Junior high school students inspire a bill seeking justice

    • 52 posts
    August 20, 2021 12:41 AM EDT

     

    A group of eighth graders in Massachusetts learning about the Salem Witch Trials take on the case of Elizabeth Johnson, Jr., which pushed the matter to the House of Commons. state legislature In 1693, a court sentenced 22-year-old Elizabeth Johnson, Jr. to death. Her crime? Be a witch.Johnson was one of 200 people accused of witchcraft during the infamous Salem witch trials. Several trials and proceedings were held in the Massachusetts Colony that began in the spring of 1692 and lasted more than a year. The first to be convicted, Bridget Bishop, was hanged in June of that year,

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    with at least 18 suffering the same fate on a barren hill near the village of Salem. The trial, which was largely aimed at women It is a long dark and tragic event in American history.in the 17th century in New England Witches are thought to have sold their souls to the devil. Johnson escaped from the gallows due to the governor's pardon in 1711, but the state did not add her to the list of those who were officially pardoned later.A bill proposed in the Massachusetts Senate attempted an amendment that would acquit her a century later.

    We don't know why. But with all these attempts to forgive women who were convicted of witchcraft. but was never executed. Elizabeth was never included,” Emerson Baker, a history professor at Salem State University, told the Boston Globe for an article on Johnson and his efforts to seek mortal justice. for her and her family "In the eyes of the law Her confidence is technically still.At the Salem Witch Museum, which commemorates Bridget Bishop, the first person found guilty of the Salem Witch Trials, Bishop was hanged in June 1692.The bill S1016, backed by Democratic state senator Diana DiZoglio representing North Andover,