ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 11月1日 02時31分


Where was the first woman condemned for witchcraft? Not in Salem. Practicing witchcraft became a crime punishable by death in Connecticut in 1642, decades before it was outlawed in the famous Massachusetts town. The #Connecticut Colony sent colonial America’s first condemned witch — Alse Young, a resident of Windsor — to the gallows in 1647. By 1662, a total of 11 people, 9 women and 2 men, were executed in the area. (The men were the husbands of convicted women.) One reason Salem is the name you probably know: Its witch trials were much more condensed, spanning just 15 months, compared with the decades of less frequent trials in Connecticut. But now, a group called CT Witch Memorial wants to clear the names of the victims. @hillphoto photographed the Windsor Town Hall and green in September. Swipe left to see a photo of a small memorial for Alse.


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