Sarah-Jane and Anna Flannagan

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Sarah-Jane (born 1841) and Anna Flannagan (born 1866) were nineteenth century New Zealand murderers. Like Caroline Whitting (1872) and Phoebe Veitch (1883) before them, but unlike Minnie Dean subsequently (1895), the two women were initially sentenced to death for the killing of Anna's 'illegitimate' child and Sarah Jane's grandchild but were subsequently reprieved. In this instance, the intervention of the then-Governor-General of New Zealand William Onslow, 4th Earl of Onslow was required for mitigation of the death penalty to life imprisonment.

Trial, Verdict and Psychiatric Incarceration (1891-1894)

On January 10, 1891, the body of Anna Flannagan's illegitimate infant child was found, mutilated, after Miss Flannagan had taken her from Jane Freeman, the wet nurse that was feeding her-although Anna Flannagan had been introduced as "Mrs Stevens", Freeman knew her to be the latter.[1] It was alleged that in a moment of maternal madness, Anna Flannagan had killed the child, although she was later lucid enough to be arrested on attempting to flee to Sydney, Australia. In February 1891, Christchurch, New Zealand residents Anna Flannagan (25), her mother Sarah Jane Flannagan (50) and Sarah Jane's husband, former Constable Daniel Flannagan, were all accused of killing Anna's illegitimate child, although they claimed to have been attacked by a gang of male assailants who killed the infant and dragged Anna through the streets at the end of a rope. Daniel Flannagan was later discharged, but on February 25, 1891, Sarah-Jane and Anna Flannagan were found guilty and sentenced to death.[2] On March 13, 1891, the sentence was then commuted to life imprisonment.[3] However, in November 1892, it was reported that Anna Flannagan had become a 'hopeless lunatic' and she was taken from Lyttelton Gaol to Sunnyside Hospital, a Christchurch psychiatric institution.[4] Subsequently, it was reported that there were petitions for the release of Anna Flannagan from psychiatric care to the Minister of Justice and Governor General in 1894. Anna was subsequently released in 1895 [5] As for Sarah-Jane, she was also relocated to the Terrace Gaol, but was released after serving fifteen years imprisonment, in 1906. Daniel Flannagan was never able to rejoin the New Zealand Police thereafter, despite his earlier acquittal [6]

However, given the social stigma attached to illegitimacy during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and the leniency meted out to perceived 'spontaneous' infanticide cases born of wretched parental circumstances such as poverty, lone parenting, family violence and other contextual factors, Bronwyn Daley has suggested that capital cases of infanticide carried out by mothers were usually mitigated to life imprisonment after appeal to higher judicial authorities or, in this case, Ministers of the Crown and the Governor General of New Zealand himself [7] As William Onslow noted in his official record of the appeal for clemency in this instance, there was also widespread public aversion to use of capital punishment in New Zealand when it came to culpable women (given that Minnie Dean (1895) was the only woman executed in New Zealand criminal history until capital punishment was abolished in 1961 [8]

There are few other resources available to contemporary scrutiny, other than contemporary newspaper records of the trial, the sentence and its commutation to life imprisonment. The newspaper accounts also recorded the subsequent determination that Anna Flannagan was experiencing mental illness and needed to be admitted to Sunnyside Hospital from Lyttelton Gaol in 1892, as well as that of the appeal to William Onslow, 4th Earl of Onslow (the Governor General of New Zealand) for clemency in parliamentary official records, and a subsequent petition that requested the release of Anna Flannagan from Sunnyside in 1894. According to Bronwyn Dalley's analysis of late nineteenth and early twentieth century New Zealand infanticide cases, Anna was released from Sunnyside custody in 1895 and her mother from Terrace Gaol in 1906. Thereafter, there is no further information about the lives of Anna and Sarah Jane Flannagan after their respective releases from incarceration.

In recent assessment of the case, Alison Clarke commented that the case of the Flannagans did not attract considerable public sympathy due to the perceived brutality of the purported offence, the greater age of Sarah-Jane Flannagan (thirty-two) and that this had not been her first pregnancy. Thus, she was perceived as being in a different existential and moral context from younger single women who were perceived as being 'seduced and abandoned' by unscrupulous and negligent older men or irresponsible male contemporaries. Indeed, as the Wellington Evening Post commented, there had been widespread outrage when the original sentence of capital punishment in New Zealand had been commuted to imprisonment after Flannagan had been found guilty of murder. Clarke suggests that this may have influenced the later death penalty meted out to baby farmer Minnie Dean in 1895, who was the only woman executed in New Zealand criminal history until the abolition of capital punishment in New Zealand in 1951[9]

See also

References

  1. "Christchurch Infanticide Case" Evening Post: January 13, 1891
  2. "Christchurch Child Murder Case" Marlborough Express 26 February 1891
  3. "Christchurch Murder" Thames Star: 13 March 1891
  4. "Miscellaneous' Poverty Bay Herald: 26 February 1891
  5. "Miscellaneous" Otago Daily Times: 3 April 1894
  6. Arthur Hume, Commissioner of Police:To Minister of Justice 8 May 1905: J40: 906/99
  7. Bronwyn Dalley: "Criminal Conversations: Gender and narratives of child murder in nineteenth century New Zealand" in Caroline Dalley and Julie Montgomerie (eds) The Gendered Kiwi: Auckland: Auckland University Press: 1999
  8. Appendix to the Journal of the House of Representatives 1891: Session II: A-01
  9. Alison Clarke: Born to A Changing World: Childbirth in Nineteenth Century New Zealand: Wellington: Bridget Williams: 2012: 240

Further reading

  • Alison Clarke: Born to a Changing World: Childbirth in Nineteenth Century New Zealand: Wellington: Bridget Williams: 2012.
  • Bronwyn Dalley: "Criminal Conversations: Gender and narratives of child murder in nineteenth century New Zealand" in Caroline Dalley and Julie Montgomerie (eds) The Gendered Kiwi: Auckland: Auckland University Press: 1999.