Queer Places:
Rookwood General Cemetery Rookwood, Cumberland Council, New South Wales, Australia

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0a/Falleni.jpgEugene Falleni (25 July 1875 – 10 June 1938) (born Eugenia Falleni, also known as Harry Leo Crawford and Jean Ford) was an Italian-Australian transgender man convicted of the 1917 murder of his wife.

Falleni was born in Italy, near either Livorno (according to family accounts) or Florence.[1] Assigned female at birth and named Eugenia,, Falleni was the eldest of 22 children, of whom seventeen survived childhood. He migrated with his parents to Wellington, New Zealand circa 1877, at age 2. His father, a stern disciplinarian, worked as a carrier with a horse and cart and as a fisherman, among other occupations. After repeatedly dressing in male attire to obtain work in brickyards and stables during his teenage years,[1] Falleni left home and began calling himself Eugene, taking work as a cabin boy. His family made little effort to find him after years of being hostile and opposed to his behaviour. Falleni was also reported to have been married to a Martello Falleni before arriving in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.[2]

Falleni later recounted that after a few years at sea, he inadvertently disclosed during a drunken conversation with the ship's captain that he had been raised as female: speaking in Italian, Falleni stated that his grandmother referred to him as a piccolina (the feminine form of the noun for 'little one'). Falleni was ostracized by the rest of the crew and repeatedly raped by the captain. As having a woman on board a ship was traditionally viewed as an invitation to bad luck, Falleni was put ashore pregnant and destitute in 1898, at the ship's next port of call in Newcastle, New South Wales.

In Sydney, Falleni gave birth to a daughter, Josephine Crawford Falleni, and put the child into the care of an Italian-born woman, Mrs. de Angeles, in Double Bay.[1][3] He took on the male identity of Harry Leo Crawford,[1] of supposed Scots descent, visiting his daughter only infrequently.[3] Josephine called Mrs. de Angeles 'Granny', who told her that her father was a sea captain.[4]

IIn 1912, after a series of manual jobs in meatworks, pubs, and in a rubber factory, Falleni entered the employ of a Dr. G. R. C. Clarke in Wahroonga, Northern Sydney,[1] as a general useful and sulky driver. It was there that he met Dr. Clarke's housekeeper Annie Birkett, who had been widowed several years before, with a son named Harry. Birkett and her son left for Balmain, where she used some money she had to set up a confectionery shop.[3][5] Falleni followed her there and took an interest in the business.[5] On 19 February 1913, Falleni and Birkett were married at the Methodist parsonage in inner city Balmain.[1] Soon after, the couple moved to Drummoyne, where Falleni worked in hotels and factories at various kinds of work.[6]

According to Falleni and witnesses at his later trial, Birkett was not aware that he was transgender until 1917, when a neighbor told her.[3][7] Falleni refused to confirm this to Birkett when she confronted him, fearing that she would tell the police and have him arrested.

OOn 1 October 1917, Birkett suggested that the two of them have a picnic near Lane Cove River. According to Falleni's later statement to the police, the two of them quarreled after she revealed her intention to leave him. Falleni reported that during the argument she slipped and fell backwards, hitting her head on a rock. He said that he tried to save her but she died within minutes, and in a panic that he would be investigated and exposed as transgender, he attempted to burn the body beyond identification. Falleni told Birkett's son that she had run off with another man, while a witness at the later trial also claimed Falleni had told them Annie had 'cleared out'.[8]

BBirkett's body was discovered in scrub land off Mowbray Road, Chatswood.[9][10] The medical examiner reported "no definite marks of violence" and concluded she had died "probably due to burns".[11] The body was not identified at that time, and newspaper accounts reported that the police believed it to be a case of suicide, based on accounts of a woman 'whose manner has been regarded as strange' being recently seen in the area, and the discovery of a small bottle of kerosene.[11] Ultimately, an open verdict was returned at the inquest[12] and the remains were buried in a coffin marked 'the body of an unknown woman' at Rookwood Cemetery.[13][14]

In 1919, Falleni met Elizabeth King Allison, known as Lizzie, who was over fifty years of age.[15] They married at Canterbury in September 1919, with Falleni giving his name as Harry Leo Crawford, his place of birth as Scotland, and his occupation as mechanical engineer.[15]

AAfter Birkett's disappearance, her son took up lodgings at Woolloomooloo.[16] In 1920, he visited his aunt[16] and reported that upon returning from a holiday weekend and discovering that his mother was missing, Falleni took him to The Gap, a notorious suicide spot, where he threw stones off the cliff. At night, about a week later, Falleni took him to scrub land near Manning Road, Double Bay, and asked him to dig a hole. He did and they returned to the city.[2]

This put suspicion on Falleni, who was arrested on 5 July 1920.[1][6][9][16] Falleni asked to be placed in the women's cells.[1] He had been living with Lizzie in a house in Stanmore, but requested that his wife not be told that he was transgender. His lawyer Maddocks Cohen did not apply for bail.[17]

Birkett's remains were exhumed,[18] but a second post-mortem, including x-rays, did not reveal any new information and her body was released to her family for burial at Woronora.[19] Falleni's daughter was located and interviewed by the police.[20]

At the committal hearing in August 1920, witnesses included the dentist who made the false teeth found with Birkett's remains and Birkett's sister, Lillie Nugent, who also identified the gemstone found with the body as belonging to the deceased.[21] Birkett's son testified that his mother had only married Falleni because he was so persistent and after that 'there were always rows and they were never happy'.[22] He mentioned them leaving for his aunt's, then another location, and how much Falleni 'worried' his mother and an incident when Falleni found them and 'smashed up everything'.[22] He expanded on his story of his trip with Falleni to The Gap and testified that Falleni had tried to lure him over the fence to the cliff edge.[22] Falleni's lawyer, Maddocks Cohen, objected to his evidence about being taken to dig holes in the scrub, but the magistrate allowed it on the grounds that it indicated Falleni's frame of mind.[22]

The Government Medical Officer, Dr Palmer, repeated his testimony from the post-mortem that he believed the deceased died of burns and was alive when the fire began, due to blistering on the skin, but he could not say if she was conscious or not.[23][24] He also stated that small cracks to the skull were likely a result of the fire, but a more substantial one could have been evidence of violence.[23] Henrietta Schieblich, who rented Falleni a room after Birkett's death, said Falleni had told her his wife had left him and added, 'We had a jolly good row, and I gave her a crack on the head, and she cleared'.[23] She also claimed Falleni had said he was going to kill Birkett's son on the night he took him to dig holes in the scrub.[23] Another witness supported the son's evidence that Falleni, who couldn't read or write, had asked others to look for mentions of a murder in the newspapers in the weeks after Birkett's disappearance.[23]

The prosecutor was given permission to treat Falleni's daughter Josephine as a hostile witness and submitted her earlier sworn statement to police as evidence.

At the end of the hearing, Falleni was committed for trial and refused bail.[3] A few days after the committal hearing, the magistrate, Mr. Gale, was criticised in a Sydney newspaper for personally escorting into the courtroom, and providing 'box seats' for, a popular actor and actress.[26]

At Falleni's trial for murder at Darlinghurst courthouse in October 1920, the ‘Man-Woman case’ created a press sensation, with the accused appearing in the dock first in a man's suit and then in women's clothes.[1] The Crown's case followed the evidence presented at the committal, although the Prosecutor was reticent when 'referring to the relations between the accused and the deceased' because 'there were some matters to which he did not care to refer to in the presence of women'.[27] He was rebuked by the presiding Chief Justice, Sir William Cullen, who responded that 'if women came to a Criminal Court they must not be considered for a moment'.[27] The Prosecutor presented a dildo found in a search of Falleni and Lizzie's home in Stanmore, as evidence that he was 'practical in deceipt' about his gender.[28]8][7]

Evidence from other witnesses did not always support the Crown's case. While on his way to work, David Lowe saw a woman with a suitcase behaving in a 'half-witted' way, who disappeared into the scrub 200 yards from where the burned remains were found.[29] Police-Inspector Mayes was one of those, at the original inquest, who suggested the body may have been of a woman who set herself on fire accidentally.[29]

Falleni pleaded not guilty to the murder,[30] but the jury only took two hours to reach their verdict,[31] and he was convicted and condemned to death.[1]1] Asked by the Chief Justice if he had anything to say, Falleni consulted with his attorney before replying: " 'I have been three months in Long Bay Gaol. I am near to a nervous breakdown. I am not guilty, your Honor. I know nothing whatsoever of this charge. It is only through false evidence that I have been convicted."[31][32]

In mid-October, Falleni lodged an appeal against the conviction.

The Court of Criminal Appeal dismissed the case finding that if the original jury 'came to the conclusion that the accused was the person who had brought about the death of the woman, no matter by what means, it was justified in finding a verdict of guilty'.'.[35]

Falleni's sentence was commuted to imprisonment for life[36]6] but the matter of his gender identity and the supposed deception of it was made much of in the popular press, which portrayed him as a monster and a pervert.[7]7]

Friends of Falleni and 'prison reform workers' petitioned 'on several occasions' for his release. In February 1931, reportedly following an hour-long visit with the prisoner, Minister for Justice Joe Lamaro granted Falleni his freedom on the basis that he was nearly sixty years old and 'not of robust health'.[37][38] Upon leaving Long Bay Prison, Falleni was taken by car 'for an unknown destination'.[38] Questions were again raised by the press about the case, as there was no certainty as to the body being Birkett's, the skull fractures and the effect of the fire, the possibility of poison and the lack of 'definite evidence that Falleni had taken the woman's life'.[39]

Falleni had assumed the name "Mrs. Jean Ford"[40] and became the proprietor of a boarding house in Paddington, Sydney.[1][41] On 9 June 1938, he was struck by a motorcar in nearby Oxford Street, and died of his injuries the following day in Sydney Hospital.[1] He was only identified through fingerprint records and the £100 he gained from the sale of the boarding house business, just before the accident, found in his bag.[41] The inquest returned a verdict of accidental death.[42] Falleni's funeral notice was announced under his final name and he was buried in the Church of England section of Rookwood Cemetery.[43]

In the intervening years, after the publication by the press and popular crime writers of a large amount of speculation and various contradictory accounts of his life (many of them propagated by Falleni himself, who had grown up believing that impersonating a man was a criminal offense), the case was largely forgotten until the appearance of a detailed biography of Falleni by Suzanne Falkiner in 1988, after which his story was taken up in Australia by a number of artists, playwrights and short film makers, museum and photography curators, and academics with an interest in gender studies. In 2012, Mark Tedeschi QC wrote a conjectural or partly fictionalised biography of Falleni, entitled Eugenia Falleni (Simon and Schuster, 2012). A new edition of Falkiner's book, Eugenia: A Man, summarising new information, was published in 2014.

A play based on the life of Falleni by New Zealand playwright Lorae Parry premiered in the U.S. at the State University of New York at New Paltz on March 1, 2012.


My published books:

Amazon Logo Nero 010.pngSee my published books

BACK TO HOME PAGE


  1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugene_Falleni