Salem Witch Trials Landmarks

Click black markers to learn about important Salem sites connected to the 1692 witch trials (and how Salem remembers them today).

Landmark Marker: Salem Witch Trials site or interpretation location
Tip: Read carefully—your scavenger hunt questions are answered in the landmark descriptions.

Click a landmark marker

This map highlights key Salem locations connected to the Salem Witch Trials of 1692—places where people remember the victims, learn about the trials, or explore buildings and spaces connected to judges, witnesses, and the community of the time.

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Scavenger Hunt: Salem Witch Trials Landmarks

Use the map descriptions to answer these 10 multiple-choice questions. When you’re done, click Submit to check your score.

1) Which site was created to remember the 20 people who died in the 1692 witch trials?



2) Which landmark marks the most likely location where the executions took place?



3) Which building was once the home of Judge Jonathan Corwin (a witch trials judge)?



4) Which landmark is known for teaching the story of the trials using exhibits and interpretation for visitors?



5) Which cemetery contains graves of people connected to the trials (including officials and local families)?



6) Which site is a “memorial” rather than a museum building you go inside?



7) Which landmark uses reenactment-style interpretation (acting out a trial) to help visitors learn?



8) Which location is described as a place of reflection, where names and dates help visitors remember victims?



9) Which landmark is included mainly because it helps explain Salem’s civic “downtown” setting (even if it isn’t a trials site)?



10) Which landmark is marked as an “approximate site” because the original building from 1692 no longer stands?