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George Washington Van Nest

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George Washington Van Nest Famous memorial

Birth
Death
12 Mar 1846 (aged 1)
Cayuga County, New York, USA
Burial
Fleming, Cayuga County, New York, USA Add to Map
Plot
Plot of Van Nest Murder Victims
Memorial ID
View Source

Murder Victim. In 1846 this toddler was one of four members of a prominent local white family slain by a mentally disturbed man of color. The Van Nest-Wyckoff killings consequently became one of the most sensational crimes of the era, raising legal and social issues still debated today. During the landmark trial which followed, the accused murderer was represented by future U. S. Secretary of State William H. Seward, who argued that the defendant was not guilty by reason of insanity, one of the earliest uses of this plea. Victim George Washington Van Nest, just days short of his second birthday, had been fatally stabbed along with his father, his pregnant mother, and his elderly widowed grandmother, Phebe Wyckoff, on March 12, 1846, when an alleged horse theft by William Freeman turned violent. The patriotically-named little boy and his parents died of their wounds that day; his grandmother two days later. The defendant in the case was a freed slave from Auburn, a partially deaf man of African and Native American descent with a troubled past, including extreme abuse in childhood, prior imprisonment, and a brain-damaging accident. Although the "Insanity" plea failed and Freeman was sentenced to be hanged, defense lawyer Seward succeeded in winning him a new trial. The condemned man died of tuberculosis in prison, however, while awaiting his new day in court. The three Van Nests were buried beneath an unusual triple headstone: a low, horizontal slab "Cut by Reed & Clark of Auburn, NY" which describes the tragic circumstances of their deaths; the fourth victim, Mrs. Wyckoff, was interred nearby.

Murder Victim. In 1846 this toddler was one of four members of a prominent local white family slain by a mentally disturbed man of color. The Van Nest-Wyckoff killings consequently became one of the most sensational crimes of the era, raising legal and social issues still debated today. During the landmark trial which followed, the accused murderer was represented by future U. S. Secretary of State William H. Seward, who argued that the defendant was not guilty by reason of insanity, one of the earliest uses of this plea. Victim George Washington Van Nest, just days short of his second birthday, had been fatally stabbed along with his father, his pregnant mother, and his elderly widowed grandmother, Phebe Wyckoff, on March 12, 1846, when an alleged horse theft by William Freeman turned violent. The patriotically-named little boy and his parents died of their wounds that day; his grandmother two days later. The defendant in the case was a freed slave from Auburn, a partially deaf man of African and Native American descent with a troubled past, including extreme abuse in childhood, prior imprisonment, and a brain-damaging accident. Although the "Insanity" plea failed and Freeman was sentenced to be hanged, defense lawyer Seward succeeded in winning him a new trial. The condemned man died of tuberculosis in prison, however, while awaiting his new day in court. The three Van Nests were buried beneath an unusual triple headstone: a low, horizontal slab "Cut by Reed & Clark of Auburn, NY" which describes the tragic circumstances of their deaths; the fourth victim, Mrs. Wyckoff, was interred nearby.

Bio by: Nikita Barlow



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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Originally Created by: Nikita Barlow
  • Added: Sep 1, 2005
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/11662911/george_washington-van_nest: accessed ), memorial page for George Washington Van Nest (17 Mar 1844–12 Mar 1846), Find a Grave Memorial ID 11662911, citing Sand Beach Cemetery, Fleming, Cayuga County, New York, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.