Jacobs, George, Sr.: Difference between revisions

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subordinate women.
subordinate women.
Jacobs had a sizable farm called Northfields which was to the north of Salem Town, halfway to Salem Village. His house stood until 1938,
in full view of Route 114 in Danvers, on the right side of the road heading from Salem and Peabody to Danversport.


[[File:GeorgeJacobs.jpg]]
[[File:GeorgeJacobs.jpg]]

Revision as of 12:34, 10 June 2021

George Jacobs, Sr. was about 72 years old when he was hanged as a wizard on August 19, 1692, along with three other men and one

woman -- the first time men were executed for witchcraft in Salem. He was accused, among many others, by his granddaughter,

Margaret Jacobs who was also accused and imprisoned. Depending on scholarly opinion, he has been seen as the victim of personal

grudges, the casualty of the socio-political climate of Salem, or the target of cultural system's effects on young, socially

subordinate women.

Jacobs had a sizable farm called Northfields which was to the north of Salem Town, halfway to Salem Village. His house stood until 1938,

in full view of Route 114 in Danvers, on the right side of the road heading from Salem and Peabody to Danversport.

GeorgeJacobs.jpg

See Also

Important Persons in the Salem Court Records Salem Witch Trials, Univ. of Virginia.

Salem possessed; the social origins of witchcraft by Paul Boyer and Stephen Nissenbaum 1974.