(Rochester, NY)
UNION SUN AND ADVERTISER Feb. 3, 1858
--Arrest of a Woman in Genesee County with Poisoning Her Husband and Six
Children--
A correspondent of the Democrat, writing from Alabama, Genesee county, 30th,
gives the following account of the investigation into a horrible poisoning case
which has just come to light in that locality.
Some time in July, 1856, Henry HOAG, a respectable citizen of
this town died quite suddenly. About six weeks after his death a little daughter
five or six years old, died after an illness of only twenty-four hours.
Suspension of foul play was suspected by some at the time, but no action was
taken in the case. Last spring, an infant child -- born subsequent to Mr. Hoag's
death, died after a short illness.
Suspicion was again aroused, but nothing was done. Last fall another child, some
two years old, died under still more suspicious circumstances. A postmortem
examination was had, but the chemist to whom the child's stomach was sent
neglected to analyze its contents. But the community had become satisfied that
the death of so many members of a family, under such circumstances, required
further investigation, and the bodies of all of them were exhumed, and the
stomachs of the three first, and a portion of the abdomen of the last secured,
and upon analysis, arsenic was found in them all.
Suspicion at once pointed to the wife and mother, as the
person who administered the poison and she was arrested and is now in our county
jail at Batavia, awaiting the action of the Grand Jury which is next week
Since her husbands death she has been married again to a man
by the name of FRISCH, who lived with her but a short time -- some difficulty
having arisen between them.
Some years since three other of her children died suddenly
with symptoms almost precisely similar to the last ones, and it is inferred that
she poisoned them also, from the fact that she confessed that she had poisoned
the first one, but that she did it accidentally and through mistake. Altogether
this is one of the most horrid cases on record.
That a woman would poison her husband may not be incredible, but that a mother
would poison deliberately, one after another, six of her own offsprings, seems
too inhuman for belief. I will give no opinion of her guilt or innocence, as her
case will soon be brought before the proper tribunal for investigation.
*** (Note: Her second husband's name was Otto Frisch. He went to a
doctor accusing Polly of trying to poison him too. The doctor gave him an
antidote and he left right after for parts unknown.)
CA