4.7 • 908 Ratings
🗓️ 19 May 2023
⏱️ 29 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Lucy Worsley investigates the historical crimes of women from a contemporary, feminist perspective.
In this episode, Lucy is joined by Dr Katherine Ramsland, a professor of forensic psychology at DeSales University, to visit Massachusetts in New England, USA and discover how one nurse became a notorious serial killer. Jane Toppan is a well-respected and successful private nurse in Cambridge, Massachusetts. She spends her time moving from one family to another, caring for them until they either recover, or pass away. In June 1901, Jane gets a visit from her friend, Mattie Davis. But upon her arrival, Mattie falls ill. Jane takes care of her until she dies a week later. After this, Jane moves into the Davis family’s house to help them cope with the loss of their mother. But soon, one by one, the other members of the family die in quick succession. Jane is onto her next job, but suspicions are soon raised about the care she’s providing. She is followed secretly by a policeman as the bodies of the Davis family are exhumed and tested for poison. Traces of morphine and atropine – substances that Jane Toppan would have had access to in her role as a private nurse – are discovered and Jane is arrested. To help Lucy explore this case, historian Dr Elizabeth DeWolfe visits Massachusetts General Hospital Archives to discover what it was like to be a nurse at the turn of the 20th century. She also visits the Boston Public Library to see how the press reacted to the murderous nurse.
Lucy and Katherine discuss Jane’s case and the impact it had on the relatively new profession of nursing. Lucy also wants to know how Jane Toppan compares to serial killers today.
We think of nurses as caring, virtuous and we trust them with our life. Jane Toppan will make you think twice.
Producer: Hannah Fisher Readers: Laurel Lefkow and Jonathan Keeble Sound Design: Chris Maclean Series Producer: Julia Hayball
A StoryHunter production for BBC Radio 4
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0:00.0 | My name is Annie Matt Manus and my name is Nick Grimshaw. How long have we known each other babe? |
0:05.1 | Probably 20 years now and in that time we've always worked in and around music right? |
0:10.6 | We have. So it kind of makes sense that we do a podcast better. |
0:13.4 | It sounds like he's been 20 years in the making. It's not a avatar for podcasts, basically, |
0:17.6 | but it is good. So we put the world to rights with regards to music. |
0:21.5 | It's all the stuff that you'd want to chat to your mate about over a pint. |
0:25.0 | Sidetracked with us Annie and Nick. |
0:27.0 | Listen on BBC Sounds. |
0:29.0 | This program has been edited since broadcast. |
0:33.0 | Welcome to Lady Killers with me Lucy Worsley. |
0:39.0 | This is where True Crime meets history with a twist on BBC Radio 4. |
0:44.0 | I was called to the Davis House being told that Mary is very sick. |
0:54.0 | She lay on her bed with her eyes partly open, barely breathing. |
0:57.5 | She did not speak and I could see but little life in her. |
1:01.0 | The next morning she was dead. |
1:02.6 | Jenny Toppen had been caring for her all that time. |
1:05.8 | Inquiries underway, investigation of deaths of Catumet family. |
1:10.2 | Autopsies are performed today on the bodies of which father, mother, and the two daughters all died between July 4th and August 13th. |
1:19.3 | Miss Jane Toppham of Cambridge, a professional nurse, is the attendant on each of the patients. |
1:25.5 | I could have worked for years longer at poisoning. |
1:28.3 | If I hadn't killed four in one family almost all at once, That was the greatest mistake of my life. |
1:37.1 | This is Lady Killers, the series where ordinary women act in extraordinary ways. |
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