Betty Parris

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Elizabeth "Betty" Parris (November 28, 1682March 21, 1760) was the nine-year-old daughter of the Salem villages' reverend Samuel Parris (1653–1720) and was the first to become ill after being "bewitched" as most people thought. Her contortions, convulsions and outbursts of gibberish at first baffled everyone, especially when other girls began to show similar symptoms. Shortly after her illness, the Salem witch trials began, with the girls accusing neighbors of witchcraft.

Although she initially played a large part in the accusations, Betty Parris's role soon diminished as she was sent to live with relatives of magistrate Samuel Sewall, after which her afflictions seem to have subsided.

Supposedly, she and her cousin, Abigail Williams, were taught some methods of fortune-telling by Tituba, an African, (or possibly native American Indian) servant from Barbados. Many recent historians have since dismissed this theory, perhaps most vehemently Mary Beth Norton, author of "In The Devil's Snare", since primary source documentation is slim to non-existent, and the tale largely stems from the extremely slanted and sometimes wholly inaccurate writings of 19th century historian Charles W. Upham.

According to the play The Crucible, "Betty" and other girls start to act like they were being bewitched because they were scared. The night before "Betty" fell sick, Abigail Williams, other girls, and she were dancing in the woods only to be discovered by Reverend Parris.

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