“ A many years ago
When I was young and charming
As some of you may know
I practiced baby-farming.”
--Buttercup from Gilbert and Sullivan’s HMS Pinafore, 1878
Bristol in 1850s. |
Amelia Dyer was born in 1837, during the Victorian era, in Pyle March—a tiny village just east of Bristol. She was the
youngest of five children.
Her father, Samuel Hobley was
a shoe marker, so the family had means. He paid for Amelia to go to school in a
time when only a quarter of children had this privilege.
Amelia loved literature and
wrote poems, but at an early age, her world was shaken. Her mother, Sarah
Weymouth Hobley became mentally ill after suffering from typhus fever.
Young Amelia watched her
mother’s seizures and outbursts until her death in 1848. Her slow, horrific
death had a long-lasting effect on Amelia—she was sometimes called upon to
provide care for a mother that was slowly losing her mind.
This early trauma skewed
Amelia’s emotional responses for the rest of her life.
After her mother’s death
Amelia was sent to live with an aunt and started an apprenticeship with a
corset maker, a job she did until her father’s death in 1859.
Two years later, at the age or
24, Amelia broke off all ties with her family and moved to Bristol where she
married George Thomas who at the age of 59 was 35 years her senior.
After her marriage, Amelia
trained as a nurse and midwife at Bristol Royal Infirmary. In this era, nurses
were not prepared to be caring or merciful; instead, they were expected to be
strong and “emotionless” with their patients.
Amelia was a natural.
However, when she became pregnant, she was no longer allowed to work.
Bristol Royal Infirmary |
At this time, Ellen Dane was
a boarder in Amelia’s home. Dane was a midwife who was a baby farmer on the
“shady side.” Amelia observed that it was a lucrative profession if done right.
Dane provided housing for
women who became pregnant out of wedlock—she offered them a place to
hide from societies’ eyes, which condemned them for immorality.
Baby farming. |
She would then take a
once-off fee from these women and either adopt out or kill their babies through
malnutrition. Amelia being a midwife, felt this business was ideal, despite the
risk. She thought it would be an easy way to make money.
Her husband George died in
1869 leaving her with a child to support. She made two cold decisions that
changed the course of her life forever.
Dane under suspicion by the
police fled to America and Amelia took over her business.
Amelia, like Dane, provided a
place for unwed mothers when they began to show. Once they had their babies she
then firmly took control.
She like Dane demanded an upfront, once-off fee of £5-10 to have the babies
supposedly adopted out, which cut down on the number of mothers returning
to check on their children.
She did this not for the
child’s welfare but to secure more profit.
She began to advertise her
services in newspapers.
Two advertisements Amelia placed in newspapers. |
Amelia like many baby farmers
subjected her charges to persistent underfeeding—for the fees she received
rarely paid for ongoing food. This resulted in these babies starving to death.
Godfrey's Cordial |
A common practice at the time
was to use an over the counter medicine known as Godfrey’s Cordial, also known
as Mother’s Friend. This syrup was
given to children and infants in the late 18th and early 19th
centuries as a cure-all—that helped with colic, jaundice, and diarrhea.
It also helped with excessive
crying. And hungry babies cried a lot, which made them difficult to
handle. So Amelia like other farmers used this laudanum syrup that contained harmful
opiates--to quiet the babies down.
Basically, it put them into a
dull state where they felt no hunger. Many babies died from overdoses, but most
died of starvation because this syrup was not a form of nourishment.
Coroners of the time noted in
reports these deaths were due to “debility from birth,” “lack of breast milk,”
or “starvation.”
Amelia quickly became used to
making a tidy profit.
Ironically, Amelia became
addicted to this laudanum syrup herself—which exasperated her mood swings and
put her in deep depressions even when she was not on the opiate.
The other cold decision
Amelia made at the time was to farm out her own daughter, Ellen Thomas. She didn’t
want a child in her way as she traveled around to adopt babies and to avoid
the authorities.
In Part lll of Amelia Dyer: Britain’s Baby Butcher this cold-hearted woman becomes even more prolific and the
authorities miss their first opportunity.
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