Wow, put into that context, the Walgreens I grew up near ... had a strip mall behind it which included a cheap Chinese food buffet my late parents frequented. Chilling ... lol!
Well, another October, another month of traffic jams all over downtown Salem. I wonder how many of the tourists actually traipsed out to the Walgreens and visited the small memorial up the block.
Girrrrrrrll. You helped give my daughter an A on her quarterly school project. We went to your book signing. She read your book. She reported on your work regarding death differences in different societies. Thank you, chica!!!
I was just about to comment that I'm so excited I get to use "witch to kitsch" in my final project in college! Caitlin, you are now a credible, citable source!
My 8th great grandmother, Abigail Faulker, was one of those pardoned. She was convicted and condemned to death on September 17th 1692 but she wasn't hanged because she was pregnant at the time of conviction. By the time the baby was born things had died down and they let her go with her baby. An interesting note is that although she was released she was still considered dead in the eyes of the law and had no legal rights. It took years of legal work to restore her rights and allow her to regain control of the Faulker estate. Prior to the conviction she ran the estate in her husband's name as he suffered some from "convulsions, memory loss, and impaired understanding". She was likely accused of witchcraft because of her husband's condition and the unusual level of power and authority it afforded her.
Lynda Wells I'm fairly certain a character in the tv show Salem is at least inspired by her! In the show a woman who is a witch (Mary Sibley) gets power by making her wealthy husband unable to speak or move.
My 8th great-uncle, Rev. Samuel Willard, was - fortunately - one of the public figures that spoke out against the Salem Trials (I was so relieved to discover that). salem.lib.virginia.edu/people?group.num=all&mbio.num=mb27
I'm related to Ann Putnam. She's something crazy like my 2nd cousin 1 million times removed or something. I'm sorry that my ancestors put your ancestors through that.
@@rudeboyjohn3483 It was King Kalman of Hungary who declared that witches didn't exist, not King Bela. But basically yeah, Hungary was one of the few places in Europe where witch-hunts were never a big thing.
I once read that Giles Corey kept asking for more weight instead of “confessing” because if he was found guilty, his properties would be owned by the state and not inherited by his family
@@williamdavidfrancavilla7388 wow, now that is some serious determination. I'm assuming he was trying to preserve his estate for his family? It's a terrible way to go, but at least he'll be remembered for showing such bravery to protect his family's future.
@@lilyt5855 I was in the play, "The Crucible" in high school. We were all told to research the character we played. I was Reverend Hale and a friend of mine was Giles Corey. Very interesting stuff we found. 20 years later I found out that one of my ancestors was Sarah Vibber... one of the accusers.
His reasoning is actually even more badass. Historians now agree that while that is a motivator, his biggest reason was a refusal to give into the hysteria and essentially stick it to the man
Either there are a few extra greats in there or she would have still been giving birth in the late 1890s/early 1900s. Mental image of a 250+ year old woman giving birth 😮.
New England is like that. Modern crap is just shoved next to historical landmarks in real close quarters. And there are so many cemeteries pretty much everywhere because nobody planned the towns at all.
I can’t believe the place they hung witches is in those people’s back yard! There’s no way I would live in that house, knowing people were unjustly murdered in my back yard!
Here's another tidbit of history....the guy that was pressed to death, cursed the Sheriff right before he died. Since then, every Sheriff of that county from that Sheriff on, has died of a heart attack.
Wow. And, I'm not sure, but didn't one of the accusers also die a tragic death? I know his house is supposed to be haunted. Got to visit it when I went to visit Salem but that was yeeeeeeeeears ago.
How was it possible to curse the Sheriff if he wasn't a witch? If you mean "to swear" at the Sheriff, impossible as his tongue was to swollen for him to speak. Hog wash. Urban legend. " It has long been rumored that Corey placed a curse on Salem and its sheriff during his torture by shouting “Damn you! I curse you and Salem!” at the sheriff before he died. ***rumored***being the key word. Four years after Corey’s death, Sheriff Corwin died suddenly of a heart attack at just 30 years old. Local legend suggests that Corey not only cursed Corwin but every Salem sheriff since 1692. While true that Sheriffs have suffered from strokes, blood diseases, etc, they are also related. When the new Sheriff came from Florida, all this nonsense stopped. Source: historyofmassachusetts.org/the-curse-of-giles-corey/ Reading is fundamental. Comprehension is key. Presentation vital for truth, justice and historical fact.
Jefferson said that in a letter it is nowhere in the founding documents. It prohibits the government from having a state religion like the Brittish did.
@@riveraspen2745 Hypercritical how? Almost the entire world was ruled by unelected kings and dictators. The founding fathers created the concept of individual freedom and human rights. Read a history book dummy.
@@davidbehsman3324 They didn't free anyone. Jim Crow went full force and most of the slaves in the South as well as the North were forced to stay on the plantations and share crop. Either way, Lincoln said in a famous recorded speech that he never intended for the equality or non-segregation between races. All men in charge were wealthy and white regardless of chosen party. It's common knowledge.
The fact that I went to school with a descendant of Ann Putnam (still has the last name!) is something I'm pretty excited to share. No, she didn't just "say" she was a descendant, her family is verified to have descended from the Putnam family and my history teacher just loved having her in class. Of course she didn't know much about her ancestors but he was so excited to have a descendant of such an "influential", to say the least, family in his class.
By "influential" you mean "by sheer fact of privilege, was able to accuse three defenseless societal outcasts of something totally made-up and send them to their deaths." Just making sure at least one of us keeps that in perspective.
@@howtosoberI see the point you’re making, but that’s a little bit of a mischaracterization. Don’t forget that this was 17th Century New England that had just come out of a conflict unparalleled in American History- King Philip’s War. They were religious akin to how we might see Mormons today. While the Putnam family was privileged comparatively (though this privilege would have been fairly new, and not too extreme- remember, Salem hadn’t been around for much more than 66 years, and the Putnam family did not come from generational wealth back in England), their social rank was not the only factor in the trials, not by a long shot. These people believed the literal Devil walked among them. They were a battered, traumatized people, and witchcraft was an acceptable and convincing argument. Now, I’m not excusing the accusers in any way, but to say that it was purely profit driven, from a privileged family to an underclassed, free from actual belief entirely is a bit unfair.
The reason Giles Corey didn't want to be tried was because if you were found guilty (as most accused and tried were) the local government could seize your land and personal property. He refused to go to trial so his estate could be passed down to his heirs after his death.
@@koko1914 You can't even spell "biased". lol There is no second 's'. Maybe it's just a typo, but if you're going to make a comment like yours, at least make the spelling perfect, or people won't take you seriously. Just saying.
We've all been there, staggering home on a Saturday night, thinking we see something we don't... most of us don't whip up a whole town's worth of hysteria about it though. Late 17th century drunken hallucinations had insanely good PR teams.
I love when people show video/photos of "spooky woods" and it literally looks like the back of my house. The woods here on the east coast are just "like that" I guess?
I've read that the reason Giles Corey refused to enter a plea was because if tried and convicted, his property would be forfeited to the court - thereby, disinheriting his sons.
s p that’s right! If he said anything at all it could’ve been taken to prosecute and in his death he knew they’d have to leave his property and not strip the future of his family
2s p - Giles Corey refused to call his wife, Martha Corey, a witch. He stood by her until his end. I'm sad to say that my ancestor, Henry Kenney, is one of the parties that appears as an accuser on Martha Corey's arrest warrant.
October in Salem is a blast! Also, fun "last laugh": there is a vibrant and very visible Wiccan and neo-Witchcraft community in Salem. The founding fathers of the town are most likely rolling in their graves!
Many of the founding fathers were actually part of " the hellfire club" simply free thinkers and not exactly religious. Washington DC is actually purposely mapped out with geometric ideals free masons deeply rooted in our history geometry is also deeply rooted in the east associated with many paths of enlightenment. The occult is more acceptable now however it never fully left. I grew up with many occult ideals and philosophy folk magic was " normal" so the concept of witchcraft being some rebellion against things is not one I can understand. If we're going on baseline concepts simplified a prayer is no different from a spell. It's simply a tool to bring about a desired result. We aren't as disconnected as popular opinion suggest. I'm not sure anyone is having the last laugh on atrocities of the past aside from learning from them and out growing imaginary division bore from a hate.
@@shhimbusy7616 I know you're right about the Founding Fathers (Jefferson, et al). I was thinking of the founding fathers of Salem, the ones who had many of Salem's (innocent) people imprisoned and executed. I enjoy the irony that there is a vibrant community of people in Salem that would have been outrageous in the 1600's- perhaps that's clearer than "last laugh". The occult (a huge umbrella term which can cover everything from Freemasons, to the OTO to Wiccan traditions depending on who you ask), has certainly not been widely accepted or been able to be practiced in the open in most parts of the world or even the US consistently. I'm glad you were able to grow up in an environment where Occult ideas and folk magic were accepted and incorporated into your life- that's a gift. I agree with prayer and "spells" or other rituals being motivated by the same impulse and driving to the same end result. I'm sure a lot of people who are open-minded can see the similarities over the differences, and that's progress, which I hope continues. My general experience is that younger generations seem more accepting, and that gives me hope. Merry Meet! I hope my response clarified my original, somewhat flippant, two-liner.
It's absolutely nuts! On weekends the residents from several towns around drive blocks out of their way to avoid the traffic tie-ups in downtown from the hordes of tourists in the streets.
Some of the later people accused had land that other people wanted. It was a good way to free up some property and land rights. So let us not forget about greed because it played a factor.
Every time this subject comes up let everybody/every person know this fact, you are absolutely right, the real estate was claimed by the so-called good Christians, after the people were hanged. Blessed Be, White Shaman, Kelly (*-*)
The exact same happened in the UK - that’s why the Church had so much land. As punishment for harbouring a ‘Witch’, they would confiscate the families land.
Nightengale64 I could agree with you more, you are spot on!!! A Cordial Hello, I am White Shaman - Kelly - Much Love To You, Sister Spirit!!! All My Best To You and Your Relations - I am part of the Priestess's and Priest's of The Melchizedek Order and Lord Yahushua is Our Team Captain and is Head of The Melchizedek Order, we are all meant to raise the chrism oil monthly in our solar plexus, and a million other things as well. You can find the Melchizedek Order in the Bible, and I would recommend watching Raising The Chrism Oil - I could not paste the you-tube video so please watch the video titled: Sacred Secretion / Christ Oil / True Anointing Heaven on Earth !!! and see if you can order the book: God-Man The Word Made Flesh on Ama-zon!!! I would also recommend you watching Santos Bonacci 4 part series on the Chrism Oil!!! His name came to me psychic-ly Satnam and Namaste!!!
Aww, you totally missed my favorite part. . .that the start of it all with these 3 sick girls was because of ergot poisoning. Ergot, a mold that grows on rye grain, now has several derivatives that are used for medical purposes including migraine meds and stopping bleeding after childbirth. . . but at the time pretty much caused hallucinations and burning sensations in the extremities.
@@jayg1438It defies common sense to begin with, thinking that loads of people would all have the same, nearly-identical hallucinations, under the influence of ergotism (or any other drug). It's an interesting theory, and maybe someone at some point had hallucinations due to infested grain. But the idea of a coordinated witch-hunt arising from grain defies belief, like you say.
That's a common misconception. The girls ended up confessing they made it up. Though Ergot has been proven as causing some people being killed as witches, just not here. It was a cause of some 'witch' killings or 'satanic worshiper' killings in the original colonies, along with just straight up mental illness. It is possible one of the girls was under the influence of something and the others went along with what they thought would be a fun time, but after they confessed to making it up, it's pretty unlikely.
Rebecca Nurse is my 9x great grandmother. It was a very emotional experience to visit her home (still standing and you can visit) and to hear how she was hanged. Then her body dumped in a ditch. Her family snuck in the dark that night to take her body to the homestead to give her a proper burial.
Rebecca Nurse is my great + Aunt, I can't wait to visit her home, also Susannah Martin is my step great + Grandma...my brother has all the family ancestry so I need to get together with him and find out more..take care cousin :)
@@nicoleapril4477 Susannah North Martin is my 9th great-grandmother. My grandmother was Anna Elizabeth Martin. Did you know that she was the 4th great-grandmother of president Chester Arthur ??
" MORE WEIGHT"!!!!!!!!!!!!! The response of Giles Cory to being pressed under stones to elicit a confession. Rather than submit, he took death. Of course it was to keep his property in the family since if he confessed, his land would be forfeited to the state.
He never said it. _Any_ sound that could be interpreted as speech was considered a confession; that was the law in England and all her colonies at the time. Only by staying speechless could he protect his family, and he did.
@@honourhorne-jaruk8252 I'm only going by history as told to me. I can believe your take as history is very muddled. Like Napoleon being short. He was not short. He was average in height. It was anti Napoleon propaganda from the UK that claimed Napoleon was a little man so people would not fear him or his army.
People have died in 5 minutes when crushed in a crowd or held down by improperly trained security guards or police officers. When the chest cavity can not expand, the person can not breathe. I don't know what they did to their crushing device to allow people to live so long!
Legit my one greatest fear. That the unwashed masses would some day turn against a person, and no logic or reason would save you from their cruelty. Extra points if it is done under the mockery of justice and process.
Upon researching the West Memphis Three case in Arkansas back in the 1990's I couldn't help but draw comparisons to the Salem Witch Trials in Massachusetts back in the 1690's. In both instances; the accused were "community outcasts," both West Memphis, AR and Salem, MA were vehemently conservative and deeply religious communities, and anyone who expressed skepticism and/or criticism of the trials or expressed their belief that the accused were innocent could run the risk of accusations of being in league with Satan.
Yeah, it's sadly still a real fear and still a possibility that can happen to people. It's part of why cancel culture is feared, along with being doxxed.
This torture - _"peine forte et dure"_ was a common practice in English law, until it was finally abolished in 1772: *"The prisoner shall be sent to the prison from whence he came, and put into a mean room, stopped from any light, and shall there be laid upon the bare ground, without any litter, straw, or other covering, and without any garments about him, except for something to hide his privy members. He shall lie on his back, his head shall be covered and his feet be bare. One of his arms shall be drawn with a cord, to one side of the room, and the other to the other side; and his legs shall be served in the like manner. Then there shall be laid upon his body as much iron or stone as he can bear, or more. And the first day after, he shall have three morsels of barley bread, without any drink; and the second day, he shall be allowed to drink as much as he can, at three times, of the water that is next to the prison door, except running water, without any bread; and this shall be his diet till he dies."*
@@studogable Most North Americans and Europeans have no idea how many thousands of "witches" died at the hands of slave owners or colonists (or just in general) powerful white men in South American Countries like Colombia
Remember when enjoying all that kitschy crap meant for tourists, those were real human beings who were murdered. Also Caitlin, those tend to be the main scapegoats all over the world throughout human history..... sadly it is not just an American issue
"American Scapegoat Bingo", besides being the worst game ever played, made me actually laugh out loud on my lunch break at work. Love ur content and ur sense of humor !!!
ryan wood Canada has advertisements and pamphlets asking people to become organ donors when they die and they say that 1 donor can save up to 8 lives. I hope that helps.
You can opt to donate any organ after death, or in life. To take more than the donor has willed is highly illegal. One donor could potentially save eight lives, while the donations from one could vastly improve many more. All organs can be donated, and as long as it takes, and there are no complications or malpractice, there will be no negative side effects other than scarring.
It also depends on how the organ donation system works. Look up organ donations and chain reactions. I heard of cases were one single donation started a chain that lead to over 50 transplants been performed.
Sydney Elle i used to live across the street from a cemetery, lovely view (lots of trees) and i swear it was the only paranormal free house i've lived in!
one time at the house i was staying at the owners chowchow came up out of the woods to greet me with a deer leg in its mouth.hoof to elbow. my only thought was, wheres the rest of him?
Wasn't it also true that Huntington's Disease was in the area, which...sadly...may have contributed to the hysteria since people didn't understand it was a medical problem rather than possession?
I live near Salem, love this video. Giles Corey didn't want them to take his property so "more weight!" My dad loves that story lol a true hero right there.
If you pled either way--guilty or not guilty--your property would be seized. Giles was determined that his heirs (sons, IIRC) should receive what they deserved (his wife Martha was either already dead or in prison at that point), hence his refusal to plead. It was basically slow suffocation, combined with being crushed by the weight, and a truly horrible way to die (the minister who poked his tongue back in his mouth w/his cane did it purely out of spite, with a mind to torture him even more). I don't think he'd mind at all me calling him a stubborn fellow, especially for such a cause (for both his heirs and to pretty much tell the powers-that-be to go fuck themselves--think Mel Gibson at the end of Braveheart), so yes, he was a hero, and may his memory be a blessing.
Robin Colleen Moore Yeah, I forgot to point that out about how they screwed over people either way. May his memory and ability to give the middle finger to corruption never be forgotten. :)
for everyone looking to visit salem: definitely consider going in the off-season! i live in the area and visit pretty regularly and during the halloween season its obviously WAAAY more crowded than usual and many places are more expensive (and parking is a nightmare). that said, going during the halloween season is still amazing!! they have lots of cool events and festivals and the overall experience of just being there is like no other :] but if youre simply wanting to explore and learn more about the towns history then the off-season is what i recommend! they have some wonderful goth shops and art museums as well
Yeah I agree. I go about twice a year cause I live not to far, and parking can be atrocious even in the summer sometimes! So October is almost impossible. I love the area so much that I don’t really care about the parking, I just love being there!
I went many many years ago when I was a teenager. We toured the House of the Seven Gables and that's about all I remember of it. We didn't go into the witch museum. I don't think we had the money or the time. We did wander through the cemetery though. I love old cemeteries. I grew up in Massachusetts and there are so many of them all over the place. A friend and I used to go on bike hikes to the different ones in our town. We'd check out the ones in back first because they were the oldest. So cool seeing the ones from the 1700s. The ones I assumed were from the 1600s were worn smooth and unreadable.
I love Giles for being a badass who outsmarted the law, but if you research who he was in life, he was kind of an asshole, he beat a servant so bad they later died from their injuries.
AmethystEyes they lived with severe conquences and were viewed as outcasts for the rest of their lives. They got exactly what was coming to them. I believe a few of them ended up as prostitutes because no good man would have them. I am trying to remember back to a paper I wrote over twenty years ago so I may be wrong
Ann's mother (also named Ann Putnam) was the real villain behind Ann's testimony--there was a long-standing family feud between the Putnams and Rebecca Nurse's family (among others--IIRC, Mr. Putnam was rather argumentative and litigious), so when the chance arose to get some payback, Mrs. Putnam jumped on it and manipulated her daughter into testifying against Rebecca, who became one of the 20 victims of the witch trials. Keep in mind that (a) the entire society sincerely believed in witchcraft, including some of their most highly educated members (e.g., Cotton & Increase Mather); and (b) Ann herself was 11-12 years old, still only a child, and, as mentioned, easily manipulated by her mother. In the years after the witchcraft frenzy finally ended, Ann came to deeply repent her involvement in the trials in general, and Rebecca's death in particular, and in 1706 took the step of standing before her congregation while the minister (NOT Parris, who had basically been run out of town after the trials) read her confession and repentance aloud. (She didn't have to do it--none of the other accusers ever spoke publicly of any regrets--but she felt her sin was significant enough to require public confession, and both her parents were long dead at that point. She died a few years later, having never married, whereas some of the other accusers did eventually marry and disappear back into respectable Puritan life, and a couple did turn out to live disreputable lives; IIRC, I think Abigail Williams also died young.
I just remembered that there is also the question of if the girls who started it all were hallucinating due to a certain type of mold. No preservative back then.
Lisa Nickerson But why would only those girls be hallucinating and nobody else? Couldn't other people have gotten the moldy bread and hallucinate as well?
Men's privates are hung, hanged are people, that's how I always use it anyway lol. Kind of like Mould (ice mould) or Mold (fungus) for me too. I'm not a native UK speaker either, it's just preference lol.
I’ve been to Salem lots of times and my grandfather’s a historian. That said, the trials and hangings didn’t actually happen in Salem. That’s a commonly held misconception. They happened in the next town over, Salem Village. Which, these days, is called Danvers. And that’s why you won’t find a word of the trials mentioned there except for a monument in the center of town. lol
That makes sense! It's the same in the German city I studied in where far more witches were tortured and killed (about 1000 deaths, that was every 10th inhabitant, super high numbers even for Germany). No mention of this piece of history in public spaces, no dedicated museum, nothing. Still a very catholic city to this day. Hmmmm...
Weongl honey! I'm a Salem tour guide. We get this a lot. The original accusations were in Danvers. Several victims were from Andover. But ALL the hangings and trials and many examinations took place in the center of Salem.
@@camogrrl Eh. It's less of a mistake and more of a technicality. Danvers is where the accused were from and where the accusations happened. Salem is where the hanging happened. Why people only want to focus on the death part that happened in Salem, we have no idea (actually, we do-- Salem Village changing its name, thereby giving all attention to Salem, which gladly took all of it)...
I’ve always found the Salem trials so morbidly interesting. My 10th great-grandfather Thomas Farrar was accused of witchcraft by Ann Putnam. He was in his 70s at the time and spent 5 months in prison before being released, I shudder to think of what he had to endure. He ended up dying two years later
fun fact: i’m actually related to sarah goode and one of my middle school classmates was the descendant of one of the judges (can’t remember who) in the salem trials. we didn’t get along that well lmao.
Lol. I recently found out I'm related to the Putnams. Not through Thomas's line but ya know. Sorry, I dont have Facebook so I didnt know what kind of fake news my distant ass family was riling up. My mommy kept me away from that side of the family. States and years away.
Do not take "The Crucible" as history. Even Arthur Miller said that it is not factual, but he simply used the Trials as a setting so he could protest McCarthyism without being hauled in front of the House Un-American Activities Committee. If you want the actual truth, here is the link to the actual Trial Transcripts: salem.lib.virginia.edu/home.html
@@MasterHiramAbiff obviously not. the point is, though, that there are still connections to facts from the Salem witch trials. of course, The Crucible play was written during the red scare - so it was obviously used as a mirror of the time
I my self am a Mortician in Houston Texas I do appreciate you and your videos 45 years in the business here Old school , also was an Autopsy Surgeon for Harris county Medical examiner. Good luck Stay safe
I think those kids pulled a prank never speaking up when things went too far. Nobody should’ve ended up on trial because there was no (entertaining) toys or flat screen devices with internet in the 1600’s.
@@frogsoda I think it’s the fact that it’s very prevalent through history over there. Where everyone around the world knows of it as well. Whereas from other places around the globe, it wasn’t as atrocious, or quite as loud/well known.
As someone who was in the show The Crucible, it's really weird to hear about the real people the characters were based on. Also, as Ann Putnam, I feel oddly guilty
Hanged is the technically correct term if you mean hung by the neck until dead. Anything or anyone can be hung. It is correct to say "I was hung by my ankles." It is not correct to say "I was hanged by my ankles." I once watched someone being hung by their neck. It was a circus performer who did not die as a result because it was part of the act. Hanged is only correct when death or an attempt at death is involved. For example you could correctly say "I was hanged but then cut down before I died, but then they hung me by my wrists and whipped me." By the way my response to your post is more for other people's benefit to clarify as I am pretty sure you already know everything I just said.
I was gonna mention it, but because of her wit and humor, it sounds so cute. I love it when my friend spells words wrong, it is the innocence of that person, so I like the child like errors. I am sure i make many , who needs english other then to speak?? Freedom of speech & press USA copyrighted.
@@1besieged - Since the written word is meant to convey one's thoughts, impart meanings, to educate, and to entertain, if one does not write clearly so that others can understand what they mean, then what is the use of writing at all? ... And remember, commas can KILL! ["Let's eat grandma." vs "Let's eat, Grandma."]
@joanne chon . . . No, if you're referring to the mode of execution, the past perfect is still "hanged": "The pardons arrived by noon, but the prisoners had been hanged at dawn." As Game of Thrones Lady Olenna said, "Your grandfather was not a tapestry, dear."
LOVE LOVE LOVE!!! 25 year tour guide, and Salem historian here. Also the 11th great grandson of Bridget Bishop's 2nd husband Thomas Oliver. GREAT video....GREAT GREAT GREAT VIDEO> THANK YoU
Caitlin, I don't know if you'll ever see it but I wanted to tell you that you are my idol! You are so inspiring; you take time to fight for a right we should all have: to choose what we want to happen with our bodies, and you are fighting the good fight against the greed of the death industry! I never had given much thought to how I wanted to be buried but you have inspired me to plan ahead! I want my body to nourish the earth which has nourished me my whole life! Thank you for being such an inspiration to me and so many other people. I loved your books and just thank you for your educational videos about things we not only want but *need* to know!
But let me tell you English grammar is not always easy for people from other countries. I don't know if that's correct: My ex-husband hanged himself six years ago, he hung from a ceiling hook.
I grew up learning English and this stuff is still confusing. Just look up the mess that is 'shining a light, but past tense' 'shone, shun, etc'. The English language is a hot mess at the best of times, and mind melting at the worst.
I love the “I’m in backyards, I think I’m trespassing” yeah that’s exploring in New England for you. Didn’t know about that location, although Charter St Cemetery is also an incredible place
I was literally doing something that I've been trying to do for a few weeks, and I dropped it the second I got the video notification. I may love this channel too much.
I'm pretty sure the tl;dr is the colony was starving/freezing to death, so one dude went back to england to get supplies, took forever to get back, and when he finally did the people were gone but had written CROATOAN on a tree. what they leave out of the story is that that was the name of a nearby native american tribe, and the pilgrims had almost certainly gone to live with them. for whatever reason (racism perhaps) the guy who left didn't want to accept this, and now we have some spooky legend about a disappearing colony that didn't actually disappear. *the more you know*
It’s pretty simple, they married and integrated into the local tribe. There were reports for years of people in the tribe carrying the names of the colonists and many mixed race children. Source: local knowledge, archaeology classes at local university, and part of my family tree comes from a now “extinct” (heavy fucking side eye) tribe in close to that exact area.
After being surprised to find the grave stones of Martha and GIles Corey at the head of a rail trail in Peabody I did a little research. It is written that the reason Giles kept asking for more stones to be piled upon him is that if he broke down and confessed to being a witch the court could legally relieve him of his assets. Corey had sons and he sacrificed his own life to secure their inheritance. What have you all done for your kids lately? Lol!
I was driving to school today, and I heard the Kidd Kraddick morning show talk about your interview on CBS, "a youtuber whos helping make death less taboo" and I knew it had to be our favourite mortician!
@Ruthanne D'Antuono I heard it's not for nothing ... it was also about power struggles, delusions and enrichment ... witchcraft was just an excuse to bring her to the gallows
@Ruthanne D'Antuono 1585 The Archbishop of Trier ordered so many women to be executed as witches that only two women were left in two villages. Many were burned, but because it took too long also hanging was common, it was faster and easier to do. The effect was that there were only a few heirs and the diocese became heir. The men of the villages were allowed to fuck their cows without being expelled from the church and punished.
I second that! The town of Nederland, Colorado every year has a frozen Dead Guy days because it was someone's wishes to be Frozen and kept as such. There's actually a law that you cannot freeze your body anymore there because it became trendy
Some friends and I did some digging into this location when we were in high school in the early 2000s. We drove across the state a couple of days before Halloween because we figured we could get some solid information about it from tourist trap employees. It worked out, and a tour guide gave us directions to the Walgreen's and told us to head out back through the skate park to the hill. It was pretty surreal. The best part of the story was that we weren't the only people poking around out there, and we came across three couples on motorcycles who were all dressed as bunches of grapes. I figure I'll always remember the time I explored Proctor's Ledge with my old friends and six bikers dressed as grapes.
It is important to understand that Wicca is a neo-pagan religion invented in the early 20th century by Gerald Gardner (which is fantastic! no need for appeals to tradition). The people executed for witchcraft in 17th century Salem had literally nothing to do with Wicca. They were Christian people living and dying in (and for) a Christian paradigm after the reformation.
It behooves us to remember that only 70 years after the Salem Witch Trials, the United States' Constitution was drafted, establishing the new nation as a secular country and offering unprecedented rights to the accused. The horror of these events would have been fairly fresh in the minds of the founding fathers. The victims of Salem's mass hysteria did not die in vain.
Ben Franklin's mom was a survivor of that actual hysteria. Weird huh! 1692 regional medieval emotional politics going to 1787 a reasonable and rational discussion and compromise of the Enlightenment. A good century of progress. Not perfect, but a much bigger step than softies today realize. Especially for people isolated from Europe and settled in agrarian villages on their own. However such nutty stuff would reappear in the 19th century in New England. The vampire hysteria of mid 1800s Connecticut (and other adjacent states) is quite interesting reading. Braham Stokker used some of those reports for his novel. I think they had a witchcraft (rye grain poisoning) scare in France in the 1960s.
@@johnrobinson4445I have a feeling you're weak-minded yourself. Just a hunch. Im no lover of FOX but the fact you called that one out when it's arguably the less evil of them all tells me you lean more towards a certain degenerate political party I shall not name.
Great video!! My 5 year old is going as batman, but he wanted us to dress up too. So we're getting all dressed up, adding some zombie makeup, and going as batman's dead parents. Someday he'll appreciate our humor haha
That is awesome! I wonder how many stuffy parents are going to give you guys the side eye because of your costumes (I get this every year because I let my daughter go as whatever she wants, usually some sort of snarling monster). If I were in your shoes, I'd keep a tally of stuck up people showing their distaste for great morbid humor.
Michelle Poland For our son's first Halloween we went as a group- I was a corpse, my husband carried a shovel and was a gravedigger, and we dressed our son up as a tombstone. People either laughed hysterically or thought we were sick.
Giles CorEy was one tough old piece of gristle since he was 81 y/o, laid out bare & naked in the cold November weather for three days. A great book on the subject is Marion L. Starkey's "The Devil In Massachusetts" which details the entire Salem witch hunts.
Rebecca Wadsworth When I was really young I didn't know anything about the East Coast and thought Salem was just a place in Oregon... And a talking cat.
I would love to see you do a video on Sleepy Hollow! I got to go last year and it was amazing. So much history and the sleepy hollow cemetery is huge and gorgeous!
Thanks for this video, gave me the same bucket list “I gotta see this in person” feeling like the urban explorer videos of the abandoned set for the Salem series do 😁 Someday want I want to visit both Sleepy Hollow and Salem in the same trip. 🎃
Can you do a video about the Thai king's funeral that happened this week? It's quite interesting and I think more people should hear about it. From the lying in state for a year to the urn that the king is placed in before the service and the relics his son picks out. It's so far removed from our western funerals.
One of my favorite historical topics!! While Salem itself is the site of the hangings and a few other historical sites linked to the trials, Danvers is the actual location of the trials and where all of the accused lived. Back in 1692 there was Salem Town and Salem Village, and the village is known as Danvers now. There are incredible places to see there as well. 😊
I just discovered your channel yesterday! I absolutely love it. Your mixture of facts, history, humor, and beauty has lifted my spirits as I socially distance during the coronavirus. Thank you!
@@katesclabassi3857 Yeah,but there are some regulations concerning it-I don't know just what those are-I don't live in MA,(nearby)and have seen billboards about the legality, advising learning the new laws.. Still not legal by the Fed. laws just to make it interesting.
My mother-in-law’s family are descendants of Mary Easty. I made sure to take pictures of objects with her name on them for the family when I took a trip there last October. It was really surreal.
"... August 19th, 1692. My birthday!" PROOF that Caitlin Doughty is a never-aging, 327-yr-old Vampire of the Good Death.
Texadon - Andromeda Cripps Hahaha yessss!!😂
No, no, she's definitely a *mage*, using Life and Death magic for life extension. I mean, it's right there in the name - "Good Death" == Euthanatos!
@@logansorenssen Ah, another Mage: The Ascension enthusiast after my own heart! May you never go _barabbi,_ my friend. ^_^
Texadon - Andromeda Cripps my birthday too!
Like this a lot so Caitlin can see this
"I'll meet you behind the Wallgreens" now has a completely different meaning.
🤣🤣🤣
Morbid minute: I knew someone that died behind a Walgreens
Let's go!
Wow, put into that context, the Walgreens I grew up near ... had a strip mall behind it which included a cheap Chinese food buffet my late parents frequented. Chilling ... lol!
Well, another October, another month of traffic jams all over downtown Salem. I wonder how many of the tourists actually traipsed out to the Walgreens and visited the small memorial up the block.
Girrrrrrrll. You helped give my daughter an A on her quarterly school project. We went to your book signing. She read your book. She reported on your work regarding death differences in different societies. Thank you, chica!!!
I give her an A+ in death positivity!
marie watson congrats! Cool
Awesome
I was just about to comment that I'm so excited I get to use "witch to kitsch" in my final project in college! Caitlin, you are now a credible, citable source!
Sorry are the patreons paying for you and your friends to fly around America for seconds worth of footage? I think so. AMAZING!
Had no idea Caitlin was born in 1692. What a revelation. She looks fantastic.
My 8th great grandmother, Abigail Faulker, was one of those pardoned. She was convicted and condemned to death on September 17th 1692 but she wasn't hanged because she was pregnant at the time of conviction. By the time the baby was born things had died down and they let her go with her baby. An interesting note is that although she was released she was still considered dead in the eyes of the law and had no legal rights. It took years of legal work to restore her rights and allow her to regain control of the Faulker estate. Prior to the conviction she ran the estate in her husband's name as he suffered some from "convulsions, memory loss, and impaired understanding". She was likely accused of witchcraft because of her husband's condition and the unusual level of power and authority it afforded her.
Lynda Wells that's a really interesting story.
Lynda Wells I'm fairly certain a character in the tv show Salem is at least inspired by her! In the show a woman who is a witch (Mary Sibley) gets power by making her wealthy husband unable to speak or move.
How interesting - I’ve never heard of ‘dead in the eyes of the law’ before....
My 8th great-uncle, Rev. Samuel Willard, was - fortunately - one of the public figures that spoke out against the Salem Trials (I was so relieved to discover that). salem.lib.virginia.edu/people?group.num=all&mbio.num=mb27
I'm related to Ann Putnam. She's something crazy like my 2nd cousin 1 million times removed or something. I'm sorry that my ancestors put your ancestors through that.
Im from Hungary and I'm kinda happy that King Bela just went "witches?, witches dont exist!" and that was the end of the witch trials in Hungary.
I'm totally looking that up, because bad ass
@@rudeboyjohn3483 It was King Kalman of Hungary who declared that witches didn't exist, not King Bela. But basically yeah, Hungary was one of the few places in Europe where witch-hunts were never a big thing.
@@jbshiva865 There are such a thing as witches they are called satan worshippers
@@bobburger9152 Hail Satan then. :P
@@bobburger9152 No, those are satanists. Witches are typically pagans who worship nature.
I once read that Giles Corey kept asking for more weight instead of “confessing” because if he was found guilty, his properties would be owned by the state and not inherited by his family
That is absolutely true
@@williamdavidfrancavilla7388 wow, now that is some serious determination. I'm assuming he was trying to preserve his estate for his family? It's a terrible way to go, but at least he'll be remembered for showing such bravery to protect his family's future.
@@lilyt5855 I was in the play, "The Crucible" in high school. We were all told to research the character we played. I was Reverend Hale and a friend of mine was Giles Corey. Very interesting stuff we found. 20 years later I found out that one of my ancestors was Sarah Vibber... one of the accusers.
His reasoning is actually even more badass. Historians now agree that while that is a motivator, his biggest reason was a refusal to give into the hysteria and essentially stick it to the man
Still kinda bad *** tho ngl
My Great Aunt was Rebecca Nurse!! It was a story I learned growing up. My family helped pay for her gravestone!
Ancestry says, Rebecca Nurse, is a relative of mine !
My sons great great aunt was also Rebecca Nurse! His grandmother was a
Related to the nurse family.
So looks as if we might all be cousins!!! Nice to meet you all
Deepest sadness that she was treated so badly
Either there are a few extra greats in there or she would have still been giving birth in the late 1890s/early 1900s. Mental image of a 250+ year old woman giving birth 😮.
"That rocky hill by the Walgreens" sounds right out of Welcome to Night Vale.
Sam Langmead I love night Vale🤗
Omg your so right
Yaaaassssss
New England is like that. Modern crap is just shoved next to historical landmarks in real close quarters. And there are so many cemeteries pretty much everywhere because nobody planned the towns at all.
I can’t believe the place they hung witches is in those people’s back yard! There’s no way I would live in that house, knowing people were unjustly murdered in my back yard!
Here's another tidbit of history....the guy that was pressed to death, cursed the Sheriff right before he died. Since then, every Sheriff of that county from that Sheriff on, has died of a heart attack.
Wow. And, I'm not sure, but didn't one of the accusers also die a tragic death? I know his house is supposed to be haunted. Got to visit it when I went to visit Salem but that was yeeeeeeeeears ago.
Oh, really?? I didn't know that.
That's an easy death for such a monster
That's so cool....
How was it possible to curse the Sheriff if he wasn't a witch? If you mean "to swear" at the Sheriff, impossible as his tongue was to swollen for him to speak. Hog wash. Urban legend.
" It has long been rumored that Corey placed a curse on Salem and its sheriff during his torture by shouting “Damn you! I curse you and Salem!” at the sheriff before he died. ***rumored***being the key word.
Four years after Corey’s death, Sheriff Corwin died suddenly of a heart attack at just 30 years old. Local legend suggests that Corey not only cursed Corwin but every Salem sheriff since 1692.
While true that Sheriffs have suffered from strokes, blood diseases, etc, they are also related. When the new Sheriff came from Florida, all this nonsense stopped.
Source: historyofmassachusetts.org/the-curse-of-giles-corey/
Reading is fundamental. Comprehension is key. Presentation vital for truth, justice and historical fact.
Fun fact: this incident is a big part of why our founding fathers pushed for separation of church and state.
Jefferson said that in a letter it is nowhere in the founding documents. It prohibits the government from having a state religion like the Brittish did.
The same hypocritical fathers. Bye
@@riveraspen2745
Hypercritical how? Almost the entire world was ruled by unelected kings and dictators. The founding fathers created the concept of individual freedom and human rights. Read a history book dummy.
@@riveraspen2745 Just for your information, it was white Christian Republicans who freed the slaves.
The Democrats? Not so much.
@@davidbehsman3324 They didn't free anyone. Jim Crow went full force and most of the slaves in the South as well as the North were forced to stay on the plantations and share crop. Either way, Lincoln said in a famous recorded speech that he never intended for the equality or non-segregation between races. All men in charge were wealthy and white regardless of chosen party. It's common knowledge.
The fact that I went to school with a descendant of Ann Putnam (still has the last name!) is something I'm pretty excited to share. No, she didn't just "say" she was a descendant, her family is verified to have descended from the Putnam family and my history teacher just loved having her in class. Of course she didn't know much about her ancestors but he was so excited to have a descendant of such an "influential", to say the least, family in his class.
Lies …
I'm also a descendant of Ann Putnam. My great aunt was a genealogist and found that out.
I've been told that we are descendants of Martha Carrier however I have not done the acestry that far back yet
By "influential" you mean "by sheer fact of privilege, was able to accuse three defenseless societal outcasts of something totally made-up and send them to their deaths." Just making sure at least one of us keeps that in perspective.
@@howtosoberI see the point you’re making, but that’s a little bit of a mischaracterization.
Don’t forget that this was 17th Century New England that had just come out of a conflict unparalleled in American History- King Philip’s War. They were religious akin to how we might see Mormons today.
While the Putnam family was privileged comparatively (though this privilege would have been fairly new, and not too extreme- remember, Salem hadn’t been around for much more than 66 years, and the Putnam family did not come from generational wealth back in England), their social rank was not the only factor in the trials, not by a long shot.
These people believed the literal Devil walked among them. They were a battered, traumatized people, and witchcraft was an acceptable and convincing argument.
Now, I’m not excusing the accusers in any way, but to say that it was purely profit driven, from a privileged family to an underclassed, free from actual belief entirely is a bit unfair.
The reason Giles Corey didn't want to be tried was because if you were found guilty (as most accused and tried were) the local government could seize your land and personal property. He refused to go to trial so his estate could be passed down to his heirs after his death.
Wow. That’s amazing commitment to his family (and maybe a little spite towards the local government).
Now that's a true man, unlike those accusing him. Looked out for his family even in the throes of horrendous pressure.
@@765respect I concur! Respect!
I know a descendant of Giles Corey!
He just became more badass
I am a history buff. Your account is unbiased, historically accurate & entertaining. Thank you so much. I enjoy your channel.
I am an historian and there’s no such thing as ‘unbiased’
It is pretty left-wing biassed
sky driver I’m sorry but you’re very, very, very ignorant if you think that.
@@GaiusSempriniousGracchus oh really, and how so?
@@koko1914 You can't even spell "biased". lol There is no second 's'. Maybe it's just a typo, but if you're going to make a comment like yours, at least make the spelling perfect, or people won't take you seriously. Just saying.
Ann Putnam: "These women have been influenced by Satan!"
Also Ann Putnam: "Wait nvm that was just me"
"my bad."
Whoopsie!
@@FeralSB2S351 💀
We've all been there, staggering home on a Saturday night, thinking we see something we don't... most of us don't whip up a whole town's worth of hysteria about it though. Late 17th century drunken hallucinations had insanely good PR teams.
The 1600's equivalent of RUclipsr apology videos. I could imagine she did the same dishelved tired looks to garner pity points as well.
I love when people show video/photos of "spooky woods" and it literally looks like the back of my house. The woods here on the east coast are just "like that" I guess?
I've read that the reason Giles Corey refused to enter a plea was because if tried and convicted, his property would be forfeited to the court - thereby, disinheriting his sons.
s p that’s right! If he said anything at all it could’ve been taken to prosecute and in his death he knew they’d have to leave his property and not strip the future of his family
That's ghe case with the inquisition. Until now, the catholic church owns properties that were sized from convicetd witches.
@@8LyJu8 Evil boy fucking bastards.
2s p - Giles Corey refused to call his wife, Martha Corey, a witch. He stood by her until his end. I'm sad to say that my ancestor, Henry Kenney, is one of the parties that appears as an accuser on Martha Corey's arrest warrant.
@@MossyMozart That must be strange to know that your (recent) ancestors were brutal savages.
October in Salem is a blast! Also, fun "last laugh": there is a vibrant and very visible Wiccan and neo-Witchcraft community in Salem. The founding fathers of the town are most likely rolling in their graves!
In your face! Ha, ha...
Many of the founding fathers were actually part of " the hellfire club" simply free thinkers and not exactly religious. Washington DC is actually purposely mapped out with geometric ideals free masons deeply rooted in our history geometry is also deeply rooted in the east associated with many paths of enlightenment. The occult is more acceptable now however it never fully left. I grew up with many occult ideals and philosophy folk magic was " normal" so the concept of witchcraft being some rebellion against things is not one I can understand. If we're going on baseline concepts simplified a prayer is no different from a spell. It's simply a tool to bring about a desired result. We aren't as disconnected as popular opinion suggest. I'm not sure anyone is having the last laugh on atrocities of the past aside from learning from them and out growing imaginary division bore from a hate.
@@shhimbusy7616 I know you're right about the Founding Fathers (Jefferson, et al). I was thinking of the founding fathers of Salem, the ones who had many of Salem's (innocent) people imprisoned and executed. I enjoy the irony that there is a vibrant community of people in Salem that would have been outrageous in the 1600's- perhaps that's clearer than "last laugh". The occult (a huge umbrella term which can cover everything from Freemasons, to the OTO to Wiccan traditions depending on who you ask), has certainly not been widely accepted or been able to be practiced in the open in most parts of the world or even the US consistently. I'm glad you were able to grow up in an environment where Occult ideas and folk magic were accepted and incorporated into your life- that's a gift. I agree with prayer and "spells" or other rituals being motivated by the same impulse and driving to the same end result. I'm sure a lot of people who are open-minded can see the similarities over the differences, and that's progress, which I hope continues. My general experience is that younger generations seem more accepting, and that gives me hope. Merry Meet! I hope my response clarified my original, somewhat flippant, two-liner.
It's absolutely nuts! On weekends the residents from several towns around drive blocks out of their way to avoid the traffic tie-ups in downtown from the hordes of tourists in the streets.
Soooooo.... move back to Salem. Got it!
Some of the later people accused had land that other people wanted. It was a good way to free up some property and land rights. So let us not forget about greed because it played a factor.
Every time this subject comes up let everybody/every person know this fact, you are absolutely right, the real estate was claimed by the so-called good Christians, after the people were hanged. Blessed Be, White Shaman, Kelly (*-*)
The exact same happened in the UK - that’s why the Church had so much land. As punishment for harbouring a ‘Witch’, they would confiscate the families land.
Nightengale64 I could agree with you more, you are spot on!!! A Cordial Hello, I am White Shaman - Kelly - Much Love To You, Sister Spirit!!! All My Best To You and Your Relations - I am part of the Priestess's and Priest's of The Melchizedek Order and Lord Yahushua is Our Team Captain and is Head of The Melchizedek Order, we are all meant to raise the chrism oil monthly in our solar plexus, and a million other things as well. You can find the Melchizedek Order in the Bible, and I would recommend watching Raising The Chrism Oil - I could not paste the you-tube video so please watch the video titled: Sacred Secretion / Christ Oil / True Anointing Heaven on Earth !!! and see if you can order the book: God-Man The Word Made Flesh on Ama-zon!!! I would also recommend you watching Santos Bonacci 4 part series on the Chrism Oil!!! His name came to me psychic-ly Satnam and Namaste!!!
That’s from The Crucible. Crucible is a work of fiction.
Did they build a Casino there!?
Aww, you totally missed my favorite part. . .that the start of it all with these 3 sick girls was because of ergot poisoning. Ergot, a mold that grows on rye grain, now has several derivatives that are used for medical purposes including migraine meds and stopping bleeding after childbirth. . . but at the time pretty much caused hallucinations and burning sensations in the extremities.
I thought the girls , much later, confessed that they completely made up the whole thing.
Pure speculation. Never proved just a theory
this theory has largely been disproved
@@jayg1438It defies common sense to begin with, thinking that loads of people would all have the same, nearly-identical hallucinations, under the influence of ergotism (or any other drug). It's an interesting theory, and maybe someone at some point had hallucinations due to infested grain. But the idea of a coordinated witch-hunt arising from grain defies belief, like you say.
That's a common misconception. The girls ended up confessing they made it up. Though Ergot has been proven as causing some people being killed as witches, just not here. It was a cause of some 'witch' killings or 'satanic worshiper' killings in the original colonies, along with just straight up mental illness. It is possible one of the girls was under the influence of something and the others went along with what they thought would be a fun time, but after they confessed to making it up, it's pretty unlikely.
Rebecca Nurse is my 9x great grandmother. It was a very emotional experience to visit her home (still standing and you can visit) and to hear how she was hanged. Then her body dumped in a ditch. Her family snuck in the dark that night to take her body to the homestead to give her a proper burial.
Rebecca Nurse is my great + Aunt, I can't wait to visit her home, also Susannah Martin is my step great + Grandma...my brother has all the family ancestry so I need to get together with him and find out more..take care cousin :)
@@nicoleapril4477 Susannah North Martin is my 9th great-grandmother. My grandmother was Anna Elizabeth Martin. Did you know that she was the 4th great-grandmother of president Chester Arthur ??
@@1953childstar Wow I didn't know that thank you take care
My husband is a grandson of Rebecca Nurse too!
I'm so sorry she had to go through that. Must have been so very difficult for her family, too.
George Jacobs Sr. was killed on August 19, 1692, your birthday. Wow, Caitlin, you're looking great for 325 years old!
Doug Krantz Snarkiness at it's best 👏👏👏👏👍👍😆😆😆
Doug Krantz do you eat dogs and cats?
Do hot dogs count? Otherwise, not yet. I've not been hungry enough to eat an actual dog or cat. I hope I'll never be that hungry.
Doug Krantz ... Have you ever eaten Chinese food? If so, maybe you have eaten Garfield and Otis.
Doug Krantz eugh, and it was the day after my birthday
" MORE WEIGHT"!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The response of Giles Cory to being pressed under stones to elicit a confession. Rather than submit, he took death. Of course it was to keep his property in the family since if he confessed, his land would be forfeited to the state.
He never said it. _Any_ sound that could be interpreted as speech was considered a confession; that was the law in England and all her colonies at the time. Only by staying speechless could he protect his family, and he did.
@@honourhorne-jaruk8252 I'm only going by history as told to me.
I can believe your take as history is very muddled.
Like Napoleon being short.
He was not short. He was average in height.
It was anti Napoleon propaganda from the UK that claimed Napoleon was a little man so people would not fear him or his army.
People have died in 5 minutes when crushed in a crowd or held down by improperly trained security guards or police officers. When the chest cavity can not expand, the person can not breathe. I don't know what they did to their crushing device to allow people to live so long!
@@caroline10081 Its actually the diaphragm below the lungs that draw in air. If that is squeezed, air cannot get into the lungs.
Legit my one greatest fear. That the unwashed masses would some day turn against a person, and no logic or reason would save you from their cruelty. Extra points if it is done under the mockery of justice and process.
Upon researching the West Memphis Three case in Arkansas back in the 1990's I couldn't help but draw comparisons to the Salem Witch Trials in Massachusetts back in the 1690's. In both instances; the accused were "community outcasts," both West Memphis, AR and Salem, MA were vehemently conservative and deeply religious communities, and anyone who expressed skepticism and/or criticism of the trials or expressed their belief that the accused were innocent could run the risk of accusations of being in league with Satan.
Yeah, it's sadly still a real fear and still a possibility that can happen to people. It's part of why cancel culture is feared, along with being doxxed.
Happens today now that bullying is normalized in culture & runs most workplaces.
"MORE WEIGHT."
*What a Boss.*
Turns out he was just that swol.
@@FLJuJitsu or that kinky modern time he might have said "harder Daddy"
"More weight" - dude was metal af
Alucard Peach or wanted to die quicker....
Think about it. You're being tortured. You want it to last longer (than 2 days)? or quicken the agony? #morestonesplease🙋♀️
Giles Corey
Metal band Unearth has a song about him (i.e Giles Corey), look up "Unearth - Giles".
This torture - _"peine forte et dure"_ was a common practice in English law, until it was finally abolished in 1772:
*"The prisoner shall be sent to the prison from whence he came, and put into a mean room, stopped from any light, and shall there be laid upon the bare ground, without any litter, straw, or other covering, and without any garments about him, except for something to hide his privy members. He shall lie on his back, his head shall be covered and his feet be bare. One of his arms shall be drawn with a cord, to one side of the room, and the other to the other side; and his legs shall be served in the like manner. Then there shall be laid upon his body as much iron or stone as he can bear, or more. And the first day after, he shall have three morsels of barley bread, without any drink; and the second day, he shall be allowed to drink as much as he can, at three times, of the water that is next to the prison door, except running water, without any bread; and this shall be his diet till he dies."*
As an European I laughed so hard at the "we hang our witch, thank you very much"
Most Americans have no idea that thousands of "witches" were tried and executed in Europe.
@@studogable Also they were hanged rather than burning...
@@studogable We're well aware. It's the stereotype about medieval Europe
@@studogable Most North Americans and Europeans have no idea how many thousands of "witches" died at the hands of slave owners or colonists (or just in general) powerful white men in South American Countries like Colombia
@@brianperry Definitely not all of them though, that would be boring.
Remember when enjoying all that kitschy crap meant for tourists, those were real human beings who were murdered.
Also Caitlin, those tend to be the main scapegoats all over the world throughout human history..... sadly it is not just an American issue
But but …. America wasn’t founded by white racists … and patriarchy … 😂😂😂😂
"American Scapegoat Bingo", besides being the worst game ever played, made me actually laugh out loud on my lunch break at work. Love ur content and ur sense of humor !!!
& there is a computerized triple whammy @ some banks nowadays. Female, old, & unmarried.
Can you do a video on organ donation. How many organs are taken, and how many people can one person save.
ryan wood Canada has advertisements and pamphlets asking people to become organ donors when they die and they say that 1 donor can save up to 8 lives. I hope that helps.
Lshannon90 MMM bop
You can opt to donate any organ after death, or in life. To take more than the donor has willed is highly illegal.
One donor could potentially save eight lives, while the donations from one could vastly improve many more.
All organs can be donated, and as long as it takes, and there are no complications or malpractice, there will be no negative side effects other than scarring.
It also depends on how the organ donation system works. Look up organ donations and chain reactions.
I heard of cases were one single donation started a chain that lead to over 50 transplants been performed.
Ooh that would be an interesting video:)
the ledge is just casually in people's backyard 😱
my childhood house had a cemetery behind it. Friends freaked out when they saw and some thought my family was weird.
Sydney Elle i used to live across the street from a cemetery, lovely view (lots of trees) and i swear it was the only paranormal free house i've lived in!
Lots of historical places are like that. Time moves on, development happens.
one time at the house i was staying at the owners chowchow came up out of the woods to greet me with a deer leg in its mouth.hoof to elbow. my only thought was, wheres the rest of him?
I live there and it just looks like a regular town in Massachusetts besides all the tourist traps.
Wasn't it also true that Huntington's Disease was in the area, which...sadly...may have contributed to the hysteria since people didn't understand it was a medical problem rather than possession?
I live near Salem, love this video. Giles Corey didn't want them to take his property so "more weight!" My dad loves that story lol a true hero right there.
Ron Swanson would have been proud of Giles Corey.
Erin im related to him......and one of the judges who was rhe grandfather of Nathaniel Hawthorne
If you pled either way--guilty or not guilty--your property would be seized. Giles was determined that his heirs (sons, IIRC) should receive what they deserved (his wife Martha was either already dead or in prison at that point), hence his refusal to plead. It was basically slow suffocation, combined with being crushed by the weight, and a truly horrible way to die (the minister who poked his tongue back in his mouth w/his cane did it purely out of spite, with a mind to torture him even more). I don't think he'd mind at all me calling him a stubborn fellow, especially for such a cause (for both his heirs and to pretty much tell the powers-that-be to go fuck themselves--think Mel Gibson at the end of Braveheart), so yes, he was a hero, and may his memory be a blessing.
Erin I live in Worcester, it's always fun to go to Salem around Halloween.
Robin Colleen Moore Yeah, I forgot to point that out about how they screwed over people either way. May his memory and ability to give the middle finger to corruption never be forgotten. :)
for everyone looking to visit salem: definitely consider going in the off-season! i live in the area and visit pretty regularly and during the halloween season its obviously WAAAY more crowded than usual and many places are more expensive (and parking is a nightmare). that said, going during the halloween season is still amazing!! they have lots of cool events and festivals and the overall experience of just being there is like no other :] but if youre simply wanting to explore and learn more about the towns history then the off-season is what i recommend! they have some wonderful goth shops and art museums as well
Yeah I agree. I go about twice a year cause I live not to far, and parking can be atrocious even in the summer sometimes! So October is almost impossible. I love the area so much that I don’t really care about the parking, I just love being there!
@@james_sabin I love to go in March and April, no tourists but the sun is out and on sunny days you can even sit at outside tables to have lunch.
quietone748 yeah I just went two weeks ago and it’s sooo nice, just a bit weird with everything going on
@@quietone748 Spring Equinox on March 20 2021 would be a nice time to visit.
I went many many years ago when I was a teenager. We toured the House of the Seven Gables and that's about all I remember of it. We didn't go into the witch museum. I don't think we had the money or the time. We did wander through the cemetery though. I love old cemeteries. I grew up in Massachusetts and there are so many of them all over the place. A friend and I used to go on bike hikes to the different ones in our town. We'd check out the ones in back first because they were the oldest. So cool seeing the ones from the 1700s. The ones I assumed were from the 1600s were worn smooth and unreadable.
3 years ago we went to Boston, Cape Cod, and Salem. We went to the Salem Witch Museum, I learned a lot and it was sad and terrifying.
Let's give Giles Corey his props for being one hell of a rebel!!!
Brian Morrow Giles was a freaking bad ass
"MORE WEIGHT"
E'er day.
The original gangsta.
Why can't I like this more
* *tweak* *
I love Giles for being a badass who outsmarted the law, but if you research who he was in life, he was kind of an asshole, he beat a servant so bad they later died from their injuries.
An apology is not an apology if you blame someone else (in this case Anne Putnam blaming Satan)
AmethystEyes they lived with severe conquences and were viewed as outcasts for the rest of their lives. They got exactly what was coming to them. I believe a few of them ended up as prostitutes because no good man would have them. I am trying to remember back to a paper I wrote over twenty years ago so I may be wrong
Ann's mother (also named Ann Putnam) was the real villain behind Ann's testimony--there was a long-standing family feud between the Putnams and Rebecca Nurse's family (among others--IIRC, Mr. Putnam was rather argumentative and litigious), so when the chance arose to get some payback, Mrs. Putnam jumped on it and manipulated her daughter into testifying against Rebecca, who became one of the 20 victims of the witch trials. Keep in mind that (a) the entire society sincerely believed in witchcraft, including some of their most highly educated members (e.g., Cotton & Increase Mather); and (b) Ann herself was 11-12 years old, still only a child, and, as mentioned, easily manipulated by her mother. In the years after the witchcraft frenzy finally ended, Ann came to deeply repent her involvement in the trials in general, and Rebecca's death in particular, and in 1706 took the step of standing before her congregation while the minister (NOT Parris, who had basically been run out of town after the trials) read her confession and repentance aloud. (She didn't have to do it--none of the other accusers ever spoke publicly of any regrets--but she felt her sin was significant enough to require public confession, and both her parents were long dead at that point. She died a few years later, having never married, whereas some of the other accusers did eventually marry and disappear back into respectable Puritan life, and a couple did turn out to live disreputable lives; IIRC, I think Abigail Williams also died young.
AmethystEyes Her parents forced her to accuse people because of arguments over things such as land.
I just remembered that there is also the question of if the girls who started it all were hallucinating due to a certain type of mold. No preservative back then.
Lisa Nickerson But why would only those girls be hallucinating and nobody else? Couldn't other people have gotten the moldy bread and hallucinate as well?
6:26 You were born in 1692!?!? Lookin' good for a 300+ year-old!
She has a video on her skin care products
Oh my god I love this woman. This channel has brought happiness to my day.
This video ended up with my husband and I discussing hanged vs. hung.
Internet Dad hung is pretty much strictly a slang word. "Hung over, hung jury etc." The past tense of hang will always be hanged.
Pictures are hung and people are hanged. Hang isn't a slang word. It's a real word. It just refers to inanimate objects and not living ones.
www.englishrules.com/writing/2005/hanged-or-hung/
Men's privates are hung, hanged are people, that's how I always use it anyway lol. Kind of like Mould (ice mould) or Mold (fungus) for me too. I'm not a native UK speaker either, it's just preference lol.
Either is actually the correct term, it's just over time they've become interchangeable. If you wanted to go by strict English you'd use hanged
I like how that deer head is just like
“Hey what’s up?” In the background
Strange that no one else noticed or commented on it.
That's the first thing I noticed. Lol
I found your channel a couple of days ago and I CANT STOP WATCHING
Agreed!
I’ve been to Salem lots of times and my grandfather’s a historian. That said, the trials and hangings didn’t actually happen in Salem. That’s a commonly held misconception. They happened in the next town over, Salem Village. Which, these days, is called Danvers. And that’s why you won’t find a word of the trials mentioned there except for a monument in the center of town. lol
That makes sense! It's the same in the German city I studied in where far more witches were tortured and killed (about 1000 deaths, that was every 10th inhabitant, super high numbers even for Germany). No mention of this piece of history in public spaces, no dedicated museum, nothing. Still a very catholic city to this day. Hmmmm...
Weongl honey! I'm a Salem tour guide. We get this a lot. The original accusations were in Danvers. Several victims were from Andover. But ALL the hangings and trials and many examinations took place in the center of Salem.
Danvers is probably very grateful for the mistake
@@camogrrl Eh. It's less of a mistake and more of a technicality. Danvers is where the accused were from and where the accusations happened. Salem is where the hanging happened. Why people only want to focus on the death part that happened in Salem, we have no idea (actually, we do-- Salem Village changing its name, thereby giving all attention to Salem, which gladly took all of it)...
@@leighcochran7303 The marker for the site of the courthouse is right in the center of town. Bit of a hike from there down to the Walgreens however.
I’ve always found the Salem trials so morbidly interesting. My 10th great-grandfather Thomas Farrar was accused of witchcraft by Ann Putnam. He was in his 70s at the time and spent 5 months in prison before being released, I shudder to think of what he had to endure. He ended up dying two years later
fun fact: i’m actually related to sarah goode and one of my middle school classmates was the descendant of one of the judges (can’t remember who) in the salem trials. we didn’t get along that well lmao.
Nightengale sure, jan
Yeah... I can see why 😅😅
That’s wild lol
I remember learning about being related to Robert the Bruce and having to do a report on it 😳
Lol. I recently found out I'm related to the Putnams. Not through Thomas's line but ya know. Sorry, I dont have Facebook so I didnt know what kind of fake news my distant ass family was riling up. My mommy kept me away from that side of the family. States and years away.
After I read The Crucible in school every time I hear or see the name Abigail I pretty much say something a little bit like "Dammit Abigail."
Do not take "The Crucible" as history. Even Arthur Miller said that it is not factual, but he simply used the Trials as a setting so he could protest McCarthyism without being hauled in front of the House Un-American Activities Committee. If you want the actual truth, here is the link to the actual Trial Transcripts: salem.lib.virginia.edu/home.html
I loved that play! Such a good read
@@MasterHiramAbiff obviously not. the point is, though, that there are still connections to facts from the Salem witch trials. of course, The Crucible play was written during the red scare - so it was obviously used as a mirror of the time
I my self am a Mortician in Houston Texas
I do appreciate you and your videos
45 years in the business here
Old school , also was an Autopsy Surgeon for Harris county Medical examiner. Good luck
Stay safe
"American scapegoat bingo" Kaitlyn you rock🤘😆😂🤣
Yes indeed
I think those kids pulled a prank never speaking up when things went too far. Nobody should’ve ended up on trial because there was no (entertaining) toys or flat screen devices with internet in the 1600’s.
Yeah cuz that only happens in America. Y'all need to get over yourselves.
@@frogsoda I think it’s the fact that it’s very prevalent through history over there. Where everyone around the world knows of it as well. Whereas from other places around the globe, it wasn’t as atrocious, or quite as loud/well known.
@@sezzadore right. Sure thing.
As someone who was in the show The Crucible, it's really weird to hear about the real people the characters were based on. Also, as Ann Putnam, I feel oddly guilty
I am so happy to hear you say “hanged” instead of hung. I like you EVEV BETTER now.
Hanged is the technically correct term if you mean hung by the neck until dead. Anything or anyone can be hung. It is correct to say "I was hung by my ankles." It is not correct to say "I was hanged by my ankles." I once watched someone being hung by their neck. It was a circus performer who did not die as a result because it was part of the act. Hanged is only correct when death or an attempt at death is involved. For example you could correctly say "I was hanged but then cut down before I died, but then they hung me by my wrists and whipped me." By the way my response to your post is more for other people's benefit to clarify as I am pretty sure you already know everything I just said.
I was gonna mention it, but because of her wit and humor, it sounds so cute. I love it when my friend spells words wrong, it is the innocence of that person, so I like the child like errors. I am sure i make many , who needs english other then to speak??
Freedom of speech & press USA copyrighted.
@@1besieged - Since the written word is meant to convey one's thoughts, impart meanings, to educate, and to entertain, if one does not write clearly so that others can understand what they mean, then what is the use of writing at all?
...
And remember, commas can KILL! ["Let's eat grandma." vs "Let's eat, Grandma."]
@joanne chon . . . No, if you're referring to the mode of execution, the past perfect is still "hanged": "The pardons arrived by noon, but the prisoners had been hanged at dawn." As Game of Thrones Lady Olenna said, "Your grandfather was not a tapestry, dear."
LOVE LOVE LOVE!!! 25 year tour guide, and Salem historian here. Also the 11th great grandson of Bridget Bishop's 2nd husband Thomas Oliver. GREAT video....GREAT GREAT GREAT VIDEO> THANK YoU
“That rocky ledge BY THE WALGREENS”
I'm sure the Walgreens REALLY appreciates that
Caitlin, I don't know if you'll ever see it but I wanted to tell you that you are my idol! You are so inspiring; you take time to fight for a right we should all have: to choose what we want to happen with our bodies, and you are fighting the good fight against the greed of the death industry! I never had given much thought to how I wanted to be buried but you have inspired me to plan ahead! I want my body to nourish the earth which has nourished me my whole life! Thank you for being such an inspiration to me and so many other people. I loved your books and just thank you for your educational videos about things we not only want but *need* to know!
This is so kind, thank you!
Ask A Mortician Thank you for bringing death positivity to so many people! 💖
Ditto @Lauren A.
Thank you, Caitlin, for knowing how to use the words "hanged" & "hung" correctly!!! 🙏
But let me tell you English grammar is not always easy for people from other countries.
I don't know if that's correct: My ex-husband hanged himself six years ago, he hung from a ceiling hook.
It always makes me giggle when someone talking about an execution says a person was “hung” 😂 Oh was he now?
Yes!!!
I grew up learning English and this stuff is still confusing. Just look up the mess that is 'shining a light, but past tense' 'shone, shun, etc'. The English language is a hot mess at the best of times, and mind melting at the worst.
@@JC-yy8iv I can't help but think of Blazing Saddles: "They said you was hung!" "And they was right!"
I love the “I’m in backyards, I think I’m trespassing” yeah that’s exploring in New England for you. Didn’t know about that location, although Charter St Cemetery is also an incredible place
I was literally doing something that I've been trying to do for a few weeks, and I dropped it the second I got the video notification. I may love this channel too much.
Can you do a video on rowanoke? I’ve always wanted to know more about it since it’s so confusing and I would love to hear your take on it
Do you mean Roanoke?
I'm pretty sure the tl;dr is the colony was starving/freezing to death, so one dude went back to england to get supplies, took forever to get back, and when he finally did the people were gone but had written CROATOAN on a tree. what they leave out of the story is that that was the name of a nearby native american tribe, and the pilgrims had almost certainly gone to live with them. for whatever reason (racism perhaps) the guy who left didn't want to accept this, and now we have some spooky legend about a disappearing colony that didn't actually disappear. *the more you know*
@Karla Smith ah yeah, you're right. my bad. Roanoke was the british colony, Croatoan was the native tribe.
It’s pretty simple, they married and integrated into the local tribe. There were reports for years of people in the tribe carrying the names of the colonists and many mixed race children.
Source: local knowledge, archaeology classes at local university, and part of my family tree comes from a now “extinct” (heavy fucking side eye) tribe in close to that exact area.
See Mr Bett, Mat Beat, and Hip Hughes. I think they all made comments. Search RUclips for them.
Your black hair has a blue hue and I'm in love with it
Neseine B Cosmic Black dye and natural blue day light. :)
Love the hair. Works perfectly for you vids. Great analysis. You are really good at this.
"the Ol' Hangin' Ledge out back of the Walgreens" sounds exactly like something from Nightvale
My friend has a dog named Ween and every time I go to her house and see her dog I say Hello-ween 🌚
His names Deefer, deefer dog
It never gets old for the pooch, I'm sure
Does Ween do tricks? For a treat?
Is your friends dog a wiener dog?
After being surprised to find the grave stones of Martha and GIles Corey at the head of a rail trail in Peabody I did a little research. It is written that the reason Giles kept asking for more stones to be piled upon him is that if he broke down and confessed to being a witch the court could legally relieve him of his assets. Corey had sons and he sacrificed his own life to secure their inheritance. What have you all done for your kids lately? Lol!
Sara Jane Haven Aww :'( That is so touching and sad!!
That is correct. Just discovered that I am a seventh gen grandson of Giles. Didn’t see any of that estate though. :(
*tried
I was there this past November & the area just behind Walgreens is eerily quiet & has a somber energy. Thank you for helping me find the spot!
I was driving to school today, and I heard the Kidd Kraddick morning show talk about your interview on CBS, "a youtuber whos helping make death less taboo" and I knew it had to be our favourite mortician!
Dakota Tutor I live in NWA! I totally missed that show too bad.
“American Scapegoat BINGO”... yeah, sadly that concept’s still going strong. 🙁
yes..... sadly
That one of the most embarassing moment a country ever did
Ummm, not even close
@Hardy Harhar u sound more annoyed than everyone here tho?
@@usx06240 ur dumb lol
One of my ancestors in England was killed for “witchcraft”
@Ruthanne D'Antuono I heard it's not for nothing ... it was also about power struggles, delusions and enrichment ...
witchcraft was just an excuse to bring her to the gallows
@Ruthanne D'Antuono 1585 The Archbishop of Trier ordered so many women to be executed as witches that only two women were left in two villages.
Many were burned, but because it took too long also hanging was common, it was faster and easier to do. The effect was that there were only a few heirs and the diocese became heir. The men of the villages were allowed to fuck their cows without being expelled from the church and punished.
I want to say thank you for all your creations of these videos.
I'd love to know your opinion of cryogenically freezing people
Wam yes!! I hope she sees this!
Yeah this would be so cool!!
I already messaged her about that a couple of months ago on here and twitter but I haven't heard anything back lol.
It never taste as good as fresh.
I second that! The town of Nederland, Colorado every year has a frozen Dead Guy days because it was someone's wishes to be Frozen and kept as such. There's actually a law that you cannot freeze your body anymore there because it became trendy
Some friends and I did some digging into this location when we were in high school in the early 2000s. We drove across the state a couple of days before Halloween because we figured we could get some solid information about it from tourist trap employees. It worked out, and a tour guide gave us directions to the Walgreen's and told us to head out back through the skate park to the hill. It was pretty surreal. The best part of the story was that we weren't the only people poking around out there, and we came across three couples on motorcycles who were all dressed as bunches of grapes. I figure I'll always remember the time I explored Proctor's Ledge with my old friends and six bikers dressed as grapes.
Can the year of content never end???
More like to such as
Have you ever been far as to go to want to do more to look more like?
We are winning!
I remember reading The Crucible! it was amazing and I would 10000% recommend it if you like learning about the Salem Witch Trails!
I think it is awesome that the original colonist tried to eliminate witches in Salem and now it is a haven for Wiccans
Greywitch Gaming great isn't it 🌛🌝🌜
I know right now wiccans are free to be who they are there I love going to Salem.
Greywitch Gaming reclaiming space
It is important to understand that Wicca is a neo-pagan religion invented in the early 20th century by Gerald Gardner (which is fantastic! no need for appeals to tradition). The people executed for witchcraft in 17th century Salem had literally nothing to do with Wicca. They were Christian people living and dying in (and for) a Christian paradigm after the reformation.
Em P Yes but its ironic that they went on a "witch hunt" and now the town is filled with wiccans, also known as modern day "witches"
It behooves us to remember that only 70 years after the Salem Witch Trials, the United States' Constitution was drafted, establishing the new nation as a secular country and offering unprecedented rights to the accused. The horror of these events would have been fairly fresh in the minds of the founding fathers. The victims of Salem's mass hysteria did not die in vain.
Ben Franklin's mom was a survivor of that actual hysteria. Weird huh!
1692 regional medieval emotional politics going to 1787 a reasonable and rational discussion and compromise of the Enlightenment. A good century of progress. Not perfect, but a much bigger step than softies today realize. Especially for people isolated from Europe and settled in agrarian villages on their own.
However such nutty stuff would reappear in the 19th century in New England. The vampire hysteria of mid 1800s Connecticut (and other adjacent states) is quite interesting reading. Braham Stokker used some of those reports for his novel.
I think they had a witchcraft (rye grain poisoning) scare in France in the 1960s.
@@iseley Or trial by Fox News, which is even worse given its influence on the weak-minded.
@@johnrobinson4445 I'd rather a trial by Fox than by CNN.
Considering the mass hysteria brewing and building currently, I'm grateful for the Constitution and pray it gets upheld as a current document.
@@johnrobinson4445I have a feeling you're weak-minded yourself. Just a hunch. Im no lover of FOX but the fact you called that one out when it's arguably the less evil of them all tells me you lean more towards a certain degenerate political party I shall not name.
My costume is just a shirt that says "future corpse"
🗿
I been there a few times in my life Salem village is actually Danvers now. Go there on October it amazing
Great video!!
My 5 year old is going as batman, but he wanted us to dress up too. So we're getting all dressed up, adding some zombie makeup, and going as batman's dead parents. Someday he'll appreciate our humor haha
Michelle Poland I love that idea! I would give your entire family extra candy.
Michelle Poland That’s frickin awesome! 😂😂😂
That is awesome! I wonder how many stuffy parents are going to give you guys the side eye because of your costumes (I get this every year because I let my daughter go as whatever she wants, usually some sort of snarling monster). If I were in your shoes, I'd keep a tally of stuck up people showing their distaste for great morbid humor.
Michelle Poland For our son's first Halloween we went as a group- I was a corpse, my husband carried a shovel and was a gravedigger, and we dressed our son up as a tombstone. People either laughed hysterically or thought we were sick.
Michelle Poland that’s great
Damn, Giles Corey was frikkin' metal.
Giles Cory was a man's man. He stood by his principles even to death.
You can trespass on my property any time. That said... there also isn't really anything interesting on my property.
@Hardy Harhar ....Yet... ;D XD
Get caught killing people or eat someone and that will solve that problem
Giles CorEy was one tough old piece of gristle since he was 81 y/o, laid out bare & naked in the cold November weather for three days. A great book on the subject is Marion L. Starkey's "The Devil In Massachusetts" which details the entire Salem witch hunts.
I'm dressing my 2.5 year old up as a garden gnome. I wanted to be Granny Weatherwax, but...well, maybe next year.
This is such a blessed comment 😌
granny Ogg!
Just in time to start plans
I know that you focus on the dead and decay but I'd love to see you dip into the morbid and supernatural , Caitlin!
Danielle Balanga Omg YESS!
Until I was 12 I had no idea that Salem was a place. I just thought Salem was a black cat who could talk and crack some amazing jokes.
Rebecca Wadsworth When I was really young I didn't know anything about the East Coast and thought Salem was just a place in Oregon... And a talking cat.
Em B Yessss! Love this comment x 100000.
i thought it's a name of a witch
common core education victim
No offense intended, but that makes me sad.
I've never heard the full story of Salam until now. Thank you, Love your vids!
Fun Fact: The "doctor" couldn't even read
I would love to see you do a video on Sleepy Hollow! I got to go last year and it was amazing. So much history and the sleepy hollow cemetery is huge and gorgeous!
AMERICAN SCAPEGOAT BINGO!!!!
I cackled, which made me LOL.
Thanks for this video, gave me the same bucket list “I gotta see this in person” feeling like the urban explorer videos of the abandoned set for the Salem series do 😁 Someday want I want to visit both Sleepy Hollow and Salem in the same trip. 🎃
My lady, the way you storytell this with morbid curiosity is amazing!
Can you do a video about the Thai king's funeral that happened this week? It's quite interesting and I think more people should hear about it.
From the lying in state for a year to the urn that the king is placed in before the service and the relics his son picks out.
It's so far removed from our western funerals.
To be honest i zoned out during the whole thing because i had a rough day but listening to your voice was soothing my achey heart.
I was in a production of "The Crucible" and wow it was absolutely amazing!!! I played Ann Putnam haha
The house at 7:52 is my grandmothers house!
Eveyone's seen your grandma's house now
Wow! 🌟
One of my favorite historical topics!!
While Salem itself is the site of the hangings and a few other historical sites linked to the trials, Danvers is the actual location of the trials and where all of the accused lived. Back in 1692 there was Salem Town and Salem Village, and the village is known as Danvers now. There are incredible places to see there as well. 😊
and the city of Peabody was part of Danvers then became South Danvers then became Peabody lol
Will you PLEASE do a video on Bloody Mary!!!!
Please!!!!!!!
littledesertgypsy yeah that would be so cool!
Mary Tudor
Wouldn't that be interesting?
Thank you for producing such entertaining and educational material.
I just discovered your channel yesterday! I absolutely love it. Your mixture of facts, history, humor, and beauty has lifted my spirits as I socially distance during the coronavirus. Thank you!
That sign "Get Stoned In Salem" can be taken 2 ways ,now that recreational weed is legal in that state !
It's legal in Massachusetts?
@@katesclabassi3857 Yeah,but there are some regulations concerning it-I don't know just what those are-I don't live in MA,(nearby)and have seen billboards about the legality, advising learning the new laws.. Still not legal by the Fed. laws just to make it interesting.
Pretty sure that's the joke lol.
cranky: It's still dumb. Nobody got stoned in Salem. A better just would be something about being well hung in Salem.
@@milascave2 They did use to throw stones at witches when they were being carted off to be hung.
"a fun place to hang"
don't kill me .... i stole that punchline from ParaNorman
I lived in New Hampshire for 6 years and went to Salem every year in October. I loved it!!
I am related to 2 Salem "witches", Rebecca Nurse and Mary Towne Easty. Thank you for doing this video! I am, for sure, a death enthusiast!
Me too! We must be cousins!
So am I! How crazy!
WOW... what must it be like to have such famous ancestors
Hey cousin! Rebecca signed her name with 16 different spellings, but my branch of the family got stuck with Nurss.
My mother-in-law’s family are descendants of Mary Easty. I made sure to take pictures of objects with her name on them for the family when I took a trip there last October. It was really surreal.