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  1. Updated on March 30, 2019. Known for: accused of witchcraft, arrested and imprisoned in the 1692 Salem witch trials. Age at time of Salem witch trials: about 55. Dates: about 1637 to October 27, 1710. Also known as: Mary Clements Osgood, Clements was also written as "Clement" Before the Salem Witch Trials.

  2. [September 8, 1692] The examination and confession (8. Sept. 92.) of Mary Osgood , wife of Captain Osgood of Andover, taken before John Hawthorne and other their Majesties justices.

  3. When Mary Osgood was born on 15 April 1691, in Salem, Essex, Massachusetts Bay Colony, British Colonial America, her father, Peter Osgood, was 27 and her mother, Martha Ayer, was 23. She married Captain Benjamin Woodbridge on 9 September 1714, in New Hampshire, British Colonial America.

    • Female
    • Captain Benjamin Woodbridge
    • Salem, Essex, Massachusetts Bay Colony, British Colonial America
  4. 22 de ene. de 2024 · *also descended from Mary Osgood (accused) Image Credit: Official portrait of First Lady Grace Coolidge (1879-1957) Howard Chandler Christy, 1924

  5. Biography. Mary (Osgood) Marston was accused of witchcraft in the Salem Witch Trials. Mary was the eldest daughter of Capt. Christopher Osgood of Andover, Mass and his first wife, Hannah Belknap. She was born 5 July 1665 and married John Marston 2 May, 1689 [1] Mary Marston was one of many in Andover to be accused of witchcraft.

    • July 5, 1665
    • April 5, 1700
  6. 4 de mar. de 2019 · This article utilises emotions theory to explore the actions and behaviour of the young female accusers in the Salem witchcraft trials. It argues common historical interpretation of this behaviour has largely ignored the cultural context of witchcraft belief among young women, as well how agency and emotion functioned in the ...

  7. For a compelling description of the pressures to confess, see the declaration of Mary Osgood and others as they recanted their confessions. 37 The great majority of confessors such as Mary Osgood had their cases addressed by grand juries in 1693 by the Superior Court of Judicature after the Court of Oyer and Terminer that tried the 1692 cases had been dissolved.