The Manhattan Well Murder
(DECEMBER 22, 1799)
by Edward Sherman Gould
OUR forefathers firmly believed certain adages, and among others, “Murder will out,” for general experience proved its truth. But in later days the rule seems to be reversed, and the city of New York has furnished its quota of practical contradictions of the old saying. The Nathan murder, the Rogers murder, the Burdell murder, are comparatively recent as well as conspicuous instances. The disappearance of Chief Justice Lansing was prominent in a preceding generation; and still further back the murder of Miss Gulielma Sands, better known, perhaps, as the Manhattan Well Murder, yet remains an unsolved mystery. The story is remarkable, and the trial of the suspected criminal was not less so.
Elias and Catherine Ring, Quakers, lived in Greenwich Street, near Franklin Street. Their family consisted of Hope Sands, Mrs. Ring’s sister; Gulielma Elmore Sands, her cousin; two young men, Russell and Lacy, boarders; Levi Weekes and his apprentice, also boarders; and some other boarders. Weekes was a brother of Ezra Weekes, a respectable and wealthy citizen, who was originally a carpenter. He was the builder and the principal owner of the City Hotel, formerly in Broadway, extending from Thames Street to Cedar Street.
It appeared by the testimony that Weekes was very intimate with Gulielma—called “Elma” by the witnesses—and Elma had confidentially informed… Read More