『The True History Behind The Witch of Blackbird Pond with the Wethersfield Historical Society』のカバーアート

The True History Behind The Witch of Blackbird Pond with the Wethersfield Historical Society

The True History Behind The Witch of Blackbird Pond with the Wethersfield Historical Society

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Is The Witch of Blackbird Pond historical fact or beloved fiction? Museum educators Martha Smart and Gillie Johnson from the Wethersfield Historical Society pull back the curtain on Elizabeth George Speare's classic novel by revealing what she got right and what she invented. This episode demonstrates why Connecticut's real witch trials deserve more attention than they've gotten.

Discover the true story of Katherine Harrison, whose 1669 witch trial revealed the dangerous reality for independent women in Puritan Connecticut. Learn why Gershom Bulkeley, a real historical figure who appears in the novel helped end witch executions in Connecticut by declaring he'd seen no legally proven case of witchcraft.

From the Charter Oak legend to the history of slavery in colonial Connecticut, this conversation goes far beyond the novel to explore what life was really like in 1680s Wethersfield and whose stories have been left out of the history books.

  • The real Katherine Harrison witch trial and how it differed from the novel's dramatic courtroom scene

  • Why Connecticut's witch trials ended decades before Salem's panic began

  • How The Witch of Blackbird Pond has shaped—and sometimes distorted—Wethersfield's historical identity

  • What Elizabeth George Speare got wrong about Puritan social customs, trade, and the treatment of outsiders

  • The truth behind the Charter Oak legend and Connecticut's resistance to British rule

Martha Smart - Research and Reference Librarian, Wethersfield Historical Society

Gillie Johnson - Museum Educator, Wethersfield Historical Society

Learn more at wethersfieldhistory.org, where you can explore their database of people of color in Wethersfield's history.


Elizabeth George Speare's The Witch of Blackbird Pond and Connecticut's colonial-era witch trials, including the 1669 case of Katherine Harrison in Wethersfield, form an important part of the state's historical narrative, though they remain less widely recognized than their Salem counterparts.

Links

Wethersfieldhistory.org

Webb Deane Stevens Museum

Purchase the book: The Witch of Blackbird Pond from our nonprofit bookshop

Connecticut Witch Trial History


End Witch Hunts Nonprofit

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