As a 17th century historian and archaeologist working in Salem, you can't help but get caught up in the Salem witchcraft trials. Here are some of my personal projects related to witchraft and magic in early New England, as well as some recommended web sites. Thanks to Donna Vinson and Lance Eaton for their help in putting this page together.    -- Emerson W. Baker

Richard Chamberlain,  "Lithobolia, or the Stone Throwing Devil" (1698). I am currently writing a book on this fascinating case of a haunted tavern and cross accusations of witchcraft, set in Portsmouth New Hampshire in 1682. Here is the most detailed contemporary account of those events which I have scanned from George Burr's "Narratives of the Witchcraft Cases."

Increase Mather, "An Essay for Recording of Illustrious Providences" (1684). The last part of this work provides the other contemporary account of Lithobolia. This web page is part of the Hanover College Historical Texts project. They have also taken their text from George Burr.

The Humphrey and Lucy Chadbourne Archaeology Project
The on-going excavations of a 17th century homestead in South Berwick, Maine, provides insights into life at the time of the Salem witch trials. I direct this project.

Emerson Baker and James Kences, "Maine, Indian Land Speculation, and the Essex County Witchcraft Outbreak of 1692," on-line version of the article published in Maine History volume 40, number 3, Fall 2001 (pp. 159-189).

Read a review of my most recent book, The New England Knight, a biography of Sir William Phips, governor of Massachusetts Bay during the Salem Witch trials

Syllabus for my graduate seminar on Witchcraft and Magic in Early New England. I last taught this course in the spring of 2006. 

The Elizabeth & Mary
Web page for the excavations of a 1690 Massachusetts warship, excavated by Parks Canada and the Province of Quebec as featured in the August 2000 issue of National Geographic. A great reference for material culture of late seventeenth century. I am a consultant for this project.
 

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Recommended Websites Related to Witchcraft

Warning - there are a huge number of web sites related to witchcraft. Some are excellent, others are not. Be sure to use critical judgement when evaluating these, or any other web sites for that matter!
 
European Witchcraft – Documents and Bibliographies On-Line European Witchcraft – Other Links
New England Witchcraft  - Documents and Bibliographies On-Line New England Witchcraft – Other sites

European Witchcraft – Documents and Bibliographies On-Line

Bodleian Library Broadside Ballads
To access several key witchcraft tracts at the Bodleain Library, Oxford.

The Discoverie of Witchcraft
(1584) by Reginald Scot:  excerpts at Rutgers University

Internet Medieval Sourcebook sources on Witchcraft

Malleus Maleficarum On Line
Unabridged online republication of the 1928 edition, including translation notes, and two introductions by Montague Summers.

Rare Books Online: Witchcraft in Europe and America
A substantial part of Conrell Unviersity’s famous witchcraft collection available on-line. A subscription fee is charged.

Thomas Middleton, The Witch  (ca. 1613)
An interesting play, written in the wake of Dr. Faustus and MacBeth

Witchcraft Bibliography Project
This is the definitive bibiliographic source for the history of witchcraft
 
 
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European Witchcraft – Other Links

Best Witches
A site that has many excellent links for the study of witchcraft

Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies
At the University of Toronto for background and links.

Furness Shakespeare Library at the University of Pennsylvania:
For Shakespeare and English Renaissance e-texts

Public Execution in Early Modern England
Schoenberg Center for Electronic Text & Image at the University of Pennsylvania:  two sixteenth-century witchcraft tracts in Latin

Tyburn Tree:
Public Execution in Early Modern England

The Witching Hours
A site geared for a popular audience, with many useful links

New England Witchcraft  - Documents and Bibliographies On-Line

1692 Salem Witchcraft Papers
Full text, indexed, on-line from the Danvers Archival Center and UVA

The Avalon Project at the Yale Law School - Pre 18th Century Documents
Includes a number of seventeenth-century Massachusetts documents

Books On Line
 A source for many early books in full-text

A briefe account of a strange & unusuall Providence of God befallen to Elizabeth Knap of Groton by Samuel Willard
A witchcraft case in Groton, Massachusetts, from Hanover College

Burr’s Narratives of the Witchcraft Cases, 1648-1706
Full text on-line from the Danvers Archival Center and UVA

Cases of Conscience Concerning Evil Spirits by Increase Mather (1693)
Full text, on-line from the Danvers Archival Center and UVA

Lithobolia, or the Stone-Throwing Devil by Richard Chamberlain (1698)
An account of a 1682 haunting of a tavern in Portsmouth, New Hampshire

Memorable Providences, Relating to Witchcraft and Possessions by Cotton Mather (1689)
An important pre-1692 text on witchcraft, from the UMKC site

Salem, As Observed by Samuel Drake in 1875 and 1910.
An early historian of witchcraft visits Salem

The Salem Witchcraft Papers
Danvers Archival Center’s Site, done in conjunction with The University of Virginia’s Electronic Text Center. This site is “one stop shopping” for the events of 1692. It includes whole text documents of Salem and other New England cases, maps of Salem Village then and now, historical sites in Danvers, and other information on the trials

The Salem Witchcraft Trials
A source for many witchcraft documents. The site belongs to Douglas Linder at UMKC School of Law.

Some Miscellany Observations On Our Present Debates In a Dialogue Between S. & B. by Samuel Willard (1692)
Full text, on-line from the Danvers Archival Center and UVA
 

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New England Witchcraft – Other sites

Seventeenth-Century Colonial New England, with Special Emphasis on the Salem Trials
Margo Burn’s website is one of the most inclusive ones out there for witchcraft in early New England. It includes many materials on the Crucible, as well as information designed for students in grades K-8

Witch City
A site for the video on how the events of 1692 are portrayed in Salem today

Essex County Registry of Deeds
The first 20 books of the Essex Deeds are available here on line. Unfortunately, the indexes are not on-line, but they are available at the court house. Also note that the "pages" referred to on-line are numbered pages, while the index at the court house refers to "folios" (consisting of one piece of paper, front and back) So the on-line page numbers are roughly double the number of the folio given in the index.

Family Search
On-Line Searching for genealogical data on people world-wide, from the extensive collections of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day saints. An incredible resource.

The Plymouth Colony Archive
James Deetz's web site at the University of Viriginia, with many sources and links for seventeenth-century Plymouth Colony.

Plimoth Plantation
A good web site for seventeenth-century Massachusetts


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