FULL TEXT (Article 1 of 2): Pamela Myers, alias Snyder, is the name of the woman who is charged with the murder of her children. Our telegraph reports yesterday contained some particulars of the case, the following are additional circumstances: She confessed to the Mayor (of Philadelphia) to having in succession killed five of her children as soon as born, two by one father, and three by another. The last child was born five days since, and was made away with, like the others, by being thrown into the sink. The first information of this horrible disclosure was made to the Mayor by an anonymous letter. The affair happened at Nicetown, in the upper part of Philadelphia. – this hearing of the case was to have taken place yesterday forenoon, but was deferred owing to the illness of of the unfortunate woman. The children were of course all illegitimate.
[Untitled, The Brooklyn Daily Eagle (N. Y.), Nov. 7, 1854,
p. 2]
FULL TEXT (Article 2 of 2): On Thursday two of the special
officers of the police paid a visit to the house occupied by Mr. Rice, at
Nicetown, for the purpose of endeavoring to find the body of one of the
children of Pamela Snyder, which she stated had been buried there. They
effected their object, and an inquest was held upon the remains yesterday at
the Union street station house, by Coroner Delavan, in the presence of Alderman
Lenney.
The first witness called was Dr. Andrew J. Smiley, who
testified to having examined the remains of a child found among a quantity of
decomposed matter, contained in a rough wooden box, about three feet long and
one foot wide. He detailed in technical terms the various portions of the skeletons found, including the bones
of the head, spinal column, arms and lower extremities. He considered from the
size of the bones that the child had arrived at its full time; but from the
advanced stage of decomposition, it was impossible to say that the child had
been born alive, or to decide upon its sex. There was no mark upon the skull to
indicate any violence.
Officer Clark detailed the steps taken in the case from the
arrest of the girl up to Thursday, when he went in company with officer Seed to
Nicetown. Some information received from Charlotte Snyder, an aunt of Pamela,
they dug in a spot she pointed out to them, and in a few minutes came to a
rough wooden box, about three feet beneath the surface. This is the child that
Wm. Snyder told me that he and George Altemus had buried, and he at the same
time acknowledged himself to be the father of it. – Pamela Myers at the time
lived with her grandmother, in the house to which the yard where the body was
found was attached. It was now occupied by Mr. Rice. The child was born on
Sunday evening, February 22nd, 1852, and was the next day washed and laid out
by Elizabeth McGuire.
Officer Seed corroborated the evidence of Mr. Clark, stating
in addition, that Pamela had told him of having had five children, two of which
choked to death. One of these she said she had thrown into the cess-pool of the
yellow house opposite the house in which she was arrested, and that it was
afterwards taken out by her uncle and other people, who buried it in the
garden. I think the body found is that of the third child she acknowledges
having; two she said had not come to their full time, and she left them in the
field.
Hannah Snyder, an aunt of the accused, testified that she
could not tell the exact time when it was born, except that it happened on a
Sunday. Pamela had been down to her mother’s, and after coming home, appeared
to be in labor. She went up stairs, and from what she saw, accused Pamela of
having given birth to a child, but she denied it.
After hunting for it, we discovered it in the cesspool
attached to the house. The attempt to get it out failed, but after night Wm. Snyder put a ladder down, and in that way it got
out. The body was placed in a wooden box that I used to bring coal in. the next
night it was buried. This was about three years since, and I believe she has
had two children since that. I saw the child; it was a girl. I saw a dent upon
the head, and supposed it was caused from striking something in falling into
the well. I understood she was taken sick once before when riding into the city
with her brother. – While he was serving some customers with milk, she went up
an alley, and on getting into the wagon again her brother drove out home with
her. Her last child was born four weeks ago last Thursday. I know this only by
hearsay, but I know that she was previously in the family way.
Geore Altemus testified that on the 22d of February, 1852,
he mistrusted there was something wrong, from seeing blood in the yard, and
two women looking about as if something had been lost. He inquired the object
of their search and was informed they supposed a child had been thrown in the
well. Witness got a rake, and raised what he supposed to be the child’s foot.
Afterwards, a ladder was brought, and in the presence of Wm. Snyder and David Kern,
the child was taken from the well. The child was taken from witness by Snyder.
The next day the witness and Snyder buried the child in the garden. The box in
which it was buried was recognized by witness. The father was said to be George
Care. Pamela is reported to have given birth to two children since 1852.
Thomas Rice testified that while digging a well on the farm
on which he now lives, he struck on a box which Wm. Snyder had told him he had
put there. Mr. Rice said he had heard of a child being born, and that it had
been buried there, but did not suppose any foul means had been used to destroy
its life. He said it was a common occurrence for poor people in the country to
bury children in the gardens or lots, to save the expense of putting them in the grave-yards. An
additional reason why he supposed no crime had been committed, was the
circumstances of an Alderman having investigated a case of supposed
infanticide, and found nothing in it. In answer to a question by a Juror,
whether he ever supposed the girl to be in a delicate situation, while in his
employ, the witness answered that he never noticed a girl in his house; he
passed them as he would a dog.
David J. Mott testified that he assisted in digging up a box
containing the remains of the child, after the spot had been pointed out by
Mrs. Snyder.
The testimony then
closed, and the jury, soon after, rendered the following verdict: --
“That box contains the remains of the body of a female
child, born on the 22nd of Feb., 1852, and who was killed by its mother, Pamela
Myers, on the day of its birth.”
[‘”The Child Murders.” from Philadelphia Ledger), The
Brooklyn Daily Eagle (N. Y.), Nov. 13, 1854, p. 2]
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For more cases of this type, see Serial Baby-Killer Moms.
For more cases of this category, see: Female Serial Killers of 19th Century America
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[1036-12/27/20]
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