"Salem Witch Trials: The Documentary Archive and Transcription Project,” provides access to 17th century Court Records and other primary source material, as well as transcriptions, historical maps, archival collections and scanned contemporary books. It is hosted by the University of Virginia, but the Project Staff is international.
“Salem Witchcraft Trials:1692” is a website within University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law
Professor Douglas Linder’s “Famous Trials” website. This ambitious project
includes primary source documents, biographical material, maps, images, a
bibliography and a Jeopardy! Game.
Witchcraft Collection, part of Cornell University Library’s Division of Rare and
Manuscript Collections, contains over 3,000 titles documenting the history of
the Inquisition and the persecution of witchcraft, primarily in Europe. The
Primary Source Digital Witchcraft Collection includes material about the Salem
Trials, as do the Student Research Papers available on the Witchcraft
Collection website.
Closer to home, drop by the
Essex Law Library in Salem to check out some of their titles on the Salem Witch
Trials and Richard Adamo’s 2002 “Salem Witchcraft Trials Selective Bibliography.”