In January of 1692, three daughters of different ages started to throw things violently, scream, mutter strange noises, and contorted themselves in bizarre positions. A Salem doctor believed it was the supernatural. “On February 29, under pressure from magistrates Jonathan Corwin and John Hathorne, the girls blamed three women for afflicting them: Tituba, the Parris' Caribbean slave; Sarah Good, a homeless beggar; and Sarah Osborne, an elderly impoverished woman.”
All three women accused were tried and interrogated in front of local magistrates for several days. Sarah Good and Osborne both insisted they were innocent. Tituba, however, claimed she had seen black dogs, red cats, yellow birds, and a “black man” asked her