Pudeator, Ann [cenotaph] d. September 22, 1692 Convicted of practicing witchcraft during the Salem Witch Trials. There are twenty benches in the memorial, one for each of the victims actively put to death (not counting those who died in prison). Cause of death: Hanged Burying Point Cemetery, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA
Redd, Wilmot [cenotaph] d. September 22, 1692 Salem Witchcraft Trial Victim. The wife of Samuel Redd, a fisherman in their village, she was accused by several village girls were supposedly "afflicted" by her witchcraft and in turn had become hysterical. An elderly woman supposedly not well liked by the womenfolk of the town, she was apprehended May 28, 1692 by James Smith. She was taken to the Salem Village for a preliminary examination on May 31, 1692, where following she was indicted and put in jail. At her trial held a few months later...[Read More] (Bio by: The Guardian) Burying Point Cemetery, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA
Salem Witch Trials Memorial d. 1692 Memorial to the victims of the Salem Witch Trials. There are twenty benches in the memorial, one for each of the victims actively put to death (not counting those who died in prison). The memorial was dedicated on August 5, 1992 by Elie Weisel, winner of the 1986 PEACE Prize for his accumulation of humanitarian work over his life, and professor at Boston University. Burying Point Cemetery, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA
Scott, Margaret [cenotaph] d. September 22, 1692 Witch Trials Victim. She was convicted of practicing witchcraft during the 1692 Salem Witch Trials. There are twenty benches in the memorial, one for each of the victims actively put to death (not counting those who died in prison). Cause of death: Hanged Burying Point Cemetery, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA
Wardwell, Samuel [cenotaph] d. September 22, 1692 Convicted of practicing witchcraft during the Salem Witch Trials. There are twenty benches in the memorial, one for each of the victims actively put to death (not counting those who died in prison). Cause of death: Hanged Burying Point Cemetery, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA
Wildes, Sarah [cenotaph] b. 1627 d. July 19, 1692 Convicted of practicing witchcraft during the Salem Witch Trials. There are twenty benches in the memorial, one for each of the victims actively put to death (not counting those who died in prison). Cause of death: Hanged Burying Point Cemetery, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA
Willard, John [cenotaph] d. August 19, 1692 Convicted of practicing witchcraft during the Salem Witch Trials. There are twenty benches in the memorial, one for each of the victims actively put to death (not counting those who died in prison). Cause of death: Hanged for Burying Point Cemetery, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA