Portland, Maine's ties to the Salem Witch Trials
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We discuss how Maine, then part of Massachusetts, was a war-torn frontier during the years surrounding the Salem Witch Trials and show that refugee movements, fear, and trauma from frontier conflict contributed to the Salem panic. The hosts focus on Salem figures connected to Falmouth (now Portland), including minister George Burroughs, afflicted witness Mercy Lewis, and confessor Abigail Hobbs, emphasizing how their experiences in Maine intersected with events and testimony in 1692. It ends by noting that magistrates Hathorne and Corwin also had a connection to the fall of Falmouth.
Links
Bernard Rosenthal, ed., Records of the Salem Witch-Hunt
The Thing About Witch Hunts / About Salem YouTube channel
Salem Witch Trials Daily Hub
Salem Witch Trials Daily Course Week 7: Families, Geography, and the Machinery of Accusation, February 9-15, 2026
The Thing About Salem
The Thing About Witch Hunts
Emerson W. Baker, A Storm of Witchcraft: The Salem Trials and the American Experience
Marilynne K. Roach, The Salem Witch Trials: A Day-by-Day Chronicle of a Community Under Siege
Mary Beth Norton, In the Devil’s Snare: The Salem Witchcraft Crisis of 1692
Ben Wickey, More Weight: A Salem Story
Peabody Essex Museum Salem Witch Trials Collection
The Sermon Notebook of Samuel Parris, 1689–1694 - Colonial Society of Massachusetts
Richard Hite, In the Shadow of Salem: The Andover Witch Hunt of 1692