Record 08 · Instance 01 — Massachusetts Bay, 1692

Pregnancy bought you time. Not your life.

The court would wait for the baby. It would not spare the mother.

A pregnant woman under sentence of death received a stay of execution until after she gave birth — English common law didn’t permit executing a woman carrying an innocent child.

Elizabeth Proctor’s stay outlasted the trials themselves, and she survived. But the stay was never a pardon — only a postponement with an expiration date.