Note: Cases such as this one, in which a child is the perpetrator of but one actual murder, yet shows an inclination to commit further murders, are included in our inventory, not to inflate the numbers, but because cases involving young killers are exceptionally important in understanding the phenomenon of serial killing.
Henrietta Weibel, 13 and 7 months, was accused of attempting to burn to death two babies (first the Kelly (Kinney) baby in Tarrytown, later the Franck baby at West Farms, Bronx) on two separate occasions.
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CHRONOLOGY (based on best source, NY Herald):
***
CHRONOLOGY (based on best source, NY Herald):
Henrietta
Weibel, 13 and 7 months old; arrested at 418 E. 17th St., West Farms, Bronx;
employed by Mrs. Stein, tenant at Leopold Appell Hotel. 4 Siblings. Father
deceased.
Spring,
1874 – attempted to burn a baby belonging to Mr. Kinney, of Tarrytown,
Jun.
1874 – employed by Louis Stern’s family, until Jul. 2;multiple thefts, broke windows.
Jul.
2, 1874 – threatened 3-y-o Stern boy to cut off his foot, poisoned him twice.
Jul.
4, 1874 – Mrs. Dometion; set fire to dress of Mrs. Dometion’s little girl (2), blamed girl’s brother, Rob.
Jul 29, 1874 – Set two fires at Mrs. Stein’s, risking life
of Mrs. Stein’s cousin’s baby.
Jul.
30, 1874 – Baby Frank, attempted to burn. Leopold Appell Hotel.
Jul. 31, 1874 – arrested; Thirty-fourth Police precinct, at Tremont
Aug.
11, 1874 – Court of General Sessions, The People vs. Henrietta Weibel, arson.
***
FULL TEXT (Article 1 of 4): Henrietta
Weibel, aged 15, was arrested, on a charge of attempted murder and
incendiarism, she having on Wednesday night, attempted to burn the infant child
of Mrs. Franck, a boarder at the Leopold Palace Hotel, and afterwards made two
endeavours to set fire to the house. The baby was lying asleep when the girl
set fire to the bed clothes. Another servant extinguished the flames, but the
little child was nearly suffocated. The girl confessed her guilt, and said she
had a mania for burning children and houses. It is said that last spring she
attempted to burn the baby of Mr. Kelly, of Tremont, and that she was formerly
employed by Uhling, the brick-laden coffin conspirator.
[“A Young Murderess,” The Singleton Argus and Upper Hunter
General Advocate (NSW, Australia), Sep. 30, 1874, p. 3]
***
FULL
TEXT (Article 2 of 4): Henrietta Weibel, who set the
bed on fire in a West Farms [in the Bronx, New York] hotel with the view
of
destroying Mrs. Frank’s infant, was examined on Saturday by Police
Surgeon
Loomis. She told him that she had no motive for her crime. She loved the
child
dearly. But seeing it sleeping, she thought it would be nice to see it
burn,
and instantly fired the bed. But then ran out of the room. As she closed
her
door, smoke entered the little sleeper’s lungs, and it gasped for death.
Henrietta relented, and was about to snatch the child from its danger,
but
something, she said, seemed to drive her from the spot, and half
bewildered she
ran down stairs singing. She said she would not hurt the little darling
for the
world, but that she could not control her action. Dr. Loomis believes
that
Henrietta is insane. Justice Wheeler has ordered a medical examination.
[“Henrietta Weibel, The Child Burner.” (reprinted from, New
York Sun, Aug. 3), The Evening Star (Washington, D. C.), Aug. 4, 1874, p. 1]
***
***
FULL TEXT (Article 3 of 4): The disciples of the theories of
total depravity of morbid impulse in explaining dark but purposeless crime may
either of them claim evidence in support of their pet theory in the
circumstances leading to the arrest of a young girl at No. 418 East Seventeenth
street yesterday morning. The officer who executed the summons was from the
Thirty-fourth precinct, and the charge was defined to be attempted murder, and
incendiarism. Henrietta Weibel had been a domestic at Leopold Appell’s Hotel,
West Farms, for a few days. She had not been cheerfully industrious, but until
Wednesday last she had manifested no fiendish proclivities.
On that day, however, she stealthily proceeded to a room on
the second floor, where the baby of Mrs. Frank – a boarder – was asleep in its
cot, and shortly afterwards the alarm of fire was raised, and the hurried rush
up stairs by the alarmed mother revealed the fact that the infant was enveloped
in flames. Happily it was rescued uninjured, but half suffocated with smoke,
from which, after medical assistance, it was slow to recover.
A few hours afterward smoke was discovered issuing from the
dining room closet, where the table linen was kept. And still again on the same
day some wearing apparel in a hall closet was discovered ablaze. It did no at
once occur to the proprietor that the girl was the incendiary: but on his
suspicions being aroused he sharply questioned her, and she at one and
unhesitatingly confessed to the crime. She said she couldn’t help doing it;
that whenever she saw a baby asleep she wanted to burn it. It having been
ascertained that she had six months since attempted to burn a baby belonging
to Mr. Kinney, of Tarrytown, Mr. Appell had the girl arrested.
Yesterday evening a reporter proceeded to No. 418 East
Seventeenth street, with a view of investigating, if possible, the moral
influence of the girl’s home. After some difficulty the wretched dwelling was
discovered on the second floor of a rear and rank-smelling tenement house. The
stairs that led up to it were foul; the room was comfortless, and seated on a
rickety chair was Mrs. Weibel herself – an overflowing woman as to shoulders
and waist, with large dark eyes and a sensuous lower jaw. The reporter stated
his errand, whereupon the lady, who was stitching an article of fine cambric,
became partially dissolved in tears, and spasmodically rehearsed her daughter’s antecedents, as follows:
“She was always a bad girl, was Henrietta – a very bad girl.
I have five children. I was left a widow two years since. Henrietta is thirteen years and seven months old, and
not fifteen, as the police report states. I was about to become a mother when
my husband died. I could not look after Henrietta properly, and she began to go
out at night among loose girls and stay till eleven and twelve o’clock. When I
was sewing for a baker near she was so cunning as to get all my earning before
the work was done, and when I took it I had no money to get. Oh!” cried Mrs.
Weibel, “she is a terrible bad girl, and if she has been guilty of trying to
burn a baby I hope they will punish her all they can.”
The mother furthermore stated that she had placed Henrietta
in a juvenile reformatory twelve months since, but that she ran away and
subsequently “hired herself out out” in Westchester county.
~ THE ACCUSED IN HER CELL. ~
The little girl, against whom rests such a terrible
accusation, is at present continued in the lockup of the Thirty-fourth Police
precinct, at Tremont. A Herald representative called there yesterday afternoon,
and on intimating a desire to see the juvenile prisoner was at once conducted
down stairs by the Sergeant in charge. The would-be baby cremationist was found
in a large, well-lighted cell, and as she lay coiled up, as it were, on the
board used for a bunk, with a folded blanket answering the purpose of a
pillow, her childish face and almost infantile form were sufficient to
challenge the credulity of the visitor as to the identity of the youthful
poisoner. Her facial; expression is by no means unprepossessing, and as her
large, lustrous hazel eyes looked responsive to a kind inquiry of the Sergeant,
her young face seemed to light up with a confiding smile, which it would be
difficult for one morally depraved to counterfeit. The girl, who as very neat
and tidy in appearance, does not seem to be more than twelve years old,
although, according to her own statement, she is between fourteen and fifteen.
“Henrietta,” queried the writer, “is it true that you tried
to burn a baby at West Farms?”
“Yes, sir,” was the prompt and apparently ingenious reply.
“What could have prompted you to attempt such a wicked
deed?”
“I don’t know, sir; something told me to do it.”
“Would you not have been sorry had you succeeded in killing
the child?”
“No, sir, I don’t know that I would.”
“Then you don’t seem to like babies?”
“No, sir.”
~ ANOTHER ATTEMPT AT BABY BURNING. ~
“Was that the first time you ever tried to burn a child?”
“No, sir. When I was living with Mrs. Kinney, at Tarrytown,
I had a mind to set fire to the baby, but I didn’t do it.”
“How long did you live with Mrs. Kinney?”
“I was there a month and two weeks.”
“Did Mrs. Kinney discharge you then?”
“No, sir; it was the first place I ever was in, and the work
was too hard for me; it was chamber work I had to do?”
“Are your parents living, Henrietta?”
“My father is dead, sir, but my mother is living in
Seventeenth street, New York; my father was a tailor; and mother is a
dressmaker.”
“What did you use in setting fire to the bed where the baby
was lying as West Farms?”
“Nothing but matches, sir.”
“Do you know that you are charged with a terrible crime, and
have you thought of what is going to become of you?”
At this question Henrietta appeared not to comprehend its
meaning, but after a few seconds she seemed to take in its full import, and
quickly raising herself from the recumbent position which she had maintained
until now, she bust into a flood of tears, sobbing out: “I feel so sorry; I am
such a wicked girl. I’ll never do it again. Oh! My poor mother cried so when I
left her last. She has always had a good name, and now it breaks my heart to
think that I have brought her into disgrace. I did not think of heaven or of
death, or else I wouldn’t have done it.”
“You haven’t always been a bad girl, have you?”
“No, sir: I always went to school and to Sunday school.”
“What Sabbath school did you attend?”
“On the corner of Twenty-second street and Fourth avenue, at
Dr. Crosby’s church.”
After offering a few words of consolation to the childish
heart which was convulsively apostrophizing a mother’s sympathy and love, the
writer took his departure, saddened by the excessive sobs of the youthful
prisoner.
[“A Fiendish Girl. – A Child of Thirteen with a Mania for
Baby Burning – The Mother’s Testimony – An Interview With the Youthful
Prisoner.” New York Herald (N.Y.), Aug. 1,
1874, p. 3]
***
Note: The original typographic presentation has been preserved. This article gives Henrietta's age as thirteen rather than fifteen. Only further research will help determine which might be correct.
***
Note: The original typographic presentation has been preserved. This article gives Henrietta's age as thirteen rather than fifteen. Only further research will help determine which might be correct.
FULL TEXT (Article 4 of 4): So many startling phases of
crime crop out from time to time that it seems almost impossible to keep pace
with them in any attempt at analysis. One of the most recent of the strange
cases was that of Henrietta Weibel, the baby burner. The idea of a little girl,
thirteen years of age, cherishing a passion for the burning up of babies is something
awful to dwell upon. But insanity steals into the brain of little girls as well
as into the brain of grown people, and there can scarcely be a doubt but that
Henrietta Weibel is insane.
A HERALD reporter called yesterday the store of Louis Stern,
No. 294 First avenue, to ascertain some facts about the girl. Henrietta had
been for the month previous to the 2nd of July a domestic in Louis
Stern’s family, and while she was there most signally distinguished herself. On
two different occasions she made free with the money drawer, spending the fifty
cents she appropriated in procuring a supply of candy, which she lavishly
distributed among her female acquaintances. On another occasion she actually
contrived to secure to herself, out of Mrs. Stern’s pocket, while that lady was
attending to household affairs, two ten cent stamps. Later in the day, while
with a friend in the little park opposite Dr. Tyng’s church, she pulled from
her pocket a stick of candy with a twenty-five stamp attached, and throwing it on
the ground, exclaimed, “Ain’t I lucky? Here’s not only lots of candy, but a
quarter dollar.” These little raids upon the money drawer cased Mrs. Stern to
send for
HENRIETTA’S MOTHER,
who, on arriving, sadly upbraided her erring daughter,
telling her that she had promised to stop doing those bad things. Henrietta got
mad with Mrs. Stern for sending for her mother and was resolved to have
revenge. On the 2d of July, while Mrs. Stern was bathing her baby, she was
startled by hearing the breaking of a pane of glass in the rear room. Henrietta
looked as innocent as a child and wondered what the young ruffians outside were
trying to do. Mrs. Stern again applied herself to the baby, but suddenly
another pane went into the fritters with a loud crash, and immediately after
three different panes were knocked into pieces. Mrs. Stern now went to the rear
of the house and closed the shutters, and Mr. Stern journeyed up to an
adjoining roof to see where were concealed the rascally boys that were breaking
his window. The shutters being closed, Mrs. Stern occupied herself once more
with the baby, but was very shocked with a series of bangs against the window
panes, which terribly alarmed her. She then went into the street, and, being
joined by a detective and two officers, the rooms were examined, after which
the officers went out to the yard to reconnoitre. No sooner had they got
outside than again the glass in the window went
FLYING IN ALL DIRECTIONS
Attracting the attention of the neighbors in the adjoining
houses, and thus gathering a crowd in the street. No one was now in the back room but Henrietta, and it was not long before
a tad of sweetmeats that was on the mantelpiece went spinning on the floor and
the glass or a picture hanging on the wall was cracked though not entirely
broken. The police gave it up as a bad job, and questioned Henrietta as to her
knowledge of the extraordinary occurrence; but the girl stoutly denied all
knowledge how the thing was done, saying that she suspected it mast have been
them bad boys or a ghost. She was dismissed from Mr. Stern’s house that
evening, however, and she admitted to a friend of hers in Seventeenth street
that she had had a jolly lark at Stern’s; she said she had a lot of bits of
brick concealed up her sleeves, with which she scared the wits out of the whole
of them. Mrs. Stern says that on one occasion Henrietta told her that a quilt
been stolen from a clothes line in the yard but that next day a neighbor found
it in the cellar of the house. The quilt was not yet quite dry and Mrs. Stern
pat it out on the line again. About half an hour after Henrietta again told
Mrs. Stern that the quilt had a second time mysteriously disappeared and that
it was the strangest thing she had ever known. Mr. Stern descended to the
cellar, and after a short exploration by the aid of a few matches that
discovered the quilt in a corner and took it away with him. Henrietta looked as
unconcerned as she had herself put it there. The Sterns have, beside the baby,
A LITTLE BOY ABOUT THREE YEARS OLD,
who was always in the habit or steeping with
the girl in charge or the children. The little fellow after the first night be
slept with Henrietta most positively objected to sleeping in the bed with her
again and began to complain constantly of a pain in his foot. The parents
treated this lightly, made him sleep with the girl for some time afterwards,
but his father had frequently to carry him in the middle of the night, the
crying with the pain in his foot. It seems that Henrietta had frightened the
little fellow by threatening that she should surely cut his foot off. The day
Henrietta was discharged Mrs. Stern’s baby got quite sick and the doctor had to
be consulted to relieve it, and the following day the little boy got sick and
had also to receive medical assistance. Mr. and Mrs. Stern rejoice to think
that they got rid of this insane little girl, even at the expense of fifteen
panes of glass, the loss of a jar of sweetmeats and the breaking of the glass
in a picture frame.
But Henrietta took an this very quietly, and
went home to her mother’s without shedding a single tear. In the rooms
adjoining her mother’s, at No. 418 East Seventeenth street, dwell Mr. and Mrs.
Dometion and their five little children. Mrs. Dometion is the housekeeper for
the tenement house, and has been very much offended that the HERALD should have
stated, a few days since, that the tenement house is not quite what it ought to
be. The place is cleanly enough; but there it as doubt but that the air which
one has to breathe in ascending the stairs to the top floor is not that of a
pretty garden, where the perfume of the flowers gladdens the sense of smell.
Anyhow, Mrs. Dometion had her quota to add to the story of
MISS HENRIETTA’S QUEER DOINGS.
Henrietta stayed round about the house all
day on the Fourth of July, looking out of the window at the boys throwing the
firecrackers, and amusing herself by pinching the children, perhaps, to make
them cry. Mrs. Stern swears Henrietta used to pinch the boy. In the afternoon
Henrietta took Mrs. Dometion’s little girl, about two years old, and her own
little sister, into her mother’s room, and having got them in she deliberately
lit a few matches and set fire to the dress of Mrs. Dometion’s little girl.
Henrietta’s little sister began screaming, and Henrietta herself went to the
head of the stairs and began calling for Rob, her own little brother, who at
the time was playing in the yard. Mrs. Dometion hearing the children’s screams
at once rushed into the Weibel’s rooms and began screaming, too, when she saw
her.
CHILD ENVELOPED IN FLAMES.
With a mother’s bravery the folded the child
in her own dress and rolled her on the floor until the flames were extinguished
and saved the child. She showed the reporter the charred dress yesterday, and
among other thanksgivings which she uttered she was glad she had sweet oil in
the house to ease the pains of the burnt child. But Henrietta looked on, Mrs.
Dometion says, with annulled visage, and when asked about the matter quietly
said that “it was Rob who did it.” Henrietta’s little sister, however, who was
an eyewitness of the lighting of the matches and that setting fire to the dress,
told the whole truth. The whole truth did not disconcert Miss Henrietta in the
very slightest degree. Yesterday Mrs. Weibel went to Tremont Jail to see
Henrietta, start clinging to the unfortunate maniac. There as another daughter
younger than Henrietta, about whom all concur in saying that she has already
shown
SIGNS OF INSANITY.
This series of acts of Henrietta, with the
circumstances attending them, point conclusively to the deduction that she is
insane. No human being at her age could possibly be so callous to the enormity
of the crimes she was perpetrating or trying to perpetrate and be in her right
senses. But never, on any occasion, as all those who know testify, showed the
slightest feeling after the discovery of her strange doings. Mrs. Sterns says
that as a servant she was willing and ready very and cleanly. The story of her
doings when left her home, after the occurrences above narrated, has been
already published.
[“The Baby Burner. – The Heartless Domestic, Henrietta
Weibel. – A Strange Story of Precocious Iniquity. – An Attempt to Burn Her Next
Door Neighbor’s Child.” New York Herald (N.Y.), Aug. 5, 1874, p. 4]
***
More cases: Serial Killer Girls
More cases: Youthful Borgias: Girls Who Commit Murder
***
MORE: Female Serial Killers & Arson
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[1180-1/20/19; 1464-1/11/21]
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