Jane Toppan (1854 - 1938), born
Honora
Kelley, was an American
serial
killer and female
lust murderer. She
confessed to 31 murders in 1901. She is quoted as saying that her
ambition was "to have killed more people — helpless people — than
any other man or woman who ever lived...".
Early life
She was
raised in Lowell
, Massachusetts
, in a poor family with a history of mental illness. In 1863, her father
turned her and her sister over to a Boston
orphanage where they would be given to other
families as indentured
servants. She was soon taken in by Ann Toppan, who,
while never formally adopting her, gave the child her last name.
Over the years, she grew to bitterly resent both her foster mother,
who was
abusive, and her foster sister
Elizabeth, the darling of the family. She nevertheless continued to
live with them long after she was officially released from service
in 1874.
Murders
In 1885,
Toppan began training to be a nurse at Cambridge
Hospital
. During her residency, she used her patients
as guinea pigs in experiments with
morphine
and
atropine; she would alter their
prescribed dosages to see what it did to their
nervous systems. Yet she’d spend a lot of
time alone with those patients, making up fake charts and
medicating them to drift in and out of consciousness and even get
into bed with them. It is not known whether any sexual activity
went on when her victims were in this stage but when Jane Toppan
was asked after her arrest, she answered that she derived a
sexual thrill from patients being near
death, coming back to life and then dying again. Toppan would
administer a drug mixture to patients she chose as her victims, lie
in bed with them and
hold them close to her
body as they died. This is quite rare for female serial killers
who usually murder for financial gain and not sexual thrills.
She was
nevertheless recommended for the prestigious Massachusetts
General Hospital
in 1889; there, she claimed several more victims
before being fired the following year. She briefly returned
to Cambridge, but was soon dismissed for prescribing
opiates recklessly. She then began a career as a
private nurse, which flourished despite complaints of petty
theft.
She began her poisoning spree in earnest in 1895 by killing her
landlords. In 1899, she killed her foster sister Elizabeth with a
dose of
strychnine.
In 1901, Toppan moved in with the elderly Alden Davis and his
family in Cataumet to take care of him after the death of his wife
(whom Toppan herself had murdered). Within weeks, she killed Davis
and two of his daughters. She then moved back to her hometown and
began courting her late foster sister's husband, killing his sister
and poisoning him so she could prove herself by nursing him back to
health. She even poisoned herself to evoke his sympathy. The ruse
didn't work, however, and he cast her out of his house.
By this time, the surviving members of the Davis family ordered a
toxicology exam on Alden Davis' youngest
daughter. The report found that she had been poisoned, and local
authorities put a police detail on Toppan. On
October 26,
1901, she was
arrested for murder.
By 1902, she had confessed to 11 murders.
On June 23, in the Barnstable County Courthouse, she
was found not guilty by reason of
insanity and committed for life in the Taunton Insane
Hospital
.
Soon after the trial, one of
William Randolph Hearst's
newspapers, the
New York
Journal, printed what was purported to be Toppan's
confession to her lawyer that she had killed more than 31 people,
and that she wanted the jury to find her insane so she could
eventually have a chance at being released. Whether or not that was
truly Toppan's intention is unknown, but she nevertheless remained
at Taunton for the rest of her life.
Fictional portrayals
Toppan is widely believed to have been the inspiration for "the
Incomparable Bessie Denker", a character in
William March's novel the
The Bad Seed, which
Maxwell Anderson would turn into a
successful play and movie. Like Toppan, Denker was a serial
poisoner who began killing at a young age.
In the independent film
American Nightmare, written and
directed by John Keyes,
Debbie Rochon
portrays a multiple murderer named "Jane Toppan" who manages to
kill numerous characters throughout the course of the film via
various means. Her character is also employed as a nurse, as
mentioned at the beginning of the film. This character was inspired
by the real Jane Toppan, but her methodology of murder differs
completely and the film is not meant as a biography.
References
Sources
- Lane, Brian and Gregg, Wilfred - The Encyclopedia of Serial
Killers (1995)