The Thing About Witch Hunts

Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack

The Thing About Witch Hunts is the podcast of historical witch trials and modern-day violent witchcraft persecution. From the Salem Witch Trials to the ramifications of today's harmful practices related to accusations of witchcraft and ritual attacks, The Thing About Witch Hunts covers it all. Tune in today to find out why The Thing About Witch Hunts is an essential podcast for everyone interested in this intriguing subject. #history #witchcraft #SalemWitchTrials #witchhunt

  1. Witches, Rakes, and Rogues: Unearthing Boston's Hidden History with D. Brenton Simons

    HACE 2 DÍAS

    Witches, Rakes, and Rogues: Unearthing Boston's Hidden History with D. Brenton Simons

    About This Episode What if Boston's colonial past held witch trial stories just as gripping as Salem's but almost entirely overlooked? This week, Sarah and Josh sit down with D. Brenton Simons, President Emeritus and former CEO of American Ancestors (New England Historic Genealogical Society), to uncover the witches, criminals, and scandal-makers that Boston's official history left out. D. Brenton Simons spent 18 years leading American Ancestors, one of the world's foremost genealogical organizations with over 500,000 members in 139 countries. He is the author of Witches, Rakes, and Rogues, a collection of true Boston stories spanning 1630 to 1741, and was honored by King Charles III for his contributions to Anglo-American history. Boston had a witchcraft period spanning over a century, and the stories from it look nothing like what popular culture has taught us. Brenton walks us through cases that defy every stereotype, including a wealthy, well-connected woman whose "disagreeable" personality made her a target after her husband's death, an Irish Catholic servant whose foreign language and customs terrified a Puritan community, and women whose only real crime was practicing folk medicine and refusing to be pushed around. The research behind this book took five years and required digging through court records, personal diaries, and archives. The result is a portrait of real people navigating a world where the devil felt as immediate and dangerous as a neighbor's grudge. The woman who appears as a background character in The Scarlet Letter and the real, devastating story behind her name How the Goodwin children's afflictions during the Goody Glover case reveal something very human about fear and attention The connection between Mercy Short's post-traumatic experiences and the Salem trials Why the discovery of a black cat may have saved Boston from a second wave of witch hunting What happened to accusations that never became trials, and why those stories matter just as much For descendants of Boston and Connecticut witch trial victims, this episode is essential listening. Brenton discusses his research connecting Mary Hale, Winifred Benham Sr., and the Benham family line across generations and colonies. If you have colonial New England ancestry, you may have more connections to these stories than you realize. American Ancestors / New England Historic Genealogical Society American Ancestors on YouTube Witches, Rakes, and Rogues by D. Brenton Simons End Witch Hunts The Thing About Witch Hunts is produced by End Witch Hunts, the only U.S. nonprofit dedicated to witchcraft accusation awareness. Find us wherever you listen to podcasts and on YouTube. If you enjoyed this episode, please leave a review and share it with anyone who loves colonial history, genealogy, or untold American stories.

    51 min
  2. The Deadly Exorcism of Arely Procter: Spiritual and Ritual Abuse Happens Right Here in the U.S.

    11 FEB

    The Deadly Exorcism of Arely Procter: Spiritual and Ritual Abuse Happens Right Here in the U.S.

    What happens when spiritual beliefs are used to justify harm against children in the United States? In this episode, Josh Hutchinson, Sarah Jack, and guest host Mary Bingham explore Spiritual and Ritual Abuse, known as SARA, and why it remains a largely unrecognized crisis in American communities. The team examines how belief-driven violence crosses every demographic and faith background, discusses the landmark case of 3-year-old Arely Procter, and raises critical questions about accountability when religious freedom is invoked as a legal defense. What Spiritual and Ritual Abuse (SARA) is and how international bodies define it How SARA manifests in the United States across faiths, communities, and demographics Why cases of belief-driven child abuse often go unrecognized or are prosecuted without acknowledging the spiritual motivations behind them How familiar cases like Elizabeth Smart and Ruby Franke fall under the SARA umbrella The story of Arely Procter and the ongoing legal proceedings in Santa Clara County, California What the Racial Justice Act of 2020 is and how it is being used in Arely's case Why the United States lacks a centralized system for monitoring spiritual abuse-and what End Witch Hunts is doing about it What research tells us about the prevalence of supernatural beliefs in America Mary Bingham is a director of End Witch Hunts and a researcher focused on spiritual and ritual abuse cases spanning historical witch trials through present-day prosecutions. Her case research and victim profiles are available on the Sarah Wildes 1692 YouTube channel, including a dedicated playlist for World Day Against Witch Hunts 2025. SARA (Spiritual and Ritual Abuse): Abuse where an offender uses spiritual, superstitious, or traditional beliefs to justify harming others, or uses a victim's own beliefs to manipulate and control them. Harmful Traditional Practices: The United Nations' terminology for practices related to accusations of witchcraft and ritual attacks, reported in at least 60 nations. Racial Justice Act of 2020 (California): Legislation ensuring that racial, ethnic, or national origin does not influence criminal investigations intentionally or unintentionally. National Domestic Violence Hotline 1-800-799-SAFE (1-800-799-7233) National Deaf Domestic Violence Hotline: Call 855-812-1001 or text START to 88788. Childhelp National Child Abuse Hotline: Call or text 800-422-4453. If you are experiencing spiritual or ritual abuse in the home, trained advocates are available around the clock. Hosts: Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack Guest Host: Mary Bingham Produced by: End Witch Hunts, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization New episodes weekly. Available wherever you listen to podcasts. The Thing About Witch Hunts has been heard in 100+ countries worldwide. Links End Witch Hunts Project: End Spiritual and Ritual Abuse SARA Cases YouTube Playlist National Domestic Violence Hotline Podcast Episode: Jordan Alexander Discusses Spiritual and Ritual Abuse Podcast Episode: Witchcraft Beliefs Around the World with Boris Gershman Article by Mary Bingham: Witch Hunting from Salem to San Jose: Dorothy Good and Arely Proctor Article by Mary Bingham: The Psychology Behind Witchcraft Accusations Law & Crime Network YouTube Video on Arely Proctor Racial Justice Act Defense https://youtu.be/4DJnPgnRVmY?si=8zSMLDGpT0hLw-YL

    49 min
  3. Witsh, a Welsh Witch Trial Story, with Mari Ellis Dunning

    4 FEB

    Witsh, a Welsh Witch Trial Story, with Mari Ellis Dunning

    Wales has something most countries don't: complete, intact court records from every witch trial held in the Court of Great Sessions. Author Mari Ellis Dunning used these archives to write Witch, a historical novel set in 16th century Wales. About the novel: Witch follows Doli, a Welsh young woman desperate to have a baby who seeks help from a local soothsayer. The story explores what happens when accusations arise in a community caught between old Welsh traditions and new English Protestant law. The historical context: Five witch trials in Wales resulted in death sentences. The records show fascinating details, including Gwen ferch Ellis's case where "ignoramus" (case dismissed) was physically crossed out before her conviction. Mari discusses the tension between licensed and unlicensed midwives, how the Royal College of Physicians excluded women from medicine, and why lay healers were often more effective than the male physicians who replaced them. Class boundaries determined which accusations progressed to trial. The conversation explores: How Mari balanced creating relatable, nuanced characters while staying true to the limited agency women actually had in the 16th century Why Wales's cultural identity and the conflict between Catholicism and Protestantism shaped different attitudes toward folk practices The connection between historical witch trials and modern medical misogyny, political rhetoric weaponizing "witch," and systemic violence against women Links Buy the book: Witsh by Mari Ellis Dunning Guest Article: Gwen ferch Ellis: The first woman in Wales to be sentenced to death on charges of witchcraft

    46 min
  4. Connecticut's Final Witchcraft Execution: Mary Barnes and the Greensmiths

    28 ENE

    Connecticut's Final Witchcraft Execution: Mary Barnes and the Greensmiths

    Before her execution, Governor John Winthrop Jr. treated Mary Barnes as a patient. He recorded her symptoms, prescribed medicines, and tracked the costs in his medical notebook. In 1663, she was executed for witchcraft in Hartford, Connecticut. This episode isn’t about the execution. It’s about fractured communities, failed institutions, and real people with lives that existed long before the gallows. It’s about what happens when a doctor’s patient becomes a community’s scapegoat, when churches wage war with themselves, and when the one leader who had stopped witch executions leaves town at the worst possible moment. Between 1647 and 1663, Connecticut hanged more people for witchcraft than any other New England colony. Then it became the first to implement legal protections that saved lives, twenty-nine years before Salem would erupt. Understanding that transformation requires understanding Hartford’s breaking point. Understanding how communities fracture, how institutions fail their people, and how fear finds convenient targets in those who don’t fit strict norms teaches us to recognize these patterns, whether in 1663 Hartford or anywhere scapegoating takes root. This is the story of what happened when a doctor’s patient became a witch. When religious anchors became battlegrounds. When neighbors turned on neighbors. And eventually, when a community chose differently. In May 2023, Connecticut officially absolved all 34 witch trial victims. The Thing About Witch Hunts examines historical witch trials and contemporary persecution patterns worldwide. Hosts Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack explore the context that makes scapegoating possible and how communities can choose differently.* End Witch Hunts is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization Links Connecticutwitchtrials.org Listen to more CT Witch Trials Podcast Episodes Buy the Book: Before Salem: Witch Hunting in the Connecticut River Valley 1647-1663 What books should I read about the Connecticut Witch Trials? End Witch Hunts Nonprofit Salem Witch Trials Daily Program

    43 min
  5. The Witch in Old Connecticut: Righting a Troubled Legacy with Richard Ross

    21 ENE

    The Witch in Old Connecticut: Righting a Troubled Legacy with Richard Ross

    How did 19th century Maryland pro-slavery advocates weaponize witch trial narratives against Connecticut abolitionists? Returning guest Dr. Richard Ross III reveals a fabricated 1848 witch trial story designed to discredit Connecticut's anti-slavery movement following the Amistad U. S. Supreme Court case victory. This conversation explores the intersection of witch trial history and American slavery through the curious case of Juliana Cox, a completely fictional Connecticut witch whose story appeared in Maryland newspapers to embarrass Connecticut abolitionists. We consider how missing colonial documents created space for propaganda, examine the real Connecticut witch trials that were hidden for generations, and discuss how witch trial rhetoric became a political weapon in debates over slavery and abolition. Dr. Ross shares research on how the Wyllys family papers disappeared into private collections, why Connecticut's witch trial history remained largely unknown until the 20th century, and the deliberate creation of a witch trial hoax borrowed from English folklore sources to serve pro-slavery political goals. Connecticut witch trial records and their disappearance into private collections The Amistad trial and Connecticut abolitionist movement Fabricated witch trial narratives as political propaganda How pro-slavery advocates compared abolitionists to Salem witch trial accusers The real witch trials of colonial Connecticut finally documented Alice Young: Connecticut's first executed witch Examining bodies for witch marks in colonial New England Literary and political uses of witch trial rhetoric in 19th century America Dr. Richard Ross III is a historian and Professor Emeritus from Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut, where he taught a seminar on New England witch trials for over ten years. He is the author of Before Salem: Witch Hunting in the Connecticut River Valley, 1647-1663 and has conducted extensive research on colonial Connecticut witch trials and 19th century American social history. Connecticut witch trials, slavery and witchcraft, Amistad trial, abolition movement, colonial Connecticut, witch trial propaganda, Richard Ross historian, Alice Young witch trial, Connecticut abolitionists, slavery history, colonial New England, witch trial records, 19th century America, anti-slavery movement, political propaganda, witch hunt history, Maryland newspapers The Thing About Witch Hunts explores historical witch trials and contemporary witch persecution worldwide. Hosted by End Witch Hunts, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization founded by Sarah Jack. Links Connecticutwitchtrials.org Buy the Book: Before Salem: Witch Hunting in the Connecticut River Valley 1647-1663 Buy the Book: Contagion in Prussia, 1831 Buy the Book: American Body Snatchers End Witch Hunts Nonprofit Salem Witch Trials Daily Program

    42 min
  6. A History of Scottish Witches with Mary W. Craig

    14 ENE

    A History of Scottish Witches with Mary W. Craig

    Historian Mary W. Craig returns to discuss her new book, *A History of Scottish Witches: The Devil’s Handmaidens, which traces the arc from the 1563 Witchcraft Act through its abolition in 1736. Craig explores how beliefs that had existed for generations became capital crimes, examining the theological frameworks, political upheavals, and social structures that shaped prosecutions. The conversation moves from John Knox’s influence on Scottish law to the chaos of 1661-62, when local courts abandoned proper procedures. Drawing on trial records and historical documents, Craig discusses who was accused, how interrogations were conducted, and why the trauma made Scottish descendants harder to trace than their New England counterparts. She also reflects on what medieval Scottish communities believed before the Reformation and how those beliefs were reinterpreted. *A History of Scottish Witches* will be available February 2025 from Pen and Sword Books and is now available for pre-order. **Keywords:** Scottish witch trials, Mary W. Craig, Scottish history, 1563 Witchcraft Act, Reformation Scotland, historical research, witch trial records, social history, legal history Scotland​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ Links Buy the Book: A History of Scottish Witches: The Devil's Handmaidens  Buy the Book: A Brief History of Time by Stephen Hawking Buy the Book: The Hammer of Witches Mary W. Craig cohosts the podcast "Borders Bletherings" MaryW.Craig.com End Witch Hunts Nonprofit Salem Witch Trials Daily Program

    46 min
  7. Peter Mintir Amadu on Helping the Innocent Women in Ghana's so-called Witch Camps

    7 ENE

    Peter Mintir Amadu on Helping the Innocent Women in Ghana's so-called Witch Camps

    Episode Overview Clinical health psychologist Peter Mintir Amadu explains the hidden mental health emergency affecting nearly 500 women accused of witchcraft in Northern Ghana and the innovative model transforming their lives. Women accused of witchcraft face a devastating reality: up to 90% suffer from severe depression, PTSD rates exceed 80%, and many live in camps for over 20 years. They've lost everything: family, livelihood, dignity, and hope. But mental health support alone isn't enough. As one survivor told Amadu: "I can sleep now, but when I wake up, I'm hungry. What happens to me?" Initiatives that combine mental health intervention with economic empowerment, creating sustainable change through advocacy, rehabilitation, therapy, livelihood training, and community engagement is being explored. This locally-developed model addresses both psychological trauma and practical survival needs. Ghana faces a 98% mental health treatment gap with fewer than 200 psychologists for 30+ million people. Yet TOLEC is proving that culturally-grounded, resource-conscious solutions can work, from teletherapy programs to training religious leaders as mental health advocates. TOLEC's work extends to prison mental health, maternal psychological care, youth substance abuse prevention, and school-based interventions, all driven by data and local innovation. International collaboration opportunities exist in capacity building, research partnerships, digital health technology, and advocacy. The model is ready to scale. What's needed is global support for local expertise. For organizations seeking meaningful partnerships in African mental health innovation, culturally-responsive trauma care, or women's empowerment initiatives. Keywords: mental health innovation Africa, witchcraft accusations Ghana, trauma-informed development, sustainable mental health programs, international mental health partnerships, women's rights Ghana, community psychology, teletherapy developing countries #MentalHealthInnovation #GlobalMentalHealth #WomensEmpowerment #AfricanSolutions #EndWitchcraftAccusations #TraumaCare Links Total Life Enhancement Center, Ghana Amnesty International, Ghana End Witch Hunts Why Witch Hunts are not just a Dark Chapter from the Past INAWARA International Alliance to End Witch Hunts

    56 min
  8. British Folklore with Owen Davies and Ceri Houlbrook

    31/12/2025

    British Folklore with Owen Davies and Ceri Houlbrook

    What is folklore and how does it connect to witch hunts? Join us for an author talk with Professor Owen Davies and Dr. Ceri Houlbrook from the University of Hertfordshire, discussing their new book Folklore: A Journey Through the Past and Present. Discover how folklore shapes our daily lives, from cheese rolling traditions to social media rumors. Episode Highlights: • Folklore definition and what folklore actually means today • British folklore traditions and American folklore customs explored • How folklore practices became legal evidence in Salem witch trials • The three types of British witches: conflict witches, accidental witches, and outcast witches • Folk devils versus theological devils in witch hunt history • Spectral evidence, pricking tests, touch tests, and folk magic in historical witch accusations • Why debunked theories like the ergot explanation persist in popular culture • How contemporary folklore evolves through podcasts and social media • The ritual year framework and material culture in folklore studies • Magical thinking and supernatural beliefs across cultures • How folklore cycles between revival and decline Whether you’re studying folklore definition, researching folklore examples, or interested in folklore and popular culture, this author talk explores how folklore studies reveals patterns in human behavior across time. Pick up Folklore: A Journey Through the Past and Present at https://bookshop.org/shop/endwitchhunts to support our work and explore opportunities to study folklore at the University of Hertfordshire’s MA folklore program.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ Links Buy Book: Folklore: A Journey Through the Past and Present ⁠The Thing About Witch Hunts YouTube⁠ ⁠The Thing About Witch Hunts The Thing About Salem website

    44 min

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The Thing About Witch Hunts is the podcast of historical witch trials and modern-day violent witchcraft persecution. From the Salem Witch Trials to the ramifications of today's harmful practices related to accusations of witchcraft and ritual attacks, The Thing About Witch Hunts covers it all. Tune in today to find out why The Thing About Witch Hunts is an essential podcast for everyone interested in this intriguing subject. #history #witchcraft #SalemWitchTrials #witchhunt

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