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Comparing The Scottsboro Trials And The Salem Witch Trials

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In 1931, in Scottsboro, Alabama, nine young black men were charged with raping two white women. They were tried, convicted, and sentenced to death. While the death sentences were overturned by the Alabama Supreme Court, the Scottsboro boys still served an average of ten years in prison for a crime that they didn't commit. While the Scottsboro trials took place over 200 years after the Salem Witch Trials, the circumstances surrounding both cases are extremely similar. One way in which the Scottsboro Trials and the Salem Witch Trials are similar is that in both cases, the accused parties were eventually proven to be innocent. In the Scottsboro Trials, all of the nine accused young men were later found to be innocent. In April 2013, the governor of Alabama officially pardoned the Scottsboro Boys and exonerated them of any wrong doing. In 1711, the colony of Salem restored the rights and innocence of those accused during the Salem Witch Trials. Even though both of the accused parties seemed guilty to the people of both Scottsboro and Salem, they were later proven …show more content…

In Scottsboro, the two young women at the center of the case, Ruby Bates and Victoria Price, weren't the innocent young women that they were perceived as being. In reality, they were both racist prostitutes who were frequently drunk. There should have been serious doubts to the claims that these girls were making, especially with how severe they were. Similarly, the lead accuser during the Salem Witch Trials was Abigail Williams who, while the trials were taking place, stole money from her uncle, Reverend Parris, and disappeared. The evidence that the accused were witches was based on the testimony of the young girls of the town, mainly Abigail Williams. The testimonies that the young girls gave should have been more highly questioned given their

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