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The baby farmers : a chilling tale of missing babies, shameful secrets and murder in 19th century Australia / Annie Cossins.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Crows Nest, NSW Allen & Unwin, 2013Copyright date: ©2013Description: ix, 293 pages, 12 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, portraits ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781743314012 (paperback)
Subject(s): Summary: In October 1892, a one-month-old baby boy was found buried in the backyard of Sarah and John Makin, two wretchedly poor baby farmers in inner Sydney. In the weeks that followed, 12 more babies were found buried in the backyards of other houses in which the Makins had lived. This resulted in the most infamous trial in Australian legal history, and exposed a shocking underworld of desperate mothers, drugged and starving babies, and a black market in the sale and murder of children. Annie Cossins pieces together a dramatic and tragic tale with larger-than-life characters: theatrical Sarah Makin, her smooth-talking husband John, her disloyal daughter, Clarice, diligent Constable James Joyce with curious domestic arrangements of his own, and a network of baby farmers stretching across the city. It's a glimpse into a society that preferred to turn a blind eye to the fate of its most vulnerable members, only a century ago.
Fiction notes: Click to open in new window
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Non-Fiction Davis (Central) Library Non-Fiction Non-Fiction 364.1523 COS 1 Available T00543356
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

The most common murder victim in 19th century Australia was a baby, and the most common perpetrator was a woman. Annie Cossins pieces together the fascinating story of the most infamous legal trial in Australia to reveal an underworld of struggling mothers, unwanted babies, and a society that preferred to turn a blind eye.

In October 1892, a one-month-old baby boy was found buried in the backyard of Sarah and John Makin, two wretchedly poor baby farmers in inner Sydney. In the weeks that followed, 12 more babies were found buried in the backyards of other houses in which the Makins had lived. This resulted in the most infamous trial in Australian legal history, and exposed a shocking underworld of desperate mothers, drugged and starving babies, and a black market in the sale and murder of children. Annie Cossins pieces together a dramatic and tragic tale with larger-than-life characters: theatrical Sarah Makin, her smooth-talking husband John, her disloyal daughter, Clarice, diligent Constable James Joyce with curious domestic arrangements of his own, and a network of baby farmers stretching across the city. It's a glimpse into a society that preferred to turn a blind eye to the fate of its most vulnerable members, only a century ago.

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Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

As in the very best true crime, criminologist Cossins uses the murders she recounts as a way of exposing an aspect of society that has been hidden. The horrific attitude toward infants in late-19th-century Australia is brought to light through the story of John and Sarah Makin, baby farmers in Sydney (in the Victorian era, children born out of wedlock were often given to professionals, who raised them-at a price). Their story reveals a larger societal problem-infanticide was so rampant at the time that the newspapers actually ran tallies of the numbers of dead babies found in a week. Against this background, Cossins, who was inspired to write the book after portraying Sarah Makin on an episode of the TV docu-drama series Deadly Women, gives a gripping account of the investigation and prosecution of the Makins after 13 corpses of babies were unearthed in 1892 in the backyards of homes where the Makins had lived. The book's power stems from its devastating details; Cossins establishes a tone so vivid it's reminiscent of Dickens. Photos. (Aug.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

Booklist Review

In nineteenth-century Australia, shiploads of convicts, hopefuls, and the poor were offloaded to scramble up what livings they could find. For the women and girls, this often meant prostitution; hence, pregnancies and babies brought not joy but often financial ruin on one side and moral ruination on the other. The horrific practice of baby farming arose to help. Mothers discreetly advertised to pay for someone to adopt their babies. Those who adopted them (and pocketed the cash) often kept the babies quiet with Godfrey's Cordial (primarily opiates) until they starved to death, died of other common ailments, or were otherwise dispatched and quietly buried. Cossins focuses here on baby farmers who were caught and punished, Sarah and John Makin, but her approach to this shameful practice makes reading about it not only bearable but also fascinating. She provides a history of the era, trial transcripts and newspaper excerpts, and many learned musings on the laws at the time and how the Makins' trial was skewed by errors and mostly the need to punish someone for a practice that was not only common but continued after the trial.--Kinney, Eloise Copyright 2010 Booklist

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