Massachusetts Bay Colony, 1648. In the austere world of Puritan New England, where piety was law and conformity meant survival, one woman's strength and independence ignited a storm of fear.Margaret Jones was no ordinary settler. Gifted as a midwife and healer, she brought comfort to the sick and hope to the suffering, relying on remedies and wisdom passed down through generations. But in a community ruled by suspicion, her confidence was branded as pride, her skill as sorcery, and her very independence as rebellion. As the colony struggled with illness, scarcity, and unrest, whispers against Margaret grew louder-until they erupted into formal charges of witchcraft.Her trial would become the first of its kind in Massachusetts Bay, a chilling prelude to the Salem witch hysteria that would follow decades later. With neighbors testifying against her and ministers declaring her cursed, Margaret stood before a court that demanded her silence, obedience, and repentance. She refused.What followed was both tragedy and legacy: the story of the first woman condemned and executed for witchcraft in New England, a tale of love tested, justice perverted, and courage in the face of certain death.Drawn from original court records, diary entries, and eyewitness testimony, The Witch Trials of Massachusetts Bay: The True Story of the First Woman Condemned in Puritan New England combines historical accuracy with narrative power. More than a chronicle of injustice, it is a vivid portrait of a woman who defied fear, a society that weaponized faith, and a moment in history that shaped America's darkest chapters.For readers of Stacy Schiff's The Witches, Beth Underdown's The Witchfinder's Sister, and Geraldine Brooks' Year of Wonders, this book offers both an intimate story of a forgotten woman and a sweeping account of the perils of dissent in a world ruled by fear.