

•It was usually the opposite case: women were accused of sending their spirits into men's bedrooms.

Page 16: The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

Did you know?•The hysteria did not die out "as more and more people refused to save themselves by giving false confessions."

•Actually, more and more people gave false confessions to save themselves as it became clear that confession could save one from the noose.

Page 17: The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

•Abigail Williams probably couldn't have laid her hands on 31 pounds in her uncle’s house to run away with John Proctor.

•Parris's annual salary was contracted at 66 pounds, only a third of which was paid in money.

Did you know?

Page 18: The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

Did you know?•Giles Corey was not executed for refusing to name a witness.

•He was accused of witchcraft and refused to enter a plea, which held up the proceedings.

•He was pressed to death with stones to try to force him to enter a plea so that his trial could proceed.

Page 19: The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.

Did you know?•"The afflicted" was not just a group of a dozen teenage girls -- there were men and adult women who were also "afflicted," including John Indian, Ann Putnam, Sr., and Sarah Bibber.

Page 20: The Crucible An introduction to what really happened during the Salem Witchcraft years.