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[M1C]⋙ Read Gratis To Hell I Must Go The True Story of Michigan’s Lizzie Borden eBook Rod Sadler

To Hell I Must Go The True Story of Michigan’s Lizzie Borden eBook Rod Sadler



Download As PDF : To Hell I Must Go The True Story of Michigan’s Lizzie Borden eBook Rod Sadler

Download PDF  To Hell I Must Go The True Story of Michigan’s Lizzie Borden eBook Rod Sadler

On a cool, spring day in 1897, Alfred Haney left his Williamston, Michigan home to earn a day’s wage. He knew his wife’s peculiar behavior had become more frequent, and he had planned on her seeing the town doctor, but she assured him she was feeling much better. They would go the following day instead. When he returned home later that day, he discovered a macabre murder so bizarre that it shook the entire community to its core. His mother’s severed head was set on the dinner table, adorned with a knife and fork on either side. Lying nearby was the old woman’s body, soaked in kerosene and set ablaze. Screaming, Alfred Haney ran from the house in search of the law, and while neighbors tried to extinguish the smoldering, beheaded corpse, Haney’s wife, Martha, removed herself to the back yard and began digging wildly with her hands. Shortly after the discovery, a sheriff’s deputy arrived, taking Martha into custody and lodging her in the local jail at the village hall. Ingham County Sheriff John Rehle, known as J. J. among his constituents, arrived by train and surveyed the carnage. He and his deputy discovered the murder weapon, an axe, hidden behind some boards under the rear stoop. Rehle organized a Coroner’s Inquest that was held inside the house where the old woman’s body lay. In an attempt to determine her state of mind at the time of the crime, local doctors interviewed the murderess. She told them she spoke frequently with her own dead mother, and her mother had told her to kill the old woman. Over the next several days, court hearings decided her ultimate fate. A panel of three doctors was commissioned to determine her sanity. In the end, there would be no prosecution. Deemed insane, she was sentenced to the Michigan Home for the Dangerous and Criminally Insane in Ionia. What made Martha Haney snap and behead her mother-in-law? Had she been insane from the beginning? Had domestic violence pervaded her short life? Or was it the eventual loss of her three children to adoption that drove her to commit this awful deed? This is the true story of insanity and murder. It chronicles the five days of investigation and court hearings following that horrible day, and provides an insight into an insane woman’s mind, while furnishing the reader with a historical perspective of 19th century law enforcement and the judicial system in place at the time.

To Hell I Must Go The True Story of Michigan’s Lizzie Borden eBook Rod Sadler

While this book, the author's first work, is generally well-written and covers a compelling subject, there is actually relatively little in the book on Martha Haney, a mentally ill woman who cut off the head of her mother-in-law, with whom she had an acrimonious relationship, in 1897. If condensed, the information on Martha, her background, and her crime would only fill several pages of text, while the author attempts to flesh out the rest of the book with a lot of detail about his father (the police officer who investigated the crime), lengthy and detailed descriptions of the layout and buildings of the town of Williamston (which are, for the most part, not relevant to the story), and some repetitive material.

One is left wondering about a great deal. For example, the author tells us that the brother of the murderess filled investigators in on her difficult childhood, but this information is not shared with the reader. The murderess also had three children which she had purportedly given up for adoption; why, and what became of them? Virtually nothing is said about the many years Martha Haney spent in the Michigan Home for the Dangerous and Criminally Insane. And so we are left with a lot of speculation and very few facts and details about her life. It may be that this information is simply not available from any source, but be that as it may, the "filler" in this book simply can't take its place.

Product details

  • File Size 3281 KB
  • Print Length 163 pages
  • Publisher Outskirts Press, Inc. (April 29, 2015)
  • Publication Date April 29, 2015
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B00WVUKTYE

Read  To Hell I Must Go The True Story of Michigan’s Lizzie Borden eBook Rod Sadler

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To Hell I Must Go The True Story of Michigan’s Lizzie Borden eBook Rod Sadler Reviews


It is a good local history book. I liked learning the history, but was quite astonished by the story itself.
Couldn't put this book down. The author is engaging and has clearly done a great deal of research to recreate the events in such detail.
I enjoyed this book immensely. Mr. Sadler brought live to the characters, and instead of a dry retelling of facts, he gave life an animation to the people involved.
Also, as a natural born Michigander, I learn some new things about our states history that I had been previously unaware of.
This was an enjoyable read and I would strongly recommend this book.
I enjoyed the book so much! I was born and raised in Williamston, Michigan and had no clue this had ever happened in my home town. Yet even from the first time I had heard of Lizzie Borden I had a fascination with her story. I have never been able to understand who would truly be responsible for that crime, many things do not add up or are very conflicting. I enjoyed that the book "To Hell I Must Go" shared the police investigation and so much background detail.
I would recommend this book as a must read for those that enjoy murder mystery, Lizzie Borden senerios, or are from lower Michigan!
However, the author makes constant statements about the different subjects' thoughts, feelings, and motives without making citations; I would assume the reasons for this were to make a better narrative and because there is a lack of actual information out there on this subject. When this is done in biographies, it undermines the author's credibility. With this all said, it is an interesting read about a crime few would ever know about if this book hadn't shone a light on it. To make it more comprehensive, the author provides informative backgrounds on most of all the people and places discussed in this text; if you are a history buff (or true crime buff), this will be the book for you.
A shocking story - let alone one you'd expect from a small town in the 1800s! It literally is one I got sucked into one evening and couldn't stop until I was done...
I bought this non-fiction novel because I thought it would be of interest to me because of my Williamston, MI roots. Wow! That was only a part of the story. This book was much, much more. The vivid descriptions of the crime, the scene, and the characters were all portrayed with excellence. The ravages of intense criminal insanity can only be imagined by most of us. Mr. Sadler did an outstanding job showing us how life must have been lived by all involved—the perpetrator, her family, neighbors, and law enforcement personnel.
A great deal of history was revealed throughout this book—not only Williamston, Ingham County, and Michigan, but also probably any small town of the 1800s. Traveling today from one city to another is taken for granted. You hop in your vehicle and go. In 1897, that wasn’t the case. Taking a prisoner even a few miles to the county seat was a major undertaking.
I thoroughly enjoyed “To Hell I Must Go” by Rod Sadler and recommend it to all with a hearty five stars.
While this book, the author's first work, is generally well-written and covers a compelling subject, there is actually relatively little in the book on Martha Haney, a mentally ill woman who cut off the head of her mother-in-law, with whom she had an acrimonious relationship, in 1897. If condensed, the information on Martha, her background, and her crime would only fill several pages of text, while the author attempts to flesh out the rest of the book with a lot of detail about his father (the police officer who investigated the crime), lengthy and detailed descriptions of the layout and buildings of the town of Williamston (which are, for the most part, not relevant to the story), and some repetitive material.

One is left wondering about a great deal. For example, the author tells us that the brother of the murderess filled investigators in on her difficult childhood, but this information is not shared with the reader. The murderess also had three children which she had purportedly given up for adoption; why, and what became of them? Virtually nothing is said about the many years Martha Haney spent in the Michigan Home for the Dangerous and Criminally Insane. And so we are left with a lot of speculation and very few facts and details about her life. It may be that this information is simply not available from any source, but be that as it may, the "filler" in this book simply can't take its place.
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