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  1. Mary Ann Warren (c. 1674 — c. 1710) was an accuser and later confessed witch during the 1692 Salem witch trials. She was a servant for John and Elizabeth Proctor. Renouncing her claims after threats of beating from her master, she was later accused and arrested for allegedly practicing witchcraft herself, after which she again became ...

    • Mary Warren & The Salem Witch Trials
    • Mary Warren After The Trials
    • Mary Warren Historical Sites

    Warren, the twenty-year-old indentured servant of John and Elizabeth Proctor, began having fits in March of 1692, shortly after Betty Parrisand the other afflicted girls’ symptoms began. John Proctor, who believed the afflicted girls were lying and pretending to be bewitched, dismissed it as nonsense and threatened to beat Warren if she didn’t beha...

    It is not known what happened to Mary Warren after the Salem Witch Trials ended. Reverend John Hale’s book A Modest Inquiry Into the Nature of Witchcraft, written in 1697, mentions an anonymous afflicted girl who suffered from “diabolical manifestation” until her death and died a single woman. Since most of the afflicted girls were known to be marr...

    Former Site of John Proctor’s Farm (rumored location of John Proctor’s grave) Address: Lowell Street, one-tenth mile south of Prospect Street, Peabody, Mass. No admission. Privately owned land. Former Site of the Salem Village Meetinghouse Address: Near corner of Hobart and Forest Street, Danvers, Mass. Historical marker on site. Former Site of the...

  2. Nov 8, 2023 · Marry Warren, although only 18 years old, was the oldest accuser during the Salem Witch Trials. Her testimony was vital in incriminating Elizabeth and John Proctor. She was arrested for the practice of witchcraft herself but was released.

    • Sarah Pruitt
    • Elizabeth (Betty) Parris and Abigail Williams. An illustration depicting an officer leading away an elderly woman accused of witchcraft. In January 1692, a doctor was called to the home of Reverend Samuel Parris, the Puritan minister of Salem Village (present-day Danvers, Massachusetts), after his nine-year-old daughter, Betty, and her 11-year-old cousin, Abigail Williams, began exhibiting strange symptoms, such as convulsing, barking and speaking unintelligible words.
    • Ann Putnam Jr. The 12-year-old daughter of Thomas Putnam and his wife, Ann Carr Putnam, became one of the most prolific accusers of the trials, naming and/or testifying against more than 60 people.
    • Elizabeth Hubbard. Seventeen-year-old Elizabeth was an orphan who worked as a maid in the household of her aunt, Rachel Griggs, and her husband, William Griggs, the doctor who first attended the afflicted girls in the Parris household.
    • Mary Walcott. A witchcraft trial where Mary Walcott is shown as a witness. The 16-year-old daughter of Captain Jonathan Walcott, leader of the Salem Village militia, was related to the Putnam family by marriage; Ann Jr.
  3. The Salem witch trials were a series of hearings and prosecutions of people accused of witchcraft in colonial Massachusetts between February 1692 and May 1693. More than 200 people were accused. Thirty people were found guilty, nineteen of whom were executed by hanging (fourteen women and five men).

  4. Mary Warren, a servant of the Proctors, subsequently began experiencing fits and accused Giles Corey of afflicting her, a claim of which Proctor was also highly critical, threatening to beat the girl if the fits continued.

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  6. May 12, 2020 · Mary Warren: Mary Warren was one of the afflicted girls of Salem Village. Warren was the 20-year-old servant of John and Elizabeth Proctor and a refugee from Native-American raids in Maine during King William’s war.

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