How the trials went Booth's most significant accusation was against John and Elizabeth Proctor. She then went on to accuse their daughter, Sarah Proctor. Booth's reputation stemmed from being one of the accused to becoming the accuser and using her experience against others.
Specific testimonies Booth's historical legacy as one of the six accusers in the 1692
Salem Witch Trials began on May 20, 1692, when she accused
John and
Elizabeth Proctor of committing the murders of a minimum of four people. She testified that the specters of those murdered had come to tell her they had been killed by the Proctors and begged Elizabeth to stop the murders. Her testimony, aided by her sister Alice's and her mother's support, convicted the Proctors of witchcraft and both were sentenced to be executed. However, Elizabeth Proctor was pregnant with her sixth child and she was placed in jail instead to await the birth of her child. was pressed to death during the Salem witch trials in the 1690s Following the trial of Elizabeth and John Proctor, Booth accused Goody Proctor of murder/witchcraft. She testified that her deceased stepfather had come to her and informed her that Goody had murdered him. Later, Booth would accuse
Giles Corey of "acting as a ringleader" when "fifty specters had flooded into their rural home for a devil's communion of wine and bread." He spent five months in jail bound by chains before he was crushed to death. On June 8, 1692, Elizabeth testified that Martha Corey (Giles Corey's wife) had murdered Thomas Goold Senyer. She said that “Thomas Goold Senyer came to her and told her that Martha said she would murder him if he did not do well by Goodman Parker's children.” On September 22, 1692, just three days after her husband's execution, Martha Cory was convicted and hanged. She was one of the last people to be executed during the Salem Witch Trials. On that same day,
Wilmont Redd was also executed for the affliction of witchcraft towards Booth despite most evidence being speculation and not factual. Booth also claimed that Job Trooney tried to afflict her and others with witchcraft. Along with Booth's testimony, another accuser,
Susannah Sheldon, also testified against Job Trooney. They claimed on June 7, 1692, he made eight other people in the town "cry and want revenge". Their testimony also claimed that “he looked as red as blood". However, the jury ruled that Sheldon wasn't a credible source due to her testimony being "overly visual and dramatic". That ruling also affected Booth's testimony against Tooney; meaning that he could not be convicted due to lack of substantial evidence. from 1892 == Life after the trial ==