Answer Close-Reading Questions
Have students write their responses, or use the Close-Reading Questions to guide a discussion.
• Who was Bridget Bishop? What happened to her in 1692? (Key Details)
Bridget Bishop was an apple orchard owner who lived in Salem, a village in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. In April 1692, she was accused of practicing witchcraft. At a public hearing, five girls screamed, twisted in pain, and said that Bishop had tried to tempt them to worship the devil. Although Bishop said she was innocent, she was charged with witchcraft and jailed. After dozens of other people were similarly jailed, she was the first to face trial, on June 2. At the end of the one-day trial, she was sentenced to death. Eight days later, she became the first of 20 people to be executed in the Salem witch trials.
• How did the Puritans’ beliefs and background contribute to the panic of the Salem witch trials? (Cause and Effect)
The Puritans, who had left England and come to the colonies seeking religious freedom, followed strict religious rules. They valued hard work, and their children had few opportunities to have fun. The Puritans believed that forces of evil were responsible for their troubles and often blamed illnesses and other problems on witchcraft. After some girls in Salem started acting strangely, the Puritans decided that witches had been sent as a test and fear spread throughout the community.
• Why might Tituba have confessed to practicing witchcraft? (Making Inferences)
Tituba might have confessed because of the pressure of Reverend Samuel Parris’s demands that she do so. As a religious leader, he had much more power and influence than Tituba, an enslaved woman who worked in his home, did. Sometimes people might make a false confession just to get an ordeal over with.
• Summarize the section “A Growing Outcry.” (Summarizing)
As more people were accused of witchcraft in Salem and other towns, some people began to have doubts and question the so-called evidence that the accusers relied on. In August 1692, villagers were shocked when a minister said a prayer before being hanged for witchcraft. In October, Governor William Phips’s own wife was accused of witchcraft and he dissolved the special court he had created. It was replaced by a new court, which had stricter guidelines. It couldn’t convict someone of witchcraft based only on rumors or visions. After a few more trials, almost all the people who had been jailed for witchcraft were set free by May 1693. Ultimately, more than 200 people were accused of witchcraft, 20 people were executed, and several died in jail.