Minnie Dean, the Scottish baby farmer
In New Zealand 's name is synonymous with cruelty, yet the Greenock-born woman is relatively unknown in Scotland. We look at the life of Minnie the "baby farmer" and reveal why, over one hundred years later, the process of restoring her reputation is now underway.
Emigration
Williamina (Minnie) McCulloch was born in Greenock in 1844, but by 1862 had emigrated to New Zealand to live with an aunt, one of the original settlers in the Otago area. She arrived with one young daughter and pregnant with her second. Minnie became a teacher in the Southland region and married publican-turned-farmer Charles Dean in 1873.
Over the ensuing years their life in Southland was extremely difficult: business ventures were unsuccessful and, suffering from what was probably post-natal depression, Minnie's daughter Ellen drowned herself and her two children in their home well. Charles was declared bankrupt in 1884.
Baby farming
Charles and Minnie moved to a two bedroomed cottage named The Larches in the town of Winton. He became a labourer while she set herself up as a ''; a practice relatively common in Victorian times where a person would look after unwanted, illegitimate children in return for a one-off or monthly payment.
Over the course of two years two young babies died of natural causes while under Minnie's care and a subsequent inquest found that The Larches was not suitable accommodation for children, albeit that they were well cared for. With the authorities now keeping an eye on her activities, Minnie became guarded of her work, advertising her services under false names. When another child in her care died, again of natural causes, she discreetly buried him in her garden.
Minnie's downfall
Martin McCrae from Stirling discovered his connection to Minnie while investigating his family history; she was his great grandmother's sister. He has since researched Minnie's story, and here explains the pattern of events that lead to her arrest:
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Minnie was charged with the murder of one of the children, baby Dorothy Carter, and put on trial in Invercargill in June 1895.
Over the years many myths and stories have evolved about Minnie's life. New Zealand author was keen to separate the fact from fiction when she researched her tale prior to writing the biography, Minnie Dean: Her Life and Crimes, published in 1994. As she explains here, it seems that Minnie's intentions were good.
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Guilty
Minnie Dean protested her innocence but was found guilty of Dorothy Carter's murder and sentenced to death. She was hanged in Invercargill on the 12th August 1895 and buried in an unmarked grave in Winton.
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In the years since her execution, folklore has kept Minnie's name alive in the Southland area. Her reputation is akin to the Bogeyman's, with parents warning disobedient children that if they didn't behave Minnie Dean would come for them. Through her research Lynley Hood aimed to find out where the truth lay:
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Restoring Minnie's reputation
After learning of Minnie's life and death Martin McCrae planned to erect a headstone at Minnie's grave, where her husband Charles is also buried. To do this he required the local authority's permission; the process took some time and in the meantime - perhaps in a bid to stall the ceremony - was found to have been laid at the grave. The inscription read: Minnie Dean is part of Winton's history/Where she now lies is now no mystery. It is still unknown who was responsible.
The stone was removed to another part of the cemetery, allowing Martin's stone to be installed. In February 2009 the during a traditional Maori ceremony, the Hura Kohatu. It brought together many people involved in Minnie's story including relatives of the children she cared for, her own descendents and locals from Winton.
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New Zealand abolished the death penalty in 1961 and as such Minnie Dean remains the only woman ever to have been executed in the country.
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