Salem witch trials document up for auction, expected to fetch up to $35,000

Salem, USA - A document from the Salem witch trials is expected to fetch as much as $35,000 when it hits the auction block.

The original court indictment of Margaret Scott, a Rowley widow in her 70s and one of the last people hanged during the 1692 hysteria in colonial Massachusetts, is part of a private collection of historical documents being sold Thursday at Swann Auction Galleries in New York.

The pre-auction estimate is $25,000 to $35,000, but one local expert thinks that is too low.

Richard Trask, the Danvers town archivist and a leading expert on the trials, tells The Salem News (http://bit.ly/x2RBmQ) it’s just the third time in a 50-year career he can recall a witchcraft document being sold.

Nineteen people were hanged and one person was crushed to death during the trials.