(Redirected from Reverend John Hale)'John Hale' (
3 June 1636-
15 May 1700) was the
pastor of the
Church of Christ in
Beverly, Massachusetts during the
Salem witch hunt in
1692. He became one of the most prominent and influential opponents of the witch trials.
Born in
Charlestown, Massachusetts, he was educated at
Harvard College in
Boston, graduating in 1657. He was ordained as the first minister of the parish church in Beverly on 20 September 1667, where he remained until his death.
He was heavily involved in prosecuting people for
witchcraft, but had a dramatic change of attitude when his second wife, Sarah, was accused. She was acquitted and the trials collapsed shortly afterward. Following his wife's death on 20 May 1697, at the age of 61,
[1] he wrote a short book, ''A Modest Enquiry into the Nature of Witchcraft'',
[2] which was highly critical of the trials.
His house from 1694 until his death, at 39 Hale Street, Beverly, is now a museum, the
John Hale House.
End of the Trials
By September of 1692, doubts were developing as to how so many townspeople could possibly be guilty. Reverend John Hale said, "It cannot be imagined that in a place of so much knowledge, so many in so small compass of land should abominably leap into the Devil's lap at once"
Fiction
In Arthur Miller's 1952 play The Crucible, Hale appears in Act I in response to a request from Samuel Parris that he examine Betty Parris, the daughter of Reverend Parris. Hale's quick visit to help with Betty actually causes him to become one of the main characters in the play. Hale stirs the witchcraft cauldron that is brewing in Salem Village.
Hale, a young minister, devoted most of his life to the study of witchcraft and other dæmonic arts in the hope of being able to destroy them in the name of God. He has found a 'witch' in his home town of Beverly, where he preaches. Ironically, Hale is the impetus behind the witch trials and later is the advocate against them. As a devout Christian, Hale sees it as his duty to seek out the witches, and to 'save their souls'. Hale, after seeing the horrors of the witch trials and watching the loss of both civil and human rights, has a conversion of heart and speaks out against them telling Judge Danforth that they are morally wrong. Hale leaves the court when Mary Warrens accuses John Proctor of witchcraft because he no longer believes in the how the court is proceeding.
[3]
In the 1996 film version of the play, he was portrayed by Rob Campbell.
References
★
Short biography of John Hale
1. 1692 Salem Witch Museum
2. A Modest Enquiry into the Nature of Witchcraft, John Hale, , , Benjamin Elliot, Boston, 1697, facsimile of document at the Salem witch trials documentary archive, University
of Virginia
3. Cliff's Notes