The Thing About Witch Hunts

Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack

Witch trials have shaped communities, claimed lives, and defined entire eras of history. The Thing About Witch Hunts investigates the real history behind witch hunts and modern witchcraft persecution worldwide, from the Salem witch trials of 1692 to the deadly witchcraft accusations devastating communities today. Hosted by Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack, each episode delivers essential context for history lovers, true crime fans, and human rights advocates. #witchtrials #witchhunts #SalemWitchTrials #witchcraft #witchcraftpersecution #history #truecrime #humanrights #historypodcast #persecutio

  1. 200 Episodes About Witch Hunts: Celebrating a Milestone with a Lesson in Witch Trial History

    22h ago

    200 Episodes About Witch Hunts: Celebrating a Milestone with a Lesson in Witch Trial History

    Episode 200: The Long Arc of Witch Hunts—From Connecticut to a Global Crisis The Thing About Witch Hunts: We mark episode 200 by tracing the full arc of witch hunts from ancient prosecutions to early modern demonology, colonial New England, and today’s escalating global violence. We begin with Connecticut’s executions—starting with Alice Young in 1647—and the 2023 resolution absolving the indicted victims, then widen out through England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, the Basque country, Sweden, and Salem, emphasizing how courts, texts, and laws shaped prosecutions and how “hysteria” does not accurately describe these bureaucratic trials. We connect historic concepts like the diabolical pact, the sabbath, and “crimen exceptum” to modern accusations, banishment, torture, and killings across at least sixty nations, citing UN-documented violence, Ghana’s Akua Denteh, and contradictory legal responses. We center survivors and the accused as people, invite action, and point listeners to endwitchhunts.org and World Day Against Witch Hunts (August 10).Thank you to the 175 guests who have appeared on the podcast and to all who have viewed or listened to The Thing About Witch Hunts. And we aren't stopping with 200 episodes. Subscribe today and watch the amazing episodes coming up. End Witch Hunts endwitchhunts.org About Witch Hunts aboutwitchhunts.com Salem Witch Trials History YouTube: https://youtube.com/@aboutwitchhunts 00:00 Episode 200 Mission 02:53 Ancient Roots 05:14 Church Turns to Heresy 09:58 Malleus and Sexism 11:36 England Goes Secular 12:23 Pamphlets and Skeptics 18:12 Laws Across Colonies 25:02 Europe Scale and Stress 27:17 England Local Panics 31:02 Scotland Burning Regime 34:50 Wales and Healing Magic 37:25 Ireland Rare Trials 40:11 Basque Hunt Split Courts 43:16 Sweden Blockula to Salem 44:40 Connecticut Before Salem 46:20 Massachusetts and Salem 51:22 After Trials Vigilantes 53:45 Modern Global Crisis 58:59 Law Patchwork Today 01:01:07 Memorials and World Day 01:03:20 What You Can Do 01:05:22 Final Call to Action

    1h 6m
  2. Witches and Familiars with Dr. Holly Bamford

    Jun 17

    Witches and Familiars with Dr. Holly Bamford

    What was a witch's familiar, and why did these animal spirits sit at the heart of English witch trials? Returning guest Dr. Holly Bamford joins hosts Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack to explain the witch's familiar, the witch's mark, and the overlooked history of male witches in early modern England. Learn what the familiar meant, how the witch's mark was used as evidence, why the witch-familiar bond mirrored motherhood, and why men accused of witchcraft were not simply feminized. Featuring Agnes Waterhouse and her cat Satan, John Bysack and his six snails, and John Palmer's familiar named Jezebel. What a witch's familiar was in English witchcraft Why the familiar mattered so much in witch trials How the witch's mark was used as evidence Who was accused of being a male witch Why men accused of witchcraft were not feminized How the witch-familiar bond mirrored motherhood Why Agnes Waterhouse and her cat Satan became a foundational case What John Palmer's familiar Jezebel reveals about marriage 00:00 Familiars in Trials 01:01 Meet Dr Bamford 02:08 Conference Paper Idea 04:14 What Is a Familiar 07:51 Pamphlets and Audiences 11:47 Counting Trials Limits 15:03 Agnes Waterhouse Case 19:21 Marks and Teats 22:56 Motherhood and Familiars 31:52 Male Witches and Snails 41:49 Humanoid Familiar Jezebel 46:27 Further Reading Wrap 48:53 Modern Meaning Outro #WitchTrials #Witchcraft #WitchsFamiliar #WitchesMark #MaleWitches #WitchcraftHistory #EarlyModernEngland #Familiars #Folklore #AgnesWaterhouse #HistoryPodcast #WitchHunts #EndWitchHunts Buy: Witchcraft, the Devil, and Emotions in Early Modern England by Charlotte-Rose Millar https://bookshop.org/a/90227/9780367204549 Buy the book Cunning-Folk and Familiar Spirits by Emma Wilby https://bookshop.org/a/90227/9781845190798 Register for the Magic and Witchcraft Conference June 24-25 Online & In Person https://www.eventbrite.com/e/magic-and-witchcraft-conference-2026-nature-and-the-supernatural-tickets-1989231567166 End Witch Hunts: https://www.endwitchhunts.org The Thing About Witch Hunts: https://aboutwitchhunts.com

    51 min
  3. Metacom's Resistance: Perspectives on King Philip's War with Sarah Stewart

    Jun 10

    Metacom's Resistance: Perspectives on King Philip's War with Sarah Stewart

    Metacom’s Resistance, Puritan Mythology, and King Philip’s War with Sarah Stewart (Partnership of Historic Bostons) We speak with Sarah Stewart, president of the Partnership of Historic Bostons, a public history organization focused on 17th-century New England, to confront Puritan mythology and widen the lens beyond Salem to Indigenous history, enslaved Africans, and displaced peoples. We dig into why King Philip’s War, which is often skipped in schools and told through colonial monuments, Increase Mather, and captivity narratives, was a turning point that devastated Native sovereignty, reshaped New England, and fed the fear that later influenced the Salem witch trials. Sarah breaks down PHB’s “Metacom’s Resistance” series, the need for reframing the war through Indigenous voices, and the realities of enslavement, land commodification, and legal encroachment on sovereignty.  00:00 Meet Sarah Stewart 00:50 Origins of the Partnership 01:51 Broadening the 17th Century Lens 03:21 Programs and Events 04:58 Puritans Beyond the Myths 06:51 Building Community Feedback 08:06 Why King Philip's War Matters 10:53 How the Story Got Distorted 13:22 Metacom's Resistance Series 17:49 Indigenous Voices Center Stage 20:50 Violence and Witch Trial Fear 23:59 Captivity and Enslavement 25:53 Land Commodification Clash 28:50 Land And Equality 29:31 Amplifying Indigenous Voices 33:08 Powerful Panels And Future Events 37:08 Puritans Fear And Ongoing Wars 39:11 Courts Sovereignty And Punishment 42:23 Thomas Morton And Other Paths 45:29 War Choices And Modern Parallels 46:55 Audience Reflections And Truth 52:01 Keep Learning Stay Connected Partnership of Historic Bostons “The Unknown War: King Philip's War, 1675-1678” (video) “The Past is Now: An Inter-Tribal Panel Discussion of King Philp's War” (video) “Surviving Slavery: Indigenous Enslavement in King Philip's War” (video) “Erasure: History, Memory and King Philip's War” (video) “What Really Happened at Turners Falls?” (video) “The Long Legacy: The Cost and Consequences of King Philip's War” (video) “The Slews and Hoars of Beverly: From Witchcraft to Slavery” (video): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2GEspMnY9-o “The Other: Understanding Witch Hunts, Part I, with Emerson Baker, Sarah Jack, and Josh Hutchinson” (video) “Resistance: Stopping Witch Hunts, Part II” (video) Jenny Hale Pulsipher, Subjects unto the Same King: Indians, English, and the Contest for Authority in Colonial New England Jill Lepore, The Name of War: King Philip's War and the Origins of American Identity Peter C. Mancall, The Trials of Thomas Morton

    54 min
  4. Open Mic Night with Guests Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack

    Jun 3

    Open Mic Night with Guests Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack

    We turn the mic on each other for a fast, personal Q&A spanning Salem and global witch hunts, from the infamous Salem witch cake to pop-culture “broom” upgrades and the accused people we can’t stop thinking about, including Samuel Wardwell, Katherine Harrison, Mary Esty, and Rebecca Nurse. We dig into why confessions didn’t always save lives, how spectral evidence shaped cases, and how banishment could be a brutal alternative to execution. We break down our three podcast formats—Salem Witch Trials Daily, The Thing About the Salem Witch Trials, and The Thing About Witch Hunts—and share what listeners most ask about innocence, “real” witchcraft, and the reality that accusations still occur in at least 60 countries. We close with how End Witch Hunts grows through volunteering, donations, subscriptions, and petitions for exonerations. 00:00 Welcome And Guests 01:18 Witch Cake Debate 02:23 Flying On Appliances 03:52 Accused Who Haunt Us 08:17 Banishment And Survival 09:20 Three Podcasts Explained 10:57 Questions We Get Asked 13:32 Research Methods Shift 15:21 Growing Reach Staying Grounded 19:10 What Makes Our Show Different 24:15 Devil Nicknames And Laughs 26:58 Witch Trials Ice Cream 29:38 Descendant Emotions And Ancestors 35:31 Understanding Accusers And Fear 43:43 Why The Accused Were Innocent 45:31 June Trials And Daily Plug 46:24 How To Support End Witch Hunts 51:36 Final Thanks And Call To Action  Links Support The Thing About Witch Hunts: https://endwitchhunts.org/donate The Thing About Witch Hunts Website: https://aboutwitchhunts.com The Thing About the Salem Witch Trials: https://aboutsalem.com Salem Witch Trials Daily: https://aboutsalem.com/salem-witch-trials-daily/ YouTube: https://youtube.com/@aboutwitchhunts Salem Witch Hunt Facebook Page: https://facebook.com/salemwitchhunt

    52 min
  5. The Art and Folklore of Divination with Icy Sedgwick, author of Fate or Fortune

    May 27

    The Art and Folklore of Divination with Icy Sedgwick, author of Fate or Fortune

    Divination folklore, folk magic history, and the practice of reading omens, cards, and natural signs are at the heart of this conversation with Icy Sedgwick, author of Fate or Fortune: The Art and Folklore of Divination, folklorist, and host of the Fabulous Folklore Podcast. From ancient liver divination in Mesopotamia to love divination games played by young women in early modern England, this episode traces the deep folk roots of divinatory practice across centuries and cultures. Icy Sedgwick is a writer, researcher, and diviner specializing in folklore, plant lore, and folk magic. Her book Fate or Fortune: The Art of Divination explores the history, folklore, and practice of divination from a folklore studies perspective. She is the creator and host of the Fabulous Folklore Podcast, based in Newcastle, England. Divination is one of the oldest and most universal human impulses, and its fingerprints are all over witch trial history. In this episode, Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack sit down with Icy Sedgwick to explore what folk magic tradition tells us about the people who practiced divination, why they sought answers through omens and tools and rituals, and what those practices reveal about the communities that preserved them. The conversation is wide-ranging, deeply grounded in folklore scholarship, and endlessly surprising. IN THIS EPISODE YOU WILL LEARN: What separates divination from fortune telling, and why has that distinction mattered throughout history? How did cunning women turn ordinary household objects into powerful folk magic tools? What do love divination rituals reveal about the real lives of women in early modern communities? Why did playing cards become so deeply entangled with the devil in folk tradition? What ancient civilizations left behind physical records of their divination practices, and what did those records reveal? How has dowsing been used for purposes far stranger than finding water? What does folklore say about omens you never asked for but receive anyway? Which forms of divination are experiencing a genuine resurgence right now, and which trend is Icy warning practitioners to avoid? Pick up Icy Sedgwick's book Fate or Fortune: The Art and Folklore of Divination through our affiliate bookshop at bookshop.org/shop/endwitchhunts icysedgwick.com #divination #folklore #folkmagic #witchtrials #salemwitchtrials #fortunetelling #cunningfolk #omens #tarot #cartomancy #dowsing #folklorePodcast #witchhunts #occulthistory #historicalpodcast #folklorestudies #divinationhistory #witchcraft #palmistry #scapulamancy

    51 min
  6. Connecticut Witch Trials Before Salem: The Play Windsor's Daughter Restores Alice Young's Legacy

    May 20

    Connecticut Witch Trials Before Salem: The Play Windsor's Daughter Restores Alice Young's Legacy

    Alice Young was the first person executed for witchcraft in the American colonies, in Windsor, Connecticut, in 1647, before the Salem witch trials. Award-winning author Beth Caruso and playwright Lauren Cavanaugh join Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack to explore her story and the new play Windsor's Daughter that is bringing her life back into the light. This conversation moves between historical research and present-day resonance, asking what it means to memorialize people whose graves were never marked, whose names faded from community memory, and whose persecution mirrors patterns still unfolding today. WHAT YOU WILL LEARN Why Alice Young's 1647 execution changed American history Why her name nearly vanished from history What made Windsor, Connecticut, a powder keg How a play brings her execution to the stage without showing it Why there is no grave to visit What the 2023 exoneration meant for her descendants How her story connects to persecution happening today Where to follow Windsor's Daughter as it finds its stage Links Author Beth Caruso at OneofWindsor.com https://www.oneofwindsor.com/ Playwright Lauren Cavanaugh https://hartford.culturalyst.com/CavanaughLMC Connecticutwitchtrials.org https://connecticutwitchtrials.org/ Listen to more CT Witch Trials Podcast Episodes https://connecticutwitchtrials.org/witch-hunt-podcast/ Support the Podcast Buy a Witch Trial History Book! https://bookshop.org/lists/connecticut-witch-trials

    52 min
  7. May 13

    Blood Countess: The Lies that Made Elizabeth Bathory a Serial Killer with Shelley Puhak

    Elizabeth Bathory is one of pop culture's favorite monsters. Accused of torturing and killing hundreds of young women, she's inspired everything from Snow White's evil stepmother to Lady Gaga. But the actual historical record shows almost none of it happened. Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack sit down with Shelley Puhak, author of The Blood Countess: Murder, Betrayal, and the Making of a Monster, to trace the documented history behind one of history's most sensationalized witch trial-adjacent cases. From the fractured Kingdom of Hungary to a Lutheran minister's invisible demonic cat army, this episode connects the Bathory case to the broader European witch trials and the religious and political warfare driving them. What You'll Learn What the preserved record actually shows The witchcraft and magic accusations woven into the case The political war that made Bathory a target What the Palatine of Hungary stood to gain from her downfall The one minister behind the witchcraft accusations Why no bodies were ever found What her own letters reveal about who she really was The role of ointments, alchemy, and antimony Why widowed noblewomen were especially vulnerable to accusation The tension between a pop culture monster and a real historical victim What justice could look like  About Shelley Puhak Shelley Puhak is a poet, essayist, and historian from Maryland. Her previous nonfiction book, The Dark Queens (Bloomsbury, 2022), was a national bestseller and Goodreads Choice Awards finalist. Her essays have appeared in The Atlantic, the Wall Street Journal, and Virginia Quarterly Review. Links Buy the book: Blood Countess by Shelley Puhak https://bookshop.org/a/90227/9781639732159 Learn about the Author on ShelleyPuhak.com https://shelleypuhak.com/ End Witch Hunts endwitchhunts.org About Witch Hunts aboutwitchhunts.com Salem Witch Trials History YouTube: https://youtube.com/@aboutwitchhunts

    52 min
  8. The American Revolution and Salem Witch Trials Families with Dan Gagnon

    May 6

    The American Revolution and Salem Witch Trials Families with Dan Gagnon

    What does 1692 have to do with 1775? More than you might think. The families of 1692 did not vanish from history. One to two generations after the Salem witch trials, descendants of both the accused and the accusers were drilling on village training fields, defying British soldiers, and dying on the same battlefields. Israel Putnam, one of the Revolution's boldest generals, was born in Salem Village, raised in a family at the center of 1692, and though he moved to Connecticut, he answered the call when Massachusetts needed him most. From Leslie's Retreat in Salem to the Battle of Menotomy, Bunker Hill, the siege of Boston, Long Island, and Saratoga, the men of Essex County were present from the first confrontation to the wider war. And Benjamin Franklin's tie to the Salem witch trials runs closer than most people know. This episode connects two of American history's most significant chapters and asks: what did the witch trial era leave behind, and how did it shape the people who built this country? Danvers and Salem historian Dan Gagnon, author of A Salem Witch: A Biography of Rebecca Nurse, returns to The Thing About Witch Hunts to tell stories of the North Shore's role in the American Revolution as part of America 250. From a standoff at a toll bridge to the bloodiest stretch of road on Patriots Day 1775, the story of Essex County and the Lexington Alarm is one most Americans were never taught. Hosts Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack trace the thread from the Salem witch trials through Lexington and Concord, from the Rebecca Nurse Homestead to the halls of the Continental Congress, and from the accused of 1692 to the soldiers of 1775. What You Will Learn: The through-line between 1692 and 1775 that changes how you understand both Why Leslie's Retreat in Salem months before Lexington and Concord matters more than you have been told What happened when Salem witch trial family names started showing up on revolutionary muster rolls Israel Putnam: the founding-era general with Salem Village roots whose story was nearly erased from history, and why A founding father with a direct family tie to the Salem witch trials, and what that connection reveals What one brutal day at the Battle of Menotomy cost a single Massachusetts town, and why they brought their dead home What you can see at the Rebecca Nurse Homestead today that quietly holds the story of two centuries Dan Gagnon leads walking tours in Danvers and the Rebecca Nurse Homestead is open seasonally.  #AmericanRevolution #America250 #IsraelPutnam #LesliesRetreat #BattleOfMemotomy #BattleOfBunkerHill #SiegeOfBoston #LexingtonAndConcord #LexingtonAlarm #PatriotsDay1775 #BattleOfLongIsland #FrenchAndIndianWar #BostonTeaParty #GeneralGage #GeorgeWashington #BenjaminFranklin #RebeccaNurse #RebeccaNurseHomestead #DanversAlarmList #Minutemen #ContinentalCongress #CoerciveActs #Marblehead #Menotomy #Arlington #EssexCounty #NorthShore #ColonialHistory #AmericanHistory #FoundingFathers #RevolutionaryWar Links  Rebecca Nurse Homestead: rebeccanurse.org A Salem Witch: A Biography of Rebecca Nurse by Dan Gagnon: www.bookshop.org/Shop/endwitchhunts End Witch Hunts endwitchhunts.org About Witch Hunts aboutwitchhunts.com Salem Witch Trials History YouTube: https://youtube.com/@aboutwitchhunts

    46 min

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4.4
out of 5
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About

Witch trials have shaped communities, claimed lives, and defined entire eras of history. The Thing About Witch Hunts investigates the real history behind witch hunts and modern witchcraft persecution worldwide, from the Salem witch trials of 1692 to the deadly witchcraft accusations devastating communities today. Hosted by Josh Hutchinson and Sarah Jack, each episode delivers essential context for history lovers, true crime fans, and human rights advocates. #witchtrials #witchhunts #SalemWitchTrials #witchcraft #witchcraftpersecution #history #truecrime #humanrights #historypodcast #persecutio

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