toppan
@Serial Killers, Birthday and Personal Life
toppan
Jane Toppan born at
Jane Toppan was born Honora Kelly on August 17, 1854 in Boston, Massachusetts to a lower middle class family. Although the accounts of her early life are largely hazy, it has been reported that her mother Bridget Kelley died when Jane was still an infant. The records say that she passed away due to tuberculosis, which was apparently untreatable at that time. Jane’s parents were Irish immigrants and her father worked as a small time tailor. She grew up with three other sisters in the household.
Following the death of her mother, her father Peter Kelley turned insane. Slowly, he grew notorious around his locality and got known as ‘Kelley the Crack’. He heavily indulged into alcohol and made the life of all his daughters hellish. One of the most popular accounts of his insanity states that he once tried to sew his own eyelids. Peter somehow had enough sense to know that he was a very bad influence on his children and hence he took two of his youngest children, Jane and Delia to the Boston Female Asylum.
However, the authorities had another story to tell about her entrance to the asylum. Official accounts state that the sisters were rescued by them from an abusive, alcoholic and eccentric father. During their stay in the asylum, it was reported that Jane’s older sister Delia started working as a prostitute. Jane somehow managed to get a job at a local house as a house-servant. She was a little older than 9 at that time.
Ann C. Toppan, the owner of the house never officially adopted Jane but she brought her up as her own daughter more or less. Jane also adopted the last name of her benefactors, Toppan and formed a close bond with Ann’s daughter Elizabeth. They both went to school together and lived in the same house, almost like sisters.
During the senior year of her high school, she got attracted to a man and started a relationship. But it did not work out and she received the shock of a lifetime when she was left at the altar by the man. This led Jane to become a depressed young woman. Several other failed relationships had her believing that she was not worthy of love by men, which became the genesis of her weird sexual behaviour later in her life.
In 1885, she started her training as a nurse in the Cambridge Hospital, where she was loved by her patients and co-workers. Due to her loving nature, she earned for herself the nickname Jolly Jane. But what went under the curtains remained unknown for many years. Jane used some of the most critical patients as her guinea pigs for experimentations. She gave them morphine in higher doses than normal and when they became unconscious, she lied in the bed with them.
Whether she had sexual relations with her patients or not it is not known but she did admit that she got a sexual satisfaction lying in the bed with men who were about to die. She spent quite a lot of alone time with her patients and cared for them when other people were around. This kept her in the good books of her co-workers and her bosses. And due to that, she was transferred to Massachusetts General Hospital in 1889.
But in a hospital as big as MGH, she could not sustain her experimentations and weird behaviour for long time. She was fired within a year and following that, she tried moving back to Cambridge hospital for a small period of time. She got her old job back somehow but her bad record with MGH put her under heavy scrutiny without her knowledge. That resulted in her getting fired from the hospital after a few months when she was caught red-handed overdosing a patient.
Soon after getting fired from Cambridge, Jane started working as a private nurse and with a decent experience with her, her career flourished. In the early stages of her new professional venture, she got booked quite a few times for her indulgence in petty thefts but all the charges on her were discarded.
As she started working, her instincts became more and more gruesome. In 1895, she claimed her first victim in form of her landlord Israel Dunham and his wife. She committed the murder by poisoning the couple when they were giving her troubles. She took a two years gap between her second and third killing and her third victim’s identity was rather shocking.
She poisoned Elizabeth Brigham, her foster sister. Elizabeth was married at that time with a man and it was later reported that Jane was jealous of Elizabeth and was in love with her husband. After Elizabeth’s death, she tried to seduce her husband but failed. This shows that sexual frustration played a major role in her crooked mental health.
In 1899, she killed one of her elderly patients Mary McNear by poisoning her and what followed was a trail of gruesome murders. By 1900, her poisoning spree had taken 30 lives and she planned the murders in such deliberate way that it was difficult for the authorities to nab the murderer. But like every other criminal, she did make mistakes and she made it in August 1901.