FULL TEXT: The case of the woman Honora Dunn, who, at the Criminal Sittings on Thursday last, was convicted of manslaughter, and sentenced to five years’ imprisonment with hard labour for causing the death of a child placed under her charge, is suggestive of very unpleasant reflections, not simply because of the peculiar atrocity of the crime of slowly killing a helpless infant, but on account of the strong suspicion raised by the evidence that the inhuman treatment of children, inflicted with a view to bringing about their early death, has for some time past constituted this woman’s regular employment.
She was accustomed, it appears, to
receive illegitimate children – those unfortunate waifs whom no one cares to
own, and whom even the law itself regards as beings having no right to
existence — to feed them with food calculated to bring on diarrhoea, and, when
the poor little sufferers cried, to beat them most un mercifully, the object
presumably being to hasten their death.
Perhaps this baby farmer might for
years have continued this brutal trade undetected had it not so happened that
in connection with the treatment of one unfortunate child circumstances arose
somewhat differing from those usually attaching to the inmates of her fatal
nursery.
In that case the de ceased was a boy
ten or eleven months old, whom his mother entrusted to the keeping of the woman
Dunn, agreeing to pay the unusually high charge of nine shillings per week for
his maintenance, in consideration of his receiving more attention than the
other children under her charge. The mother, being really solicitous of the
health of her infant, stipulated that he should be fed with milk and nourishing
food. But it was evidently not the object of such an establishment as that
which Mrs. Dunn kept to make adequate provision for the health and comfort of
the inmates.
The customary course of treatment,
unwholesome feeding, and incessant slapping, seems in this case to have
undermined the child’s health with unusual quickness, for when the mother
called to see him after the lapse of a week from her previous visit we was
suffering severely from diarrhoea, and was already very much emaciated. His
cheeks bore the marks of cruel blows inflicted upon him by a heavy hand. He had
congestion of the lungs and of the brain. In fact, within the short space of
seven days the child had been brought almost to the point of death.
The mother then made arrangements for
the admission of her infant in to the Hospital, where he died about an hour
after his arrival. His Honor Mr. Justice Andrews, in commenting upon this case,
expressed the opinion that prisoner had been in the habit of trading upon the
indiscretion and consequent misery of young women, and of ill-using the
children placed under her charge.
He asserted without reserve that she
had actually killed the child whose death formed the subject of investigation,
and that there was ample evidence to show that she had treated other infants
horribly. The question naturally suggested itself – How many children have perished from the
effects of the cruel treatment of this inhuman nurse? Following upon that comes
the enquiry – How many of the little victims were placed under her care with
the tacit understanding that their death was a consummation devoutly to be
wished?
It is a terrible stigma upon
humanity, but it is none the less true, that such arrangements are common in
almost every civilized country in the world. When Dickens drew attention to the
existence in England of large establishments in which disowned children were
gradually starved and beaten to death, many people regarded his descriptions as
pure inventions; but investigation disclosed the melancholy fact that his
charges against society were substantially correct, and that such institutions
were in reality suffered to exist.
The ailments to which children are
subject are so numerous and so readily contracted that the business of slowly
putting the little creatures out of the way is easily conducted, and,
unfortunately for society, can be carried on for a considerable time by a
cautious and unscrupulous female without the occurrence of any case tending to
criminate her, or even to rouse a strong suspicion of her guilt. In the present
case the prosecution was the result of the woman’s indiscretion in not noticing
that the child’s mother was really anxious that it should live.
The offer to pay the unusually large sum of nine shillings per week, and the
stipulations made with regard to the suitable nourishment which the child was
to receive, indicated that the mother did not possess the amount of heartless
indifference usual with females who place their children under the tender
mercies of the baby farmer.
Had Mrs. Dunn declined the charge of
the child she might have continued with impunity her vile trade, quietly
starving to death the infants committed to her care without drawing down upon
herself the notice of tender-hearted neighbours and the interference of the
officers of justice. When we consider the terrible amount of misery inflicted
on the innocent in mates of one of these baby-farming houses, and the
comparative ease with which this horrible occupation can be carried on, it is
reasonable to enquire whether the law takes sufficient pre cautions against the
existence of the evil. It is natural to ask whether legislators, in their
anxiety to discourage immorality, have not visited the sins of the mothers too
heavily upon their unfortunate offspring.
By entirely ignoring this class of
crime the authorities have afforded facilities for its development. It is
greatly to be feared that the comparative case with which infants can be
disposed of under colour of being taken care of acts as an incentive to immorality
of the worst kind, and it follows that if steps were taken to prevent the
possibility of foul play and secure the up-bringing of the children good
service would be rendered to the community. Seeing that the system of boarding
but destitute children under proper inspection has proved so successful, it
would perhaps be a wise stop for the Legislature to forbid the boarding-out of
illegitimate children excepting in houses duly licensed and regularly inspected
by the proper authorities.
The present plan of ignoring the evil
and disregarding the facilities for its exercise, until some glaring case of
slow murder brings the offender within the grasp of the law, is in the highest degree unsatisfactory. It is a disgrace to
civilized communities that in this matter they neglect obvious methods of
mitigating an admitted evil, and in effect wink at practices which, if carried
on only in semi-barbarous countries, would raise a howl of virtuous
indignation.
[“Baby Farming.” The South Australian Register (Adelaiude, Australia),
Jun. 11, 1881, p. 4]
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For more cases of “Baby Farmers,” professional child care providers who murdered children see The Forgotten Serial Killers.
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For more cases of “Baby Farmers,” professional child care providers who murdered children see The Forgotten Serial Killers.
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[950-1/11/21]
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