0:03 [SPEAKER_00]: a wooden farmhouse, a new Boston Road, the northern edge of Fall River Massachusetts, not the fall river of cotton mills and crowded tenement blocks, but the fall river of open pasture, dirt roads, and long silences between neighbors. 0:23 [SPEAKER_00]: It is the last day of May, 1893. 0:27 [SPEAKER_00]: Birth a Manchester is alone. 0:30 [SPEAKER_00]: She is 22 years old. 0:33 [SPEAKER_00]: Her father Stephen left early with the milk wagon. 0:37 [SPEAKER_00]: 12-year-old Freddie beside him. 0:40 [SPEAKER_00]: The farmhand, John Tonsol, Steating the Horse Dairy deliveries, downtown Aaron's to run The routine of a working farm Birth estate behind to keep the house running Stoking the stove, sweeping the floors The quiet work of a morning When nobody else is home And the nearest neighbor As a long walk away 1:10 [SPEAKER_00]: Six days from now, the most famous murder trial in American history will open in a courthouse 30 miles north. 1:19 [SPEAKER_00]: Lizzy Borden will stand before a jury, accused of killing her father and stepmother, with a hatchet on second street. 1:28 [SPEAKER_00]: Every reporter in the country will be there. 1:32 [SPEAKER_00]: The whole nation will watch. 1:35 [SPEAKER_00]: Nobody will look back at this farmhouse 1:40 [SPEAKER_00]: When Stephen and Freddie returned to that afternoon, they will find Bertha on the kitchen floor. 1:47 [SPEAKER_00]: 23 acts wounds to the back of her skull, defensive cuts on her hands and arms, her clothing torn from the struggle. 2:00 [SPEAKER_00]: She fought her killer. 2:02 [SPEAKER_00]: She fought him with everything she had. 2:11 [SPEAKER_00]: The same medical examiner who autopsyed Andrew and Abbey Borden, the same doctor and the same city with the same kind of weapon, walked into this farmhouse kitchen and performed the same work he had done 10 months before. 2:30 [SPEAKER_00]: Same city, same weapon, same doctor, different victim. 2:40 [SPEAKER_00]: one who disappeared into someone else's story. 2:47 [SPEAKER_00]: Hello friend, welcome to Fowl Play. 2:50 [SPEAKER_00]: I'm Shane Waters. 2:52 [SPEAKER_00]: This is season 40, 50 states, 50 forgotten crimes, for America's 250th anniversary. 3:03 [SPEAKER_00]: And this is episode 7, Massachusetts 3:09 [SPEAKER_00]: Two states, two ax murders, four years apart. 3:16 [SPEAKER_00]: One was solved. 3:18 [SPEAKER_00]: Badly, through a guilty plea, extracted from a teenager who had been in America for a month, and spoke no English. 3:28 [SPEAKER_00]: One was never solved at all. 3:36 [SPEAKER_00]: a farmhouse burned to nothing, a hundred and twenty-eight years of silence. 3:45 [SPEAKER_00]: The weapon is the axe. 3:48 [SPEAKER_00]: It needed no ammunition, no training, no money, just a blade on a handle. 3:55 [SPEAKER_00]: Every farm in 1890s America had one leaning against the wood pile. 4:02 [SPEAKER_00]: We began in Fall River, on a dairy farm at the edge of the city, with a young woman named Bertha. 4:13 [SPEAKER_00]: Bertha Mabel Manchester was born May 7, 1871, in Fall River. 4:21 [SPEAKER_00]: Her mother, Anna Davis, died when Bertha was young. 4:26 [SPEAKER_00]: Her father Stephen remarried a woman named Mary Jane Whittle, 4:31 [SPEAKER_00]: by the spring of 1893, birth that was 22, unmarried, living at home, not unusual for the time. 4:42 [SPEAKER_00]: She was the person who kept the Manchester Farm running from the inside, while Stephen and Freddie handled the milk route, and the commercial end of the operation, 4:54 [SPEAKER_00]: The mornings are new Boston Road, must have been the same every day. 4:59 [SPEAKER_00]: The wagon loaded before dawn, Stephen checking the harness, Freddie climbing a board, 12 years old, and already a working member of the household, taunts all studying the horse, in birth in the doorway, the farmhouse at her back. 5:22 [SPEAKER_00]: the day laid out in front of her, chores, solitude, the kind of quiet that only exists on a working farm when everyone else is gone. 5:34 [SPEAKER_00]: The manchester's fall river was a different city than the one most people pictured. 5:41 [SPEAKER_00]: Not the granite-fronted cotton mills, lining the quickwitch on river, not the crowded Portuguese neighborhoods below the hill. 5:51 [SPEAKER_00]: Bertha's fall river was fences and pastures, a dairy operation at the rural edge of a city of 80,000 people. 6:00 [SPEAKER_00]: That was in the spring of 1893, consumed by a single obsession, the boredom trial. 6:11 [SPEAKER_00]: May 31, 1893. 6:14 [SPEAKER_00]: Stephen Freddy and Tonsol, leave with the milk wagon. 6:20 [SPEAKER_00]: Bertha is alone. 6:23 [SPEAKER_00]: At some point during the morning, a man arrives at the farm. 6:28 [SPEAKER_00]: His name is Jose Correa de Mayo. 6:32 [SPEAKER_00]: He is approximately 19 years old, 6:35 [SPEAKER_00]: He arrived in the United States from Aheefesh, a village on the island of Sone Megal, in the Azoras, barely one month earlier, April of 1893. 6:51 [SPEAKER_00]: He speaks, knowingly. 6:53 [SPEAKER_00]: He has worked on the Manchester Farm as a day laborer in the weeks since his arrival, a pattern of a day or two of labor, followed by disappearance. 7:06 [SPEAKER_00]: According to Demalos later account, given through an interpreter, he came to the farm looking for money. 7:13 [SPEAKER_00]: He believed Stephen owed him. 7:16 [SPEAKER_00]: He found Stephen, gone, he found Bertha, alone. 7:23 [SPEAKER_00]: What happened next, one-e-three distinct axe blows to the back of Bertha's skull, force enough to knock out five of her teeth, defensive wounds on her hands and arms, 7:42 [SPEAKER_00]: birth a Manchester fought back. 7:45 [SPEAKER_00]: That is the detail the record preserves and that most retellings skip over. 7:53 [SPEAKER_00]: The axe was found by the wood pile outside the house. 7:57 [SPEAKER_00]: Birth is watch and a small purse were missing. 8:01 [SPEAKER_00]: Inside that purse were two distinct of coins, a trade dollar and a plugged half dollar are coin with a hole drilled through it. 8:13 [SPEAKER_00]: Those coins would become the evidence that sealed the mail-o's fate. 8:23 [SPEAKER_00]: They found their daughter and sister on the kitchen floor, near the stove, and a pool of blood. 8:31 [SPEAKER_00]: Within hours, fall river police had a suspect. 8:35 [SPEAKER_00]: Within days, they had him in custody. 8:40 [SPEAKER_00]: But how they got there is a story that says so much about 1890s America, as the murder itself. 8:50 [SPEAKER_00]: suspicion fell on Jose Carrero, that was how the newspaper spelled it, almost immediately. 8:58 [SPEAKER_00]: A Portuguese laborer, known to have worked on the Manchester Farm, his pattern of brief employment and disappearance made him suspicious in a community that kept close watch on newcomers. 9:13 [SPEAKER_00]: The arrest was engineered through deception. 9:17 [SPEAKER_00]: To understand how it happened, you need to understand who delivered him. 9:23 [SPEAKER_00]: Police contacted Demelo's uncle, a leader in the fall river Portuguese American community. 9:30 [SPEAKER_00]: The uncle was persuaded, or pressured, to tell his nephew that he was needed at the police station, not as a suspect, as a witness to a horse theft. 9:43 [SPEAKER_00]: Demelo went voluntarily. 9:46 [SPEAKER_00]: He walked into that police station, trusting his uncle's word. 9:51 [SPEAKER_00]: Whether the uncle believed his nephew was guilty, or whether he simply could not resist the weight of the Angelo police bearing down on his community, the sources do not say. 10:03 [SPEAKER_00]: What the record does say is that a man respected in that community, delivered his own nephew 10:12 [SPEAKER_00]: in Demelo did not walk out for 21 years. 10:18 [SPEAKER_00]: At the station, a four-hour interrogation conducted entirely through an interpreter. 10:25 [SPEAKER_00]: Demelo, 19 years old, one month in America, had no idea why he was there until they told him. 10:35 [SPEAKER_00]: The evidence against him came down to the coins, a shoe store owner, testified that the mail-o had come in after the murder, to buy new shoes, and attempted to pay with a trade dollar, and a plugged half-dollar. 10:52 [SPEAKER_00]: The same distinctive coins, known to have been in birth of stolen purse. 10:58 [SPEAKER_00]: The person itself was never recovered, but the coins were specific enough that they had amounted to a signature. 11:07 [SPEAKER_00]: DeMailo's defense relayed through an interpreter, he came to the farm for money owed, Bertha attacked him, he acted in self-defense, 23 wounds the back of her skull, made that claim impossible, attacks from behind are not self-defense, 11:31 [SPEAKER_00]: He could not afford a lawyer. 11:34 [SPEAKER_00]: Court appointed attorney was not assigned until September of 1893. 11:39 [SPEAKER_00]: Three months after his arrest. 11:42 [SPEAKER_00]: For three months, a teenager who spoke no English sat in a fall-rever jail with no legal representation. 11:51 [SPEAKER_00]: On September 18th, 1893, Demelo changed his plea to guilty of second-degree murder. 12:00 [SPEAKER_00]: Whether this was a genuine confession or a calculated surrender, a frightened immigrant who had been told the system would bury him, either way, the record does not reveal. 12:12 [SPEAKER_00]: On January 8th, 1894, Jose Damello was sentenced to life in prison at Hard Labor. 12:22 [SPEAKER_00]: Six days after birth a died, the boarden trial had opened. 12:27 [SPEAKER_00]: Every reporter in America turned north to new bedford. 12:33 [SPEAKER_00]: The parallels between the two cases, same city, same weapon, same medical examiner, Dr. William Dolan, briefly raised a question, could there be an unknown axe killer, stalking fall river? 12:50 [SPEAKER_00]: But Demelo was already in custody by the time the boarden jury was seated. 13:04 [SPEAKER_00]: the connection was coincidence. 13:06 [SPEAKER_00]: Nothing more. 13:09 [SPEAKER_00]: Lizzy Borden was acquitted on June 20, 1893 after 90 minutes of deliberation. 13:17 [SPEAKER_00]: Birth of Manchester's case was already old news. 13:22 [SPEAKER_00]: Demelo was convicted, sentenced, and locked away, but his story did not end inside that cell. 13:30 [SPEAKER_00]: And what happened 21 years later reveals as much about the system that convicted him, as the murder that put him there. 13:41 [SPEAKER_00]: 21 years. 13:43 [SPEAKER_00]: Jose Correa de Mayo, entered a Massachusetts prison at approximately 19 years old. 13:50 [SPEAKER_00]: He left at 40. 13:53 [SPEAKER_00]: His release on January 31, 1914 came through sustained petitions and advocacy from the Portuguese-American community of fall-rever. 14:06 [SPEAKER_00]: The same community whose leader had delivered Daymelo to the police under false pretenses. 14:13 [SPEAKER_00]: Now spent two decades fighting for his freedom. 14:18 [SPEAKER_00]: That persistence tells you something. 14:21 [SPEAKER_00]: that at least some of the people who knew this case, harbored doubts about the fairness of the conviction, or, at a minimum, believed that 21 years was enough for what a desperate isolated young immigrant had done in a country he did not yet understand. 14:43 [SPEAKER_00]: Upon release, Demello was immediately deported to the Azores, with a condition that he never returned to the United States. 14:53 [SPEAKER_00]: He did not go home, he went to exile. 14:58 [SPEAKER_00]: The Azores he returned to, or not the Azores he had left. 15:03 [SPEAKER_00]: He had been a teenager when he boarded a ship for America, chasing whatever promise had pulled millions of others across the Atlantic. 15:14 [SPEAKER_00]: He came back at 40, having spent his entire American life inside a prison cell. 15:21 [SPEAKER_00]: After the deportation, Jose Correa de Melo disappears from the historic record. 15:29 [SPEAKER_00]: What became of him in the Azuras, whether he found family, or work, or anything that looked like a life? 15:37 [SPEAKER_00]: Nobody knows. 15:40 [SPEAKER_00]: Birth a Manchester was buried at Oak Grove Cemetery in Fall River, alongside her father Stephen, her mother Hannah, and her stepmother, Mary Jane. 15:53 [SPEAKER_00]: For over a century, she was a footnote. 15:57 [SPEAKER_00]: The other fall river acts murder. 16:01 [SPEAKER_00]: A curiosity mentioned only when someone wrote about Lizzy Borden. 16:06 [SPEAKER_00]: In 2023, historian William D. Spencer published the other fall river tragedy, the murder of birth a Manchester, through the fall river historical society. 16:20 [SPEAKER_00]: The first full length account of Bertha's case, written as her own story. 16:27 [SPEAKER_00]: Not a sidebar, and someone else's. 16:30 [SPEAKER_00]: It took 130 years for someone to write Bertha Manchester's name at the top of a page, instead I've at the bottom. 16:41 [SPEAKER_00]: I'll be honest, the question that stays with me is not weather, Demelo killed Bertha. 16:48 [SPEAKER_00]: The evidence pointed at him, and it pointed consistently. 16:53 [SPEAKER_00]: The question is whether anything resembling justice was possible in a system where the accused spoke, no English, had no money, and had been in the country for a month. 17:09 [SPEAKER_00]: and set in a cell for three months before anyone assigned him a lawyer. 17:16 [SPEAKER_00]: He couldn't know the language. 17:19 [SPEAKER_00]: He couldn't know the law. 17:21 [SPEAKER_00]: He couldn't know that the uncle he trusted had just handed him to the people who would lock him away for 21 years. 17:36 [SPEAKER_00]: birth a Manchester fought back. 17:39 [SPEAKER_00]: She had defensive wounds on her hands and arms. 17:43 [SPEAKER_00]: Her clothing was torn. 17:46 [SPEAKER_00]: She was 22 years old, alone on a farm, and she did not surrender to the man who came through her door. 17:55 [SPEAKER_00]: That's the thing I keep coming back to. 17:58 [SPEAKER_00]: Not the 23 wounds. 17:59 [SPEAKER_00]: Not 18:06 [SPEAKER_00]: the fight. 18:08 [SPEAKER_00]: The axe was the weapon that didn't require anything. 18:12 [SPEAKER_00]: No ammunition, no training, no money, a blade on a handle, and every farm in 1890s America had one leaning against the wood pile. 18:23 [SPEAKER_00]: It was the weapon of proximity, the weapon of opportunity, and the weapon of the kind of 18:34 [SPEAKER_00]: Four years after birth a Manchester was buried in Fall River, a thousand miles south on a ridge in Tennessee that someone had named paradise. 18:46 [SPEAKER_00]: The axe fell again. 18:59 [SPEAKER_00]: a Tuesday evening in March 1897, on Paradise Ridge in the northwestern corner of Davis and County, Tennessee. 19:10 [SPEAKER_00]: The odd-day family is settling in for the night. 19:14 [SPEAKER_00]: Jacob, 57, has come home from Nashville, where he went to the bank earlier that day. 19:22 [SPEAKER_00]: His wife Pauline is in the kitchen. 19:25 [SPEAKER_00]: Their daughter of Lizzy, 18, and their son Henry, 13, are somewhere in the five rooms of the farmhouse. 19:34 [SPEAKER_00]: They've called home for 20 years. 19:37 [SPEAKER_00]: In tonight, there's a guest. 19:40 [SPEAKER_00]: Ten-year-old Rosa Marae, a neighbor's daughter, sleeping over at a friend's house on a spring night when the worst thing that could happen was a bad dream. 19:53 [SPEAKER_00]: By morning, all five of them will be dead. 19:57 [SPEAKER_00]: Four of them will have no heads and the house will be ash. 20:05 [SPEAKER_00]: Jacob Aude left Germany in the 1870s, whether he was running from something or chasing something. 20:13 [SPEAKER_00]: The record doesn't say. 20:15 [SPEAKER_00]: He brought his wife, Pauline Schofer, and together they built a life, on a high ridge in Davis and County, Tennessee, along the road to Clarksville. 20:28 [SPEAKER_00]: By 1897, the odd-day farm was 410 acres of middle Tennessee land, a five-room farmhouse, six children raised there, Emma Rosa, Anna Henry, Lizzie, and Dora. 20:47 [SPEAKER_00]: The older girls had grown up and moved out. 20:51 [SPEAKER_00]: Rosa odd-day had married Lawrence here in Nashville just two months before the martyrs 20:58 [SPEAKER_00]: 10-year-old Dora was living in Nashville with Rosa and her husband. 21:03 [SPEAKER_00]: That left Jacob, Pauline, Lizzy, 18 or 19, and Henry, 13, at home. 21:11 [SPEAKER_00]: Jacob Aude was the neighbor who lent money when you needed it. 21:16 [SPEAKER_00]: The sources call him well-liked, suspected, comfortable, not wealthy, but the kind of prosperous that came from two decades of German immigrant labor on a Tennessee hilltop. 21:31 [SPEAKER_00]: He had crossed an ocean, cleared land, built a farm, and raised six children on a ridge that somebody had named Paradise. 21:43 [SPEAKER_00]: The name came from the Paradise Brothers, early settlers from North Carolina, not from inequality of the land itself. 21:53 [SPEAKER_00]: The ridge sat near the Cheatham County line, remote scattered farms, connected by dirt roads, and the particular trust of neighbors who depended on each other. 22:08 [SPEAKER_00]: On the day of the murders, Jacob traveled to a bank in Nashville, to withdraw approximately $200 in cash, money intended as a loan for his neighbor, Tom Williams, who knew about that withdrawal would become the central question, the investigation. 22:28 [SPEAKER_00]: That evening, March 23rd, 1897, the household held five people, Jacob 57 Pauline 50, Lizzie 18, Henry 13, and their overnight guest 10-year-old Rosa Morrier, daughter of a French neighbor, 22:59 [SPEAKER_00]: The exact sequence is reconstructed from evidence, because there were no survivors. 23:06 [SPEAKER_00]: At some point that evening, a killer or killer arrived at the farmhouse. 23:13 [SPEAKER_00]: The evidence suggests Jacob was struck with the axe when he opened the door. 23:18 [SPEAKER_00]: Pauline may have rushed to help her husband, then Lizzy, then Henry. 23:25 [SPEAKER_00]: All four, a day-family members, were dragged into the sitting room after they were killed. 23:32 [SPEAKER_00]: All four were decapitated. 23:35 [SPEAKER_00]: Their heads were never recovered. 23:38 [SPEAKER_00]: Either consumed by the fire that followed, or taken by the killer. 23:44 [SPEAKER_00]: Rosa Morrier's Fate. 23:47 [SPEAKER_00]: One account holds that when the killer entered the room, where the children were, Rosa ran. 23:54 [SPEAKER_00]: She got behind the attacker and out of the house. 23:59 [SPEAKER_00]: After the days were dead, the killer or killers found her outside, killed her, and threw her body back into the house. 24:09 [SPEAKER_00]: She was not decapatated. 24:11 [SPEAKER_00]: Her head remained. 24:13 [SPEAKER_00]: She was ten years old. 24:16 [SPEAKER_00]: The house was soaked in cold oil, instead of blaze. 24:28 [SPEAKER_00]: Squire Simpson's mother, welcome. 24:32 [SPEAKER_00]: A glow, she said, from the direction of a day property. 24:37 [SPEAKER_00]: Simpson went to investigate and found the house fully engulfed. 24:42 [SPEAKER_00]: A wall collapsed. 24:45 [SPEAKER_00]: Through the opening, Simpson could see what looked like bundles of clothing on the sitting room floor. 24:52 [SPEAKER_00]: He found a potato fork, a farm tool for digging crops, lashed it to a long pole, and reached into the burning debris. 25:02 [SPEAKER_00]: He pulled out a body, then another, then another, four bodies in the sitting room, all four without heads. 25:15 [SPEAKER_00]: The next day, a more thorough search of the ashes turned up a fifth body, Henry A Day, age 13. 25:24 [SPEAKER_00]: Rosa Moore Rear was confirmed among the dead, the only victim with her head still attached. 25:32 [SPEAKER_00]: Three days later, the Nashville American ran a headline that reduced five lives to four words, killed, and then cremated. 25:45 [SPEAKER_00]: What makes this investigation significant is the number of suspects it produced, and the nothing it resolved, theory 1, robbery. 25:57 [SPEAKER_00]: The $200 Jacob withdrew from the bank. 26:01 [SPEAKER_00]: If someone knew about that cash, the motive was obvious, and I slated farmhouse, night time, a family alone, but investigators could never confirm the money was actually stolen. 26:15 [SPEAKER_00]: The fire destroyed everything. 26:27 [SPEAKER_00]: The logic ran like this. 26:30 [SPEAKER_00]: Morrier and an accomplice came to rob or attack the days, and when Rosa escaped the house and recognized her father, he had to kill her to silence a witness. 26:43 [SPEAKER_00]: The community pushed back hard against this. 26:47 [SPEAKER_00]: Neighbors testified that more rear was genuinely destroyed by grief. 26:53 [SPEAKER_00]: Actively seeking murder warrants against anyone he suspected. 26:57 [SPEAKER_00]: He was never formally charged. 27:01 [SPEAKER_00]: Theory 3, Ed Anderson, a neighbor who had quarreled with Jacob over ownership of some hogs, investigated, had a strong alibi, who operated fully, cleared. 27:18 [SPEAKER_00]: Theory 4, the Ashland City Confessions, multiple black men from nearby Ashland City, were arrested. 27:28 [SPEAKER_00]: under interrogation, they confessed to killing the a-day family for robbery, but their confessions did not match the physical evidence, and there was no confirmed evidence of robbery at all. 27:43 [SPEAKER_00]: In the racial climate of 1890s, Tennessee, where black men were routinely arrested on suspicion and subjected to violent interrogation, these confessions were almost certainly extracted under dearest. 27:58 [SPEAKER_00]: The men were eventually released. 28:02 [SPEAKER_00]: Multiple individuals were tried over the following 28:13 [SPEAKER_00]: The community turned inward after the verdicts came back, nobody talked, not because nobody knew anything, but because according to local accounts, everybody suspected everybody. 28:28 [SPEAKER_00]: The silence that settled over Paradise Ridge after those trials was not the silence of 28:42 [SPEAKER_00]: The case has never been solved, it has been cold for 128 years, and the violence did not end with the murders. 28:53 [SPEAKER_00]: What happened to the day family's land, the 410 acres that Jacob had spent 20 years building, would become its own kind of crime. 29:05 [SPEAKER_00]: After the Trials ended, around 1900, a man named W.S. 29:10 [SPEAKER_00]: Whiteman entered the story. 29:13 [SPEAKER_00]: Whiteman was a longtime neighbor of the odday family. 29:17 [SPEAKER_00]: He knew them. 29:19 [SPEAKER_00]: He had watched the whole thing, the murders, the investigations, the trials, the acquittals, and then he moved in. 29:30 [SPEAKER_00]: He approached the four surviving daughters, Emma, Rosa, Anna, and Dora, about managing the inherited property. 29:39 [SPEAKER_00]: The four hundred and ten acres were estimated at four to six thousand dollars. 29:45 [SPEAKER_00]: They considerable some. 29:47 [SPEAKER_00]: The daughters and heritons. 29:50 [SPEAKER_00]: The product of everything Jacob and Pauline had built. 29:55 [SPEAKER_00]: Whiteman told Rosa and Anna that the land wasn't worth much. 30:01 [SPEAKER_00]: He offered each of them $100 and two small lots in West Nashville that he claimed were worth a thousand apiece. 30:10 [SPEAKER_00]: The lots were nearly worthless. 30:14 [SPEAKER_00]: On December 14th, 1900, Rosa and Anna filed suit against Whiteman and his wife. 30:22 [SPEAKER_00]: Whiteman denied any wrongdoing, but eventually paid each daughter an additional $250. 30:30 [SPEAKER_00]: As far as the record shows, he kept the land. 30:35 [SPEAKER_00]: Orphanned immigrant daughters cheated out of their murdered parents' property by a neighbor who watched the whole tragedy unfold, and then saw an opportunity. 30:48 [SPEAKER_00]: The violence on Paradise Ridge did not end with the axe. 30:55 [SPEAKER_00]: The five victims were buried on the Auday property on March 26th, 1897, a granite tombstone was placed there later. 31:06 [SPEAKER_00]: It still stands. 31:08 [SPEAKER_00]: A small road called Jacob's Valley runs through what was once the Auday homestead, named 31:17 [SPEAKER_00]: In 2018, the Historical Commission of Metropolitan Nashville and Davis and County erected a historical marker at 3,000 Morgan Road in Jolton, a 121 years after the murders, someone put up a sign. 31:38 [SPEAKER_00]: Rosa Ate here, the second eldest daughter, the one who had married Lawrence, just two months before her family was killed, lived until 1962. 31:49 [SPEAKER_00]: She was 90 years old. 31:54 [SPEAKER_00]: Sixty-five years she carried the weight of that night, the murders, the failed investigations, the swindle, the silence, sixty-five years without an answer. 32:10 [SPEAKER_00]: five people murdered on Paradise Ridge for decapitated a house burned a neighbor swindled the orphans and the only memorial on that ridge today is a tombstone a road name and a marker that took a hundred and twenty one years to erect that is what unsolved means not a cold case file in a drawer 32:41 [SPEAKER_00]: a family that never got to grieve with the knowledge of why. 32:47 [SPEAKER_00]: The axe was the most common murder weapon in rural 1890s America, on every farm, in every wood shed, within reach of anyone desperate enough, or angry enough, to pick it up. 33:02 [SPEAKER_00]: It did not discriminate, and in both of these cases, separated by four years and a thousand miles, the axe fell on people that America had already decided not to remember. 33:17 [SPEAKER_00]: Bertha Mabel Manchester was 22 years old, alone on a dairy farm in Fall River, Massachusetts, when a man king threw her door with an axe. 33:30 [SPEAKER_00]: She fought back, she had defensive wounds on her hands. 33:35 [SPEAKER_00]: She died in her own kitchen, near the stove, the last day of May, 1893. 33:42 [SPEAKER_00]: Six days later, the nation turned as attention to Lizzy Borden, and Bertha disappeared into someone else's story for 130 years. 33:54 [SPEAKER_00]: Jacob and Pauline a day, left Germany, crossed an ocean, and spent 20 years building 410 acres of life, on Paradise Ridge and Davison County, Tennessee. 34:08 [SPEAKER_00]: Their children, Lizzie and Henry, in a 10-year-old neighbor named Rosa Morene, were with them on the night someone came to the door. 34:23 [SPEAKER_00]: the house burned no conviction, no answer, not then, not now. 34:32 [SPEAKER_00]: and Massachusetts, the system produced a conviction, but a convicted a 19-year-old who spoke knowingly, had been in the country for a month and was delivered to the police by his own uncle, under false pretenses, and sat in a jail for three months before anyone gave him a lawyer. 34:55 [SPEAKER_00]: In Tennessee, the system produced nothing at all, arrests, confessions that didn't match the evidence, trials that ended in acquittal, and a silence that swallowed Paradise Ridge whole. 35:11 [SPEAKER_00]: These are the stories that don't make it into the founding mythology. 35:16 [SPEAKER_00]: America in the 1890s was building, expanding, celebrating, 35:23 [SPEAKER_00]: Tennessee's Centennial Exposition opened five weeks after the odd-day family was buried. 35:30 [SPEAKER_00]: But the people doing the building, the immigrants who crossed oceans and cleared land, and took the worst jobs, and lived at the edges. 35:41 [SPEAKER_00]: They were the ones the system failed first. 35:50 [SPEAKER_00]: Birth a Manchester in the Adais family of Paradise Ridge deserved to be remembered, not as footnotes or curiosities, but as what they were. 36:02 [SPEAKER_00]: Real people, with real lives who were failed by the country, they called home. 36:21 [SPEAKER_00]: which failure was worse, the conviction that may have been coerced, or the silence that never broke. 36:32 [SPEAKER_00]: Until next time, good night, friend.
Show full transcript (263 segments)