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Elizabeth Johnson Jr., a woman convicted of witchcraft during the Salem witch trials in the 1690s, was finally exonerated after years of petitioning by Massachusetts teacher Carrie LaPierre and ...
The Salem witch trials were the largest witchcraft outbreak in American ... “It turns out the 1680s and the 1690s were the absolute most extreme weather of this whole Little Ice Age,” Baker ...
Salem’s complicated journey from witch trials to witch tourism In the 1690s, women were hanged in Salem, Massachusetts on suspicion of witchcraft. Now, it’s a witchy Mecca for tourists.
It's never too late to right a historical wrong -- even if that restoration of justice comes nearly 330 years later.Elizabeth Johnson Jr., a woman convicted of witchcraft during the Salem witch ...
Elizabeth Johnson Jr., a woman convicted of witchcraft during the Salem witch trials in the 1690s, was finally exonerated last week after years of petitioning by Massachusetts teacher Carrie ...
Her trial took place during the Salem witch trials in 1693. Both men and women (mostly women) ... Proper trials were eventually held in the late 1690s to early 1700s.
It's never too late to right a historical wrong -- even if that restoration of justice comes nearly 330 years later.Elizabeth Johnson Jr., a woman convicted of witchcraft during the Salem witch ...
In 1692 and 1693, the Salem witch trials were held in northeastern Massachusetts and led to the prosecution of more than 150 people. ... By the 1690s, however, ...
Elizabeth Johnson Jr., a woman convicted of witchcraft during the Salem witch trials in the 1690s, was finally exonerated last week after years of petitioning by Massachusetts teacher Carrie ...
Elizabeth Johnson Jr., a woman convicted of witchcraft during the Salem witch trials in the 1690s, was finally exonerated last week after years of petitioning by Massachusetts teacher Carrie ...
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