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In The Crucible, who is blamed by Mrs. Putnam for her three children's deaths?

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Mrs. Putnam blames Goody Osburn for the deaths of three of her children in The Crucible. Ann Putnam is suspicious of Osburn because she served as her midwife during the births of those children, who did not survive. This suspicion is heightened when Tituba, under pressure, names Osburn as a witch, which Mrs. Putnam accepts as confirmation of her fears and uses to assign blame for her tragic losses.

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I am glad that you put in the part about "three of her children."  The specificity is good, because the answer changes with that added information.  

Ann Putnam has lost seven total children.  She has one surviving child.  That child is Ruth.  Rebecca Nurse was Ann Putnam's midwife for all of those births, so Ann Putnam is a bit suspicious of Rebecca Nurse.  Putnam is also slightly resentful of Nurse, because Rebecca Nurse has successfully given birth to many children and has many grandchildren.  

However, Ann Putnam does openly lay the blame for three of her children's deaths on Goody Osburn.  Tituba is being interviewed (interrogated) about her involvement with the girls, and I believe that Tituba simply names some names to get the attention and blame off of herself.  She names Goody Osburn a witch, and Ann Putnam jumps on it as Gospel truth.  Putnam deeply desires to put blame on somebody for the deaths of her children, and Goody Osburn is as good as the next.  Goody Osburn even helped with three of Putnam's failed births.   

Mrs. Putnam: I knew it! Goody Osburn were midwife to me three times. I begged you, Thomas, did I not? I begged him not to call Osburn because I feared her. My babies always shriveled in her hands!

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