Levi Weeks (1776–1819) was the accused in the infamous Manhattan Well Murder trial of 1800, the first murder trial in the United States for which there is a recorded transcript.[1][2] At the time of the murder, Weeks was a young carpenter in New York City. He was the brother of Ezra Weeks, one of New York's most successful builders of the time.
Weeks was accused of murdering Gulielma "Elma" Sands, a young woman whom he had been courting.[4] Elma disappeared on the evening of December 22, 1799. Some of her possessions were found two days later near the recently created Manhattan Well in Lispenard Meadows,[5] located in today's SoHo near the intersection of Greene and Spring Streets.[6] Her body was recovered from the well on January 2, 1800. Before leaving her boarding house on the 22nd, Elma told her cousin Catherine Sands that she and Levi were to be secretly married that night.[4]
Although Elma was seen leaving with Weeks and a witness claimed to have seen Weeks making measurements at the well the Sunday before the murder,[9] Weeks was acquitted after only five minutes of jury deliberation.[10]
Post-trial life
The public strongly disagreed with the verdict, and Weeks was ostracized by the citizens of the city, forcing him to leave New York.[6] He eventually settled in Natchez, Mississippi, where he became a well-respected architect and builder. He married Ann Greenleaf in Natchez and they had four children.[3] Weeks died in Natchez in 1819, at the age of 43. A house in Natchez designed by Weeks, Auburn Mansion, is a National Historic Landmark.
In popular culture
The trial is frequently referenced in the 1973 novel Burr, by Gore Vidal.
The CBS Radio Mystery Theater episode of March 28, 1978, "The Ghost In The Well," is about the trial and acquittal of Levi Weeks, as told by the ghost of Elma Sands
The 2015 novel “City of Liars and Thieves” by Eve Karlin describes the entire case from the perspective of Gulielma Sands’ cousin, Catherine Ring.
^Kleiger, Estelle (1989). The Trial of Levi Weeks Or the Manhattan Well Mystery. The Story of the First Recorded Murder Trial in U.S. History, New York, 1800. New York: Academy Chicago Publishers.
^Serratore, Angela (September 15, 2014), "The Well on Spring Street", The Paris Review, New York, NY. This article includes both a painting and sketch of Lispenard Meadows during the time period of the murder.
^ abCarr, Nick (October 24, 2011), "In SoHo, a Historied Haunt", Metropolis, New York, NY. This article includes a photo of the brickwork of the well, still extant in the basement of 129 Spring Street.
^*Simeone, Joseph (May 27, 2003). "The strange alliance of two American historical figures, Part I". St. Louis Daily Record & St. Louis Countian. St. Louis, MO.