FULL TEXT (Article 1 of 2): In the Southern Division Police Court to-day a woman named Maria Dunne, described as a widow, residing at Inchicore, was charged with causing the death of children under their care, and with having neglected others.
Mr. Clegg, the Crown solicitor, said that the prisoner would
show a shocking and barbarous state of things. – Sergeant Thomas Conlon stated
that when he visited the house between 3 and 4 p. m. on Monday he found two
children lying dead on a couch. There were four other children there, the
eldest about four years. He was not so bad as the others. One of the dead
children, Leo Mole, was merely skin and bone – there was no flesh. The child
O’Grady did not appear to be far gone. The prisoner said to him, “I hope I
won’t get into trouble over this. I will give you something for yourself if you
say nothing about it. I would not like it to get into the paper. I will give
you half-a-sovereign for yourself if you say nothing about it.” The dead
children were in the house yet awaiting the inquest. He removed the other
children. He saw no food about the house that the children should get. The
eldest of the living children in the house appeared healthy, and was not a
subject of a charge. He asked the prisoner if she had any other children
besides the dead ones in the house. She said she had two. He asked to see them,
and she brought up the two children named Wallace and Sutton. The first
appeared to be well cared for, and the other was in a bad condition and duty.
He asked had she other children. She said “No.” He searched the house, and
found near the kitchen another child, Eugene Pyle, one and a half year old. It
was tied with a string on a chair near a basket, and was hanging motionless on
the right side and apparently dead. He took it up and found it in a filthy
condition. It screamed when he tried to straighten out of the position it was in
it had the top of a sucking bottle attached to a spool in its mouth. On further
search he found in a cradle another infant, George O’Connell, not quite three
months old. It was rolled up in filthy rags, in lying on straw in the cradle.
Two empty sucking bottles were lying near. He brought these children to the
South Dublin Union. The accused alleged to him that she did not know the
parents of one of the children. She said that the child O’Connell was driven in
a cab to the door when it was about nine days old by a woman, whom she thought
would state who its mother was, and who gave her £10 to take the child. The
child was rarely three months old now. In the case of all the other children
she said that there were weekly and monthly payments were made for them, but
that they were nearly all in arrears now. He asked who were the parents. She
gave him several addresses. He went to all these places, and there were no such
people there at all. He telegraphed to Linden, where she gave another address,
and there was no such person there as she named.
A daughter of the accused woman was examined, identified the
following letter as being in the handwriting of her mother: -- “Dear James, --
This morning the other found dead. I never went to the doctor with him. Skin
and bone the child is. Will you get the cash for him? I will give £1, for I
will sell my piano for it. I am gone if you don’t. Don’t let money stop you.
Will sell anything. Two children dead.”
The witness further said that her mother had been paid 10s.
a month for two months for one of the dead children – O’Grady. The child was
there three months. It was eight months there. Her mother fed the children with
milk and cornflour. The two children were not ailing before their death, except
an odd time. One of them died in a fit. Her mother went for Dr. Louis Byrne,
High-street, and her sister for Dr. Attock, Inchicore, but both were out. The
mother took the child to Dr. Byrne.
Dr. Boyce deposed that he saw the children about 7:30 the
previous evening. Leo Mole was very emaciated in the body, face, and limbs. He
appeared to have been dead about ten hours. He attributed death to
malnutrition, which might be caused either by improper feeding or want of
feeling. The child had not been properly cared for. The other child, Henry
O’Grady, was emaciated in the limbs, and the head and body were swollen. He had
been dead for some time. He could not say the cause of death. The child was in
a neglected state.
The accused was remanded pending further inquiry.
[“Baby Farming Near Dublin. - “Shocking And Barbarous”
Neglect.” The Manchester Gaurdian (England), Ayg. 18, 1898, p. 10]
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FULL TEXT (Article 2 of 2): A
shocking ease of baby farming was investigated by a Dublin city magistrate on August 18,
when a widow named Maria Dunn was charged with having caused the death of two
children, aged 5 and 8 months respectively, by not providing them
with.necessary sustenance and with having neglected three other children of 10,
8, and 3 months respectively. The evidence given by the police witnesses showed
that the children had been found in the prisoner's house in a fearful condition
of emaciation and filth, that the prisoner tried to bribe a police sergeant not
to say anything about it, and that the addresses she gave as those of the
children’s parents were found to be false. The prisoner was remanded till
August 23, the magistrates refusing bail. After the termination of the inquiry
it was discovered by the police that in addition to the children found dead in
the prisoner's residence one of the other children brought to the South Dublin
Union Hospital had died owing to the wretched condition to which it had been
reduced. It is very rarely that so shocking a case of baby farming is found in Dublin.
[“Shocking Charge of Baby Farming.” The Telegraph
(Brisbane, Queensland, Australia), Oct. 7, 1898, p. 2]
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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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[834-1/12/21]
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