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The Newspaper of Choice for Those Who Love Auctions -- and More
Now Celebrating 16 Years of Service to the Trade
Ephemera
by Pamela Apkarian-Russell
Have you ever wondered why the Salem Witchcraft trials have played such
an important role in American history?
Thomas Jefferson, when he wrote the Declaration of Independence, was
acutely aware of many of the laws in 1692 which denied the accused the
rights which we take for granted. Spectral evidence; guilty until proven
innocent; we can be very grateful to Jefferson that he learn from the Salem
trials that these two laws denied due process. Jefferson was disassociated
and distanced enough from all the political and commercial intrigue of
the 1690s that he could put the trials and laws into perspective. Jefferson
truly believed in separation of church and state and that tolerance of
all religions would make this country great.
The word "Cult" is a very dangerous word in that it demotes someone
else's beliefs to mumbo-jumbo; that which is not
worth considering, or is unacceptable. When the Salem witch trials
took place, the law stated that witchcraft was a crime
against the government. It ranked with treason and the penalty was
death. Three hundred years later and we still haven't progressed much.
Massachusetts hasn't fully exonerated some of the accused after all this
time.
As much as I admire Arthur Miller's "The Crucible", the play
is fiction and not fact. The play itself, or the script, is
collectible on it's own, as are posters and memorabilia from productions
of the play, and the movie that recently came
out. The Crucible has become part of the myth and contributes to the
controversy and excitement that surround the
subject. It is a who-done- it that, unless more documents are found,
will never have an answer.
Even if documents are found, the answers probably never will be. Let's
look at a few of the interesting bits of
information that we know.
A. Cotton Mather was extremely ambitious and wanted to become President
of Harvard University.
B. The Putnam family was involved in many lawsuits and felt they had
been cheated out of inheritances and greater
prosperity. Ann, the wife, was very unstable, and uneasy in her mind
as to her actions and the accepted mores inflicted
by the severe Puritan church.
C. There were so many lawsuits between the village and the town that
it makes today's judicial load look light. Families
suing families, ministers suing parishioners, and parishioners suing
everyone. If money is the root of all evil then it was
doubly so in Salem Village (Danvers of today). If your neighbor was
more prosperous than you, it must be that you had
been bewitched. The Thomas Putnam family was one of the major movers
in this tragedy, and they had grudges that the
courts could not appease.
D. Abigail Williams, just who was she? A kinswoman and only eleven
years old but a chief protagonist in the trials and living
in her kinsman's home. No one knows what relationship she had to the
Rev. Samuel Parris. Where had she come from?
The greatest mystery of all is after the trials she disappears from
all records. Did she die? If so, where are the burial
records? Did she marry? If so, where are the wedding records? Did she
move back to the Islands? If so, why are there no
records of her travel, or of having left the area. She is not on the
church record either. How does a young girl just
disappear with no trace when a short time before she was so prominent
a figure in the happenings in the area?
Parris, Cotton, Calef, and others kept records and not one word exists
of what happened to her. This is very curious
indeed.
E. The Rev. Parris bartered and dickered, like the merchant he was,
with his congregation. He plead with them, he
threatened them and he sued them. He was a man afraid of poverty, of
loss of status, and of the devil-and the devil was
anyone that would deny him of what he thought he deserved, both economically
and socially.
F. Most of the people who were accused were fairly easy targets and
a blow at the opposition, as opposed to a strike for
justice. Religion, the law, economics, and social mores were all rolled
into one and when the village divided into factions,
pro and con the minister, trouble could only come of it.
So this is what led up to the trials that shook the colonies and had
far reaching consequences. Is this the end to it?
Hardly. There have been so many books written on the subject that one
can fill a bookcase. Books have been appearing
since the trials themselves. Caleb wrote "More Wonders of the Invisible
World" making fun of Cotton Mather and the
powers that were propelling the trials forward. Mather wrote a book
defending himself, justifying his deeds and tossing in
more than a few "What a fine fellow I am" braggadocio.
However, there are many records and documents of the times that are
missing that could be very well sitting in a box
tucked up in some attic. Three hundred years is a long time and yet,
papers and documents of that time period still keep
on appearing.
Perhaps, it is a dream that everyone interested in the trials has-of
opening a box and finding the amendments of Parish's
sermons, or missing pages from the trials.
Since most of us will never be able to own these items, as they are
salted away in museums, we can instead find items
celebrating those fearful times from a later date.
Daniel Low owned a store in Salem which produced catalogues of the trinkets
and treasures that they sold at the store
and through the mail. Sterling silver jewelry and souvenirs, flatware
and hollowware. Many are familiar with the sterling
silver witch spoons, but Low made so much more.
Upham, who had the drug store that was at the front of the witch house,
also had a gift line which sold post cards and
painted china and other items that were pertinent to the witch or tourist
trade. Though these were the giants in the
witch trade, there were dairies, medicine companies (creams and astringents)
and all types of others who capitalized on
the witch logo.
Ipswich Hosiery still uses the logo of a witch as one of the "witches"
came from Ipswich. Remember, many of the accused
were not just from Salem Village or Salem town. There are nice boxes,
labels and posters and cards from the Ipswich
Hosiery Company that are very decorative and collectible. Low started
the souvenir craze and we can all be grateful to him as his inspiration
has created tens of thousands of collectibles, and the ephemera is unending-as
is the speculation on what happened to Abigail Williams.