🕯️ Our Family Connection to the Salem Witch Trials of 1692
The Salem Witch Trials of 1692 remain one of the most tragic and revealing episodes in early American history. More than a courtroom crisis, Salem was a family and community crisis that unfolded within a tightly connected colonial society. This page presents a documented genealogical connection between Anne Sturm and the broader colonial New England family network through the Bassett, Elwell, Walling, Garrison, and Griner lines.
Historical overview
The Salem Witch Trials did not occur in isolation. They emerged from a world shaped by kinship, religion, inheritance, migration, landholding, and neighborhood loyalties. In seventeenth-century New England, families formed the structure of daily life. Marriage linked one surname to another, church membership reinforced community bonds, and probate and land records tied generations together. When accusations spread in Salem in 1692, they moved through this larger human network.
For that reason, a connection to Salem is often best understood through a broader family structure rather than through one isolated individual. That is the approach taken here. Rather than relying on legend or overstatement, this page places Anne Sturm within the wider colonial network surrounding Salem through a continuous chain of documented family records.
By the late seventeenth century, Massachusetts society was already under stress. Political instability, frontier conflict, economic anxiety, and local religious tensions shaped daily life. Salem Village itself was divided by longstanding disputes involving authority, land, and church leadership. Once accusations began, they spread across known households and family circles. The people named in the trials were not strangers to one another. They were relatives, neighbors, in-laws, and members of overlapping family networks.
Documented line of descent
The following line of descent places Anne Sturm within the documented family network that ultimately connects back into the Salem-era colonial world:
Anne Sturm → Nancy Ognan → Mabel Emily Griner → Charles Berdeaux Griner → Louis Eli Griner → Eli Griner Sr. → John Griner + Eleanor Garrison → Cornelius Garrison + Anna Tullis → Daniel Garrison (1724–1799) → Jacob Garrison + Mary Walling → Thomas Walling + Sarah Elwell → Thomas Elwell + Sarah Bassett
This line is supported by surviving family records across multiple generations, including marriage records, death certificates, church records, probate materials, land records, and colonial vital records.
The Bassett, Elwell, and Walling connection
The deepest colonial significance of this line rests in the Bassett, Elwell, and Walling families. Through Sarah Bassett, the line enters a family network historically associated with colonial Massachusetts. Through Sarah Elwell and the Walling line, that ancestry continues forward in documented form into later generations.
The Elwell and Walling families act as the bridge between later New Jersey descendants and earlier New England ancestors. Their repeated appearance across multiple records reinforces the integrity of the lineage and reflects the close-knit nature of colonial family life.
The Bassett family gives this page its strongest Salem-era significance. This does not require an exaggerated claim. It means Anne Sturm’s ancestry places her inside a historically meaningful family structure surrounding the Salem Witch Trials.
Your relationship to Salem
Within this documented family network, Elizabeth Proctor is identified as a 9th great-aunt. This means she belongs to the same extended ancestral family structure, though she is not a direct lineal ancestor. That distinction matters because it is historically accurate, genealogically responsible, and consistent with how colonial New England families were actually connected.
Elizabeth Proctor remains one of the best-known names associated with the Salem Witch Trials, but she was also part of a larger family world. Placing her inside a documented kinship structure allows this page to present the connection carefully and correctly.
While this page presents the broader family history and modern records, a full document-based proof of the connection to Elizabeth Proctor has been developed using colonial wills, marriage records, and primary sources.
Why this connection matters
This connection matters because it turns Salem from abstract history into lived family history. The people of 1692 were not isolated names in court records. They were members of households whose descendants continued across generations. Genealogy restores that continuity and shows that the Salem Witch Trials were experienced through families, not just through individuals.
This page also demonstrates a responsible genealogical method. It does not depend on legend, overstatement, or unsupported claims. Instead, it builds from surviving records outward and places each generation in order.
Genealogical evidence
- Marriage records for the Griner and Loder families
- Death certificates for Ognan and Griner family members
- Church baptism records from Albany
- Probate and estate records for the Garrison family
- Land and mortgage records from Salem County, New Jersey
- Colonial records for the Walling, Elwell, and Bassett families
Primary records and family documents
Modern records
Death Certificate — Mabel Emily Griner2
Marriage Record — Donald Sturm and Nancy Ognan3
Griner family records
Baptism Record — Mabel Emily Griner4
Marriage Record — Louis Eli Griner5
Marriage Record — Charles Berdeaux Griner6
Garrison probate and land records
Administrators — Cornelius Garrison8
Heirs Record — Garrison Family9
Colonial New England records
Marriage Record — Jacob Garrison and Mary Walling10
Mary Walling Record11
Marriage Record — Thomas Walling and Sarah Elwell12
Sarah Elwell Record13
Marriage Record — Thomas Elwell and Sarah Bassett14
Notes
- New York State death certificate for Nancy M. Ognan, 2000.
- New York State death certificate for Mabel Emily Griner Ognan, 1998.
- Albany County, New York, marriage record for Donald F. Sturm and Nancy M. Ognan, 1975.
- Sacred Heart Church, Albany, New York, baptismal register entry for Mabel Emily Griner, 1920.
- Marriage record for Louis Eli Griner identifying parents Eli Griner and Rachel Loder.
- Marriage record for Charles Berdeaux Griner identifying Louis Griner and Emily Berdeaux as parents.
- New Jersey probate record, will of Daniel Garrison, 1799.
- Salem County, New Jersey, Administrators of Cornelius Garrison, 1794.
- Heirs record connecting the Garrison and Griner families through the Cornelius Garrison estate.
- Marriage record for Jacob Garrison and Mary Walling, 1719.
- Colonial record identifying Mary Walling as daughter of Thomas Walling and Sarah Elwell.
- Rhode Island colonial record of Thomas Walling’s marriage to Sarah Elwell.
- Record identifying Sarah Elwell as daughter of Thomas Elwell and Sarah Bassett.
- Massachusetts marriage record for Thomas Elwell and Sarah Bassett.
- Baptismal or probate record for William Bassett in the colonial line.
Sources
- New Jersey probate records for the Garrison family
- Albany church records
- Death certificates for Ognan and Griner family members
- Marriage records for the Griner and Loder families
- Rhode Island and Massachusetts colonial records
- Family estate and heir documents connecting Garrison, Elwell, and Griner families
Conclusion
This page presents a continuous and documented genealogical connection linking Anne Sturm to the broader colonial New England family network surrounding the Salem Witch Trials of 1692. Through the Bassett, Elwell, Walling, Garrison, and Griner families, her ancestry preserves a real and historically meaningful connection to that world.
The strength of the page lies not in dramatic claims, but in the continuity of the records. This is family history grounded in documentary evidence, structured genealogy, and the wider historical reality of interconnected colonial households.
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🕯️
Salem Witch Trials Connection
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Massachusetts Bay Colony, 1692
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| Relationship | |
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Elizabeth Proctor 9th Great-Aunt |
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| Subject | Anne Sturm |
| Genealogical basis | Family records, including probate, land, church, marriage, birth, death, and estate records |
| Key families |
Bassett Elwell Walling Garrison Griner |
| Key line | Bassett → Elwell → Walling → Garrison → Griner |
| Region | Colonial New England |
| Period | 1692–1693 |
| Line status |
Multi-generation documented Family-record supported Structurally complete |
| Evidence type | |
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✔ Probate records ✔ Marriage records ✔ Church records ✔ Land records ✔ Birth and death records |
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