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A
Witch-Link to Salem, Massachusetts
by Patricia Crandall |
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Virginie owns an eclectic craft emporium filled with exotic
tapestries, jewelry, pottery, soy candles, luscious smelling creams and
lotions, and sparkling crystals crafted by local artists. Many of those
artists are cult friends.
Amid fountains washing waters over smooth rocks and pebbles, I am
intrigued by the hand-waving conversations of Eugenie and her associates
concerning recent ‘witch-happenings’ attributed to The Pagan Resource
and Network Council of Educators. P.R.A.N.C.E. has been instrumental in
the reconstruction of the Witch Village in Salem, Massachusetts and has
hosted the “Witches’ Hospitality Tent” every year. Located on the
Common during Salem’s Haunted Happenings, Prance gives Pagan/Wiccan
tourists information and a warm welcome to the Witch City. The Salem
Witch Museum, the Witch Dungeon Museum, and the Witch History Museum take
you back to 1692, yet, present-day popularization of the witchcraft
hysteria does not reveal the large number of witches living in Salem
today. The
goal of the Salem Witch Village is to promote religious tolerance and
participation in a positive society that encourages growth and acceptance
of all of its people. Virginie
and I vacation in Salem - not together! The link we have to each other is
our discussions of our own particular interests in Salem, Massachusetts.
Otherwise, we travel with our own entourage.
I and my family enjoy touring Chestnut Street, a registered
National Historic Landmark, considered one of the most architecturally
beautiful streets in America. It is a showcase of grand antique houses and
part of Salem’s McIntyre Historic District. Other points
of interest are the schooner, Fame, at the Pickering Wharf Marina,
a replica of the successful privateer from the War of 1812. Fame sails
from Memorial Day through September --
weather permitting. Forest River Park offers beaches and picnic areas.
Hamilton Hall, built between 1805 and 1807, and designed by Samuel
McIntire, is a social center for Salem’s merchant families. This
National Register historic landmark remains a unique setting for special
functions and weddings. My special
destination in Salem, Massachusetts is the House of the Seven Gables made
famous by author, Nathaniel Hawthorne. “God will
give him blood to drink!” An evil house, cursed through the centuries by
a man who was hanged for witchcraft, haunted by the ghosts of its sinful
dead, wracked by the fear of its frightened living…. Four
Pyncheons play a part inside the blighted house: Hepzibah, an elderly
recluse; Clifford, her feeble-minded brother; Phoebe, their young country
cousin…and Jaffrey, a devil incarnate whose greedy quest for secret
wealth is marked by murder and terrible vengeance from a restless grave. Nathaniel
Hawthorne’s works are imbued with a mixture of the actual and the
imaginary, and The House of the Seven Gables is an enduring example. The
puritanical Colonel Pyncheon is the embodiment of Hawthorne’s own great
grandfather, a judge at the Salem witch trials; the gloomy, gabled house
typifies his own depressing home. It is this masterful blending of the
spiritual and symbolic that allows Hawthorne’s haunted house to stand
firm where many a weaker one has fallen.*
For academic interests and the pure enjoyment of “seeing sites
New-Englandly,” Salem, Massachusetts gives me the opportunity to tour
nearby locations made famous by New England authors. Nathaniel
Hawthorne’s greatest novel, “The Scarlet Letter” was written in
Puritan Boston in 1850. One can visit Walden Pond, made famous by Henry
David Thoreau, the Cambridge of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Emily
Dickenson’s Amherst, and the Orchard House at Concord. Louisa M. Alcott
wrote Little Women at The Wayside in Concord, and, of course, there is
Boston – the place where powerful and original literary expression in
America began.
Virginie revels in Dracula’s Castle, Salem’s haunted house.
Eerie chambers filled with “live spirits” lead to Dracula’s haunted
crypt. The Peabody Essex Museum exhibits eerie memorabilia associated with
Salem Witch trials, such as the “Witch Pins” used in the examination
of witches and a small bottle supposed to contain the finger bones of
victim George Jacobs. The bizarre, seemingly inexplicable behavior of two
young girls, the daughter, Betty, and the niece, Abigail Williams, of the
Salem Village minister, Reverend Samuel Parris, launched the hysteria
which led to the trials. In
February, 1692, Magistrates Jonathan Corwin and John Hawthorne examined
three accused women. Corwin’s home, known as the Witch House, still
stands at the corner of North and Essex Streets in Salem. This is the only
structure still standing in Salem with direct ties to the 1692 Salem Witch
Trials. Guided tours and tales of the first witchcraft trials are provided
there. John Hawthorne is an ancestor of author Nathaniel Hawthorne. Finally,
back at Eugenie’s Emporium - at times I feel uncomfortable in the aura
of witches, particularly when Jim-bo, a long-limbed Indian sits in a
trance in a room furnished in surreal and wiccan accessories, preparing to
tell fortunes. It is my prerogative to leave. |
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Other
tours and points of interest in Salem: Burying
Point (1637), Charter Street: The oldest cemetery in Salem. Contains
the graves of a Mayflower pilgrim and witchcraft trial judge John Hathorne.
Hollywood
House of Wax, Museum Place Mall: Movie stars and monsters from
supernatural Hollywood. Nathaniel
Bowditch House, 9 North Street: Home of Nathaniel Bowditch from 1811 to
1823. It is a National Historic Landmark, and is significant both
architecturally and historically. T New
England Pirate Museum, 274 Derby Street – Piracy flourished in Salem
post 1692. Notorious villains like Blackbeard and Kidd prowled the coast.
Relive their adventures. Old
Town Hall, 32 Derby Square – built in 1816 after the land was
donated to the City of Salem by John Derby III and Benjamin Pickman, Jr.,
it was the city headquarters until 1836/37 when the new City Hall was
erected on Washington Street. Salem
Common, Washington Square – Nine-acre park which was the public land
used to graze livestock and train local militia in the 17th and
18th centuries. Today it is used for concerts and community
activities. Spellbound
Museum, 190 Essex Street – Authentic historical, cultural and
religious artifacts pertaining to the supernatural world. Experience
America’s only “Ghost Gallery!” New England’s only museum
dedicated to the supernatural world and its mysteries. Witch Mansion in 3D, 11 Pickering Way – Salem’s only 3D Haunted House. Located at Pickering Wharf. |
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