User talk:Colin4C/Whitechapel Murders

The 'Nemesis of Neglect' stalks Whitechapel in this 'Punch' cartoon of 1888

The Whitechapel murders (1888-91) were a series of eleven unsolved brutal murders of women committed in Whitechapel, in the East End of London between April 3, 1888 and February 13, 1891. Some of them have been ascribed to the notorious, but elusive, individual known as Jack the Ripper.[1] Most, if not all, of the victims were prostitutes. The investigations were conducted by the Metropolitan Police, joined after 30 September by the City Police. Private organisations, such as the Whitechapel Vigilance Committee, were also involved in the search for the killer.

Whitechapel 1888-91 edit

At this period Whitechapel was reckoned as the most notorious criminal rookery in London. Assistant Commissioner of the CID Sir Robert Anderson, in an interview with an American journalist of 4 November 1889 recommended it (plus the Black Museum) as London's prime criminal "show place" 'for those who take an interest in the dangerous classes'.[2]Robbery and violence were commonplace in a district characterised by extreme poverty, sub-standard housing, homelessness, drunkenness and endemic prostitution. These factors were focused in the institution of the common lodging-house, which provided cheap communal lodgings for the desperate and the destitute, amongst whom the Whitechapel murder victims were numbered.[3].

The Victims edit

1. Emma Elizabeth Smith, (c. 1843- April 4th 1888) an East End prostitute of mysterious origins. At the time of her death was living at a common lodging-house at 18 George Street, Spitalfields. She was approximately forty-five years old.

 

2. Martha Tabram (name sometimes misspelled as Tabran; used the alias Emma Turner; maiden name Martha White), (May 10, 1849 - August 7, 1888). Born in Southwark she was a casual prostitute who at the time of her death, aged thirty-nine, resided at a common lodging house at 19 George Street, Spitalfields.[4]

 

3. Mary Ann Nichols (maiden name Mary Ann Walker, nicknamed "Polly"), (August 26, 1845 - August 31, 1888), a casual prostitute. Born a Londoner, at the time of her death she was living in a common lodging house at 18 Thrawl Street in Spitalfields. She was forty three years old but according to contemporary reports looked about ten years younger.[5][6]

 

4. Annie Chapman (maiden name Eliza Ann Smith, nicknamed "Dark Annie"), (September 1841 - September 8, 1888), a casual prostitute. Born a Londoner, at the time of her death she resided in a common lodging house at 35 Dorset Street. She was 47 years old. [7]

 

5. Elizabeth Stride (maiden name Elisabeth Gustafsdotter, nicknamed "Long Liz"), (November 27, 1843 - September 30, 1888), a casual prostitute. Stride was Swedish but had moved to London in 1866 at the age of twenty-two. At the time of her death she was living at the common lodging house at 32 Flower and Dean Street, Spitalfields. She was 44 years old at the time of her death.

 

6. Catherine Eddowes (used the aliases "Kate Conway" and "Mary Ann Kelly," from the surnames of her two common-law husbands Thomas Conway and John Kelly) (April 14, 1842 - September 30, 1888). Born in Wolverhampton, at the time of her death she was living with her partner John Kelly at at Cooney's common lodging house at 55 Flower and Dean Street, Spitalfields. She was forty-six years old.[8]

 

7. Mary Jane Kelly (called herself "Marie Jeanette Kelly" after a trip to Paris, nicknamed "Ginger"), (c. 1863 - November 9, 1888), an attractive red-haired Irish prostitute of somewhat mysterious origins and history. At the time of her death she was living in a single room at 13 Miller's Court, off Dorset Street, Spitalfields. She was c. 25 when she was murdered.

8. Rose Mylett (true name probably Catherine Mylett, but was also known as Catherine Millett, Elizabeth "Drunken Lizzie" Davis, "Fair" Alice Downey, or simply "Fair Clara"), (1862 - December 20, 1888). She was a known Whitechapel prostitute who frequently lodged in George Street. She was twenty-six years old at the time of her death. [9][10]

 

9. Alice McKenzie (nicknamed "Clay Pipe" Alice and used the alias Alice Bryant), (c. 1849 - July 17, 1889), a prostitute who resided at Mr Tenpenny's lodging house at 52 Gun Street Spitalfields. She was approximately forty years old at the time of her death.[11]

10. An Unidentified Woman (? - September 10, 1889) whose remains were designated the "Pinchin Street Torso" (a term coined after a torso was found in similar condition to the body which constituted "The Whitehall Mystery," though the hands were not severed). A speculation of the time that the body belonged to Lydia Hart, a prostitute who had disappeared, was refuted after the latter was found recovering in hospital after "a bit of a spree". Another claim that the victim was a missing girl called Emily Barker was also refuted. The woman was never identified.[12]

 

11. Frances Coles (also known as Frances Coleman, Frances Hawkins and nicknamed "Carrotty Nell"), (1865 - February 13, 1891), a prostitute described as 'young and pretty'. At the time of her death she was living at common lodging house at 8 White's Row, Spitalfields. She was twenty five years old.[13][14][15]

Investigation Timeline edit

1888 edit

  • April 3rd - Emma Smith viciously assaulted and robbed in Osborn Street, Whitechapel in the early hours of the morning. She survives the attack and manages to walk back to her lodging house at 18 George Street, Spitalfields with the injuries. Here she tells the deputy-keeper, Mary Russell, that she was attacked by a number of men, one of whom was a teenager. Friends bring her to the London Hospital.
  • April 4th - Smith falls into a coma and dies at 9 a.m. April 4, 1888. Medical investigation reveals that a blunt object had been inserted into her vagina, rupturing her perineum.
  • April 6th - the police are informed that an inquest is to be held the next day.
  • April 7th - the inquest is conducted by Coroner Wynne Edwin Baxter (who also conducted the inquests on nine of the other victims), attended by the Local Inspector of the Metropolitan Police, H Division Whitechapel: Edmund Reid. His subsequent investigations, however, prove fruitless and the murderer or murderers are never caught. Walter Dew who was a Detective Constable stationed with H Division at the time describes the investigation thought that Smith was the first victim of Jack the Ripper though most of his collegues disagreed[16].
  • August 7th - Martha Tabram murdered. Her body is found at George Yard Buildings, George Yard, Whitechapel with a total of 39 stab wounds inflicted on it. Based on the statements of a fellow prostitute, and PC Barret who was patrolling nearby, some soldiers at the Tower of London were put on an identification parade by Inspector Reid, but with no positive results.[17]
  • August 31st - Mary Ann Nichols murdered. Nichols' body is discovered, lying in a pool of blood at about 3:40 in the morning on the ground in front of a gated stable entrance in Buck's Row (since renamed Durward Street), a back street in Whitechapel, two hundred yards from the London Hospital. She has had her throat slit and there are mutilations to her abdomen. This murder occurs in the territory of the J or Bethnal Green Division of the Metropolitan Police and is initially investigated by detectives from their Bethnal Green Road station. However suspicions that there is now a serial killer at large in London led to the secondment of Detective Inspectors Frederick Abberline, Henry Moore and Walter Andrews from the Central Office at Scotland Yard to assist. On the same day James Monro resigns as the head of the CID. Initial investigations into the murder have little success, though some of the press link it to the two previous murders and suggested the killing might have been perpetrated by a gang as in the case of Smith.[18]In his memoirs Walter Dew records widespread panic in London at this time due to the killings.[19]
  • September 2nd - Superintendent Arnold, in charge of H (Whitechapel) Division of the Metropolitan Police goes on leave.
  • September 7th - Anderson goes on sick leave to Switzerland.
  • September 8th - Annie Chapman murdered. Chapman's horribly mutilated body (with some body parts missing) is discovered about 6:00 in the morning lying on the ground near a doorway in the back yard of 29 Hanbury Street, Spitalfields. Chapman, a prostitute, had left her common lodging house at 35 Dorset Street with the intention of getting money from a client to pay for the rent at 2am on the same day she was murdered, before meeting with her killer[20]This precipitates a mob attack on the Commercial Road police station, on the suspicion that the police were harbouring the murderer there.[21]
  • September 10th - a notorious local character called John Pizer, dubbed 'Leather Apron', with a reputation for terrorising the local prostitutes, is arrested by the police on suspicion of the murders, but is found to have an alibi. At this time the Whitechapel Vigilance Committee under the chairmanship of George Lusk is set up and offered a reward for the apprehension of the killer, something the Metropolitan Police refuses to do. The Society also employs two private detectives to solve the case.
  • September 15th - overall direction of the murder enquiries is confused and hampered by the fact that the head of the CID, Sir Robert Anderson is on holiday in Switzerland, leading the Chief Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, Sir Charles Warren to appoint Superintendent Donald Swanson to co-ordinate the enquiry from Scotland Yard.
  • September 25th - further confusion is caused by the Dear Boss letter hoax in which the Central News Agency is informed that the preceding murders had been committed by 'Jack the Ripper'.
  • September 30th - Elizabeth Stride and Catherine Eddowes murdered. Stride's body is discovered at about 1am, lying in a pool of blood with her throat cut, in Dutfield's Yard, inside the gateway of 40 Berner Street (since renamed Henriques Street), Whitechapel. She had been killed just minutes before. At 1.45am Eddowe's horribly mutilated body is found at the south corner of Mitre Square, in the City of London, by PC Edward Watkins on his beat. She had been killed less than ten minutes before. One of Eddowes' kidneys has been removed by the killer. Due to the location of this murder the City Police under Detective Inspector James McWilliam are also engaged in the enquiry. At 3am a blood-stained fragment of Eddowes' apron is found lying in the passage of the doorway leading to 108 to 119 Model dwellings Goulston Street, Whitechapel. Above, on the wall is a graffito inscribed: "The Juwes [sic] are the men that will not be blamed for nothing". At 5am, Commissioner Warren attends the scene and orders the words erased. Superintendent Arnold returns.
  • October 1st - The Saucy Jack postcard from 'Jack the Ripper', claiming responsibility for the murders of Stride and Eddowes, posted and received by the Central News Agency. It describes the murders of the two women as the "double event", a designation which has endured to this day.
  • October 2nd - the Whitehall Mystery. An unidentified female torso found in the basement of New Scotland Yard is linked to the Whitechapel murders by the press, though this is denied by the police.
  • October 15th - the head of the CID, Anderson eventually gets back from holiday and takes charge of the investigation on the part of Scotland Yard. On the same day the "From Hell" letter is dispatched, also known as the "Lusk letter".
  • October 16th - the letter is received by George Lusk of the Whitechapel Vigilance Committee. Lusk opens a small box to discover half a human kidney, later said by a doctor to have been preserved in "spirits of wine" (ethanol). The writer claims that he had extracted it from the body of Eddowes and that he had "fried and ate" the missing half.
  • November 8th - Charles Warren resigns as Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police.
  • November 9th - Mary Jane Kelly murdered. Kelly's severely mutilated body is discovered shortly after 10:45 in the morning lying on the bed in the single room where she lived at 13 Miller's Court, off Dorset Street, Spitalfields.
  • November 19th - amid scenes of great emotion, thousands of mourners attend Mary Kelly's funeral. The cortege travels six miles to the Roman Catholic Cemetery at Leytonstone, where she is laid to rest.
  • December 1st - James Monro appointed new Commissioner of Metropolitan Police.
  • December 20th - Rose Mylett murdered. Her body was discovered by a patrolling constable in Clarke's Yard, High Street, Poplar. She was reportedly strangled "by a cord drawn tightly round the neck". However, at the Inquest the head of CID Sir Robert Anderson contests the verdict of four doctors present that she had been strangled and states his belief that she had accidentally suffocated herself on the collar of her dress while in a drunken stupor. Despite this the jury returns a verdict of 'wilful[sic] murder against some person or persons unknown' and the case was added to the Whitechapel murder file. The identity of the murderer was never discovered.[23]

The Metropolitan Police Commissioner's report for 1888 records that the Whitechapel murderer remains undiscovered despite 143 extra plain-clothes men deployed in Whitechapel in November and December[24]

1889 edit

  • July 17 - Alice McKenzie murdered. She reportedly died from the "severance of the left carotid artery" but several minor bruises and cuts were found on the body. Her body is found in Castle Alley, Whitechapel. Police Commissioner James Monro initially believes this to be a Ripper murder and one of the pathologists examining the body, Dr Bond, agreed, though later writers have been more circumspect. Evans and Rumbelow suggest that the unknown murderer tried to make it look like a Ripper killing to deflect suspicion from himself.[25]
  • September 10th - "The Pinchin Street Murder", a term coined after a torso was found in similar condition to the body which constituted "The Whitehall Mystery," though the hands were not severed in this case. The body is found under a railway arch in Pinchin Street, Whitechapel. An unconfirmed speculation of the time is that the body belonged to Lydia Hart, a prostitute who had disappeared. "The Whitehall Mystery" and "The Pinchin Street Murder" have often been suggested to be the work of a serial killer, for which the nicknames "Torso Killer" or "Torso Murderer" have been suggested. Whether Jack the Ripper and the "Torso Killer" were the same person or separate serial killers of uncertain connection to each other (but active in the same area) has long been debated.[26]

1890 edit

1891 edit

  • February 13th - Frances Coles murdered. Minor wounds on the back of the head suggest that she was thrown violently to the ground before her throat was cut. Otherwise there were no mutilations to the body. Her body is found by PC Thompson at 2.15 a.m. at Swallow Gardens a passageway under a railway arch between Chamber Street and Leman Street, Whitechapel. Superintendent Arnold and Inspector Reid arrive soon afterwards from the nearby Leman Street police station and by 5am Chief Inspectors Swanson and Moore who had been involved in the previous Whitechapel murders investigation arrive. [27]A man named James Sadler, seen earlier with her, is arrested by the police and charged with her murder. A high profile investigation by Swanson and Moore into Sadler's past history and his whereabouts at the time of the previous Whitechapel murders indicates that the police may have thought him to to be the Ripper himself.
  • March 3rd 1891 - Sadler discharged from court due to lack of evidence.[28]

1896 edit

  • The Whitechapel murder file is closed following the receipt of a final hoax letter.

The murderer or murderers were never found and the case remains unsolved.

References edit

  1. ^ The Metropolitan Police History of Jack the Ripper
  2. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 225
  3. ^ Jerry White (2007) London in the Ninetenth Century: 323-332
  4. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 51-55
  5. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 56-62
  6. ^ Paul Begg (2006) Jack the Ripper: The Facts: 42
  7. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 66-73
  8. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 114-40
  9. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 245-6
  10. ^ Martin Fido (1987) The Crimes, Detection and Death of Jack the Ripper: 101
  11. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 205-09
  12. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 210-15
  13. ^ Paul Begg (2006) Jack the Ripper: The Facts: 316-17
  14. ^ Martin Fido (1987) The Crimes, Death and Detection of Jack the Ripper: 113
  15. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 218-22
  16. ^ Walter Dew (1938) I Caught Crippen
  17. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 51-55
  18. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 56-62
  19. ^ Nicholas Connell (2005) Walter Dew: The Man Who Caught Crippen: 15-16
  20. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 66-73
  21. ^ Nicholas Connell (2005) Walter Dew: The Man Who Caught Crippen: 19-21
  22. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 175
  23. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 245-6
  24. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 204
  25. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 205-09
  26. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 210-15
  27. ^ Martin Fido (1987) The Crimes, Detection and Death of Jack the Ripper: 104-5
  28. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 218-22

Further Reading edit

Stewart P. Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates. Sutton: Stroud. Category:Crime

The Whitechapel Murders (1888-91) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search

The 'Nemesis of Neglect' stalks Whitechapel in this 'Punch' cartoon of 1888The Whitechapel murders (1888-91) were a series of eleven unsolved brutal murders of women committed in Whitechapel, in the East End of London between April 3, 1888 and February 13, 1891. Some of them have been ascribed to the notorious, but elusive, individual known as Jack the Ripper.[1] Most, if not all, of the victims were prostitutes. The investigations were conducted by the Metropolitan Police, joined after 30 September by the City Police. Private organisations, such as the Whitechapel Vigilance Committee, were also involved in the search for the killer.

Contents [hide] 1 Whitechapel 1888-91 2 The Victims 3 Investigation Timeline 3.1 1888 3.2 1889 3.3 1890 3.4 1891 3.5 1896 4 References 5 Further Reading


[edit] Whitechapel 1888-91 At this period Whitechapel was reckoned as the most notorious criminal rookery in London. Assistant Commissioner of the CID Sir Robert Anderson, in an interview with an American journalist of 4 November 1889 recommended it (plus the Black Museum) as London's prime criminal "show place" 'for those who take an interest in the dangerous classes'.[2]Robbery and violence were commonplace in a district characterised by extreme poverty, sub-standard housing, homelessness, drunkenness and endemic prostitution. These factors were focused in the institution of the common lodging-house, which provided cheap communal lodgings for the desperate and the destitute, amongst whom the Whitechapel murder victims were numbered.[3].


[edit] The Victims 1. Emma Elizabeth Smith, (c. 1843- April 4th 1888) an East End prostitute of mysterious origins. At the time of her death was living at a common lodging-house at 18 George Street, Spitalfields. She was approximately forty-five years old.

2. Martha Tabram (name sometimes misspelled as Tabran; used the alias Emma Turner; maiden name Martha White), (May 10, 1849 - August 7, 1888). Born in Southwark she was a casual prostitute who at the time of her death, aged thirty-nine, resided at a common lodging house at 19 George Street, Spitalfields.[4]

3. Mary Ann Nichols (maiden name Mary Ann Walker, nicknamed "Polly"), (August 26, 1845 - August 31, 1888), a casual prostitute. Born a Londoner, at the time of her death she was living in a common lodging house at 18 Thrawl Street in Spitalfields. She was forty three years old but according to contemporary reports looked about ten years younger.[5][6]

4. Annie Chapman (maiden name Eliza Ann Smith, nicknamed "Dark Annie"), (September 1841 - September 8, 1888), a casual prostitute. Born a Londoner, at the time of her death she resided in a common lodging house at 35 Dorset Street. She was 47 years old. [7]

5. Elizabeth Stride (maiden name Elisabeth Gustafsdotter, nicknamed "Long Liz"), (November 27, 1843 - September 30, 1888), a casual prostitute. Stride was Swedish but had moved to London in 1866 at the age of twenty-two. At the time of her death she was living at the common lodging house at 32 Flower and Dean Street, Spitalfields. She was 44 years old at the time of her death.

6. Catherine Eddowes (used the aliases "Kate Conway" and "Mary Ann Kelly," from the surnames of her two common-law husbands Thomas Conway and John Kelly) (April 14, 1842 - September 30, 1888). Born in Wolverhampton, at the time of her death she was living with her partner John Kelly at at Cooney's common lodging house at 55 Flower and Dean Street, Spitalfields. She was forty-six years old.[8]

7. Mary Jane Kelly (called herself "Marie Jeanette Kelly" after a trip to Paris, nicknamed "Ginger"), (c. 1863 - November 9, 1888), an attractive red-haired Irish prostitute of somewhat mysterious origins and history. At the time of her death she was living in a single room at 13 Miller's Court, off Dorset Street, Spitalfields. She was c. 25 when she was murdered.

8. Rose Mylett (true name probably Catherine Mylett, but was also known as Catherine Millett, Elizabeth "Drunken Lizzie" Davis, "Fair" Alice Downey, or simply "Fair Clara"), (1862 - December 20, 1888). She was a known Whitechapel prostitute who frequently lodged in George Street. She was twenty-six years old at the time of her death. [9][10]

9. Alice McKenzie (nicknamed "Clay Pipe" Alice and used the alias Alice Bryant), (c. 1849 - July 17, 1889), a prostitute who resided at Mr Tenpenny's lodging house at 52 Gun Street Spitalfields. She was approximately forty years old at the time of her death.[11]

10. An Unidentified Woman (? - September 10, 1889) whose remains were designated the "Pinchin Street Torso" (a term coined after a torso was found in similar condition to the body which constituted "The Whitehall Mystery," though the hands were not severed). A speculation of the time that the body belonged to Lydia Hart, a prostitute who had disappeared, was refuted after the latter was found recovering in hospital after "a bit of a spree". Another claim that the victim was a missing girl called Emily Barker was also refuted. The woman was never identified.[12]

11. Frances Coles (also known as Frances Coleman, Frances Hawkins and nicknamed "Carrotty Nell"), (1865 - February 13, 1891), a prostitute described as 'young and pretty'. At the time of her death she was living at common lodging house at 8 White's Row, Spitalfields. She was twenty five years old.[13][14][15]


[edit] Investigation Timeline

[edit] 1888 April 3rd - Emma Smith viciously assaulted and robbed in Osborn Street, Whitechapel in the early hours of the morning. She survives the attack and manages to walk back to her lodging house at 18 George Street, Spitalfields with the injuries. Here she tells the deputy-keeper, Mary Russell, that she was attacked by a number of men, one of whom was a teenager. Friends bring her to the London Hospital. April 4th - Smith falls into a coma and dies at 9 a.m. April 4, 1888. Medical investigation reveals that a blunt object had been inserted into her vagina, rupturing her perineum. April 6th - the police are informed that an inquest is to be held the next day. April 7th - the inquest is conducted by Coroner Wynne Edwin Baxter (who also conducted the inquests on nine of the other victims), attended by the Local Inspector of the Metropolitan Police, H Division Whitechapel: Edmund Reid. His subsequent investigations, however, prove fruitless and the murderer or murderers are never caught. Walter Dew who was a Detective Constable stationed with H Division at the time describes the investigation thought that Smith was the first victim of Jack the Ripper though most of his collegues disagreed[16]. August 7th - Martha Tabram murdered. Her body is found at George Yard Buildings, George Yard, Whitechapel with a total of 39 stab wounds inflicted on it. Based on the statements of a fellow prostitute, and PC Barret who was patrolling nearby, some soldiers at the Tower of London were put on an identification parade by Inspector Reid, but with no positive results.[17] August 31st - Mary Ann Nichols murdered. Nichols' body is discovered, lying in a pool of blood at about 3:40 in the morning on the ground in front of a gated stable entrance in Buck's Row (since renamed Durward Street), a back street in Whitechapel, two hundred yards from the London Hospital. She has had her throat slit and there are mutilations to her abdomen. This murder occurs in the territory of the J or Bethnal Green Division of the Metropolitan Police and is initially investigated by detectives from their Bethnal Green Road station. However suspicions that there is now a serial killer at large in London led to the secondment of Detective Inspectors Frederick Abberline, Henry Moore and Walter Andrews from the Central Office at Scotland Yard to assist. On the same day James Monro resigns as the head of the CID. Initial investigations into the murder have little success, though some of the press link it to the two previous murders and suggested the killing might have been perpetrated by a gang as in the case of Smith.[18]In his memoirs Walter Dew records widespread panic in London at this time due to the killings.[19] September 1st - Sir Robert Anderson appointed head of the CID. September 2nd - Superintendent Arnold, in charge of H (Whitechapel) Division of the Metropolitan Police goes on leave. September 7th - Anderson goes on sick leave to Switzerland. September 8th - Annie Chapman murdered. Chapman's horribly mutilated body (with some body parts missing) is discovered about 6:00 in the morning lying on the ground near a doorway in the back yard of 29 Hanbury Street, Spitalfields. Chapman, a prostitute, had left her common lodging house at 35 Dorset Street with the intention of getting money from a client to pay for the rent at 2am on the same day she was murdered, before meeting with her killer[20]This precipitates a mob attack on the Commercial Road police station, on the suspicion that the police were harbouring the murderer there.[21] September 10th - a notorious local character called John Pizer, dubbed 'Leather Apron', with a reputation for terrorising the local prostitutes, is arrested by the police on suspicion of the murders, but is found to have an alibi. At this time the Whitechapel Vigilance Committee under the chairmanship of George Lusk is set up and offered a reward for the apprehension of the killer, something the Metropolitan Police refuses to do. The Society also employs two private detectives to solve the case. September 15th - overall direction of the murder enquiries is confused and hampered by the fact that the head of the CID, Sir Robert Anderson is on holiday in Switzerland, leading the Chief Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, Sir Charles Warren to appoint Superintendent Donald Swanson to co-ordinate the enquiry from Scotland Yard. September 25th - further confusion is caused by the Dear Boss letter hoax in which the Central News Agency is informed that the preceding murders had been committed by 'Jack the Ripper'. September 30th - Elizabeth Stride and Catherine Eddowes murdered. Stride's body is discovered at about 1am, lying in a pool of blood with her throat cut, in Dutfield's Yard, inside the gateway of 40 Berner Street (since renamed Henriques Street), Whitechapel. She had been killed just minutes before. At 1.45am Eddowe's horribly mutilated body is found at the south corner of Mitre Square, in the City of London, by PC Edward Watkins on his beat. She had been killed less than ten minutes before. One of Eddowes' kidneys has been removed by the killer. Due to the location of this murder the City Police under Detective Inspector James McWilliam are also engaged in the enquiry. At 3am a blood-stained fragment of Eddowes' apron is found lying in the passage of the doorway leading to 108 to 119 Model dwellings Goulston Street, Whitechapel. Above, on the wall is a graffito inscribed: "The Juwes [sic] are the men that will not be blamed for nothing". At 5am, Commissioner Warren attends the scene and orders the words erased. Superintendent Arnold returns. October 1st - The Saucy Jack postcard from 'Jack the Ripper', claiming responsibility for the murders of Stride and Eddowes, posted and received by the Central News Agency. It describes the murders of the two women as the "double event", a designation which has endured to this day. October 2nd - the Whitehall Mystery. An unidentified female torso found in the basement of New Scotland Yard is linked to the Whitechapel murders by the press, though this is denied by the police. October 15th - the head of the CID, Anderson eventually gets back from holiday and takes charge of the investigation on the part of Scotland Yard. On the same day the "From Hell" letter is dispatched, also known as the "Lusk letter". October 16th - the letter is received by George Lusk of the Whitechapel Vigilance Committee. Lusk opens a small box to discover half a human kidney, later said by a doctor to have been preserved in "spirits of wine" (ethanol). The writer claims that he had extracted it from the body of Eddowes and that he had "fried and ate" the missing half. November 8th - Charles Warren resigns as Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police. November 9th - Mary Jane Kelly murdered. Kelly's severely mutilated body is discovered shortly after 10:45 in the morning lying on the bed in the single room where she lived at 13 Miller's Court, off Dorset Street, Spitalfields. November 12th - Inquest into death of Kelly held at Shoreditch Town Hall.[22] November 19th - amid scenes of great emotion, thousands of mourners attend Mary Kelly's funeral. The cortege travels six miles to the Roman Catholic Cemetery at Leytonstone, where she is laid to rest. December 1st - James Monro appointed new Commissioner of Metropolitan Police. December 20th - Rose Mylett murdered. Her body was discovered by a patrolling constable in Clarke's Yard, High Street, Poplar. She was reportedly strangled "by a cord drawn tightly round the neck". However, at the Inquest the head of CID Sir Robert Anderson contests the verdict of four doctors present that she had been strangled and states his belief that she had accidentally suffocated herself on the collar of her dress while in a drunken stupor. Despite this the jury returns a verdict of 'wilful[sic] murder against some person or persons unknown' and the case was added to the Whitechapel murder file. The identity of the murderer was never discovered.[23] The Metropolitan Police Commissioner's report for 1888 records that the Whitechapel murderer remains undiscovered despite 143 extra plain-clothes men deployed in Whitechapel in November and December[24]


[edit] 1889 July 17 - Alice McKenzie murdered. She reportedly died from the "severance of the left carotid artery" but several minor bruises and cuts were found on the body. Her body is found in Castle Alley, Whitechapel. Police Commissioner James Monro initially believes this to be a Ripper murder and one of the pathologists examining the body, Dr Bond, agreed, though later writers have been more circumspect. Evans and Rumbelow suggest that the unknown murderer tried to make it look like a Ripper killing to deflect suspicion from himself.[25] September 10th - "The Pinchin Street Murder", a term coined after a torso was found in similar condition to the body which constituted "The Whitehall Mystery," though the hands were not severed in this case. The body is found under a railway arch in Pinchin Street, Whitechapel. An unconfirmed speculation of the time is that the body belonged to Lydia Hart, a prostitute who had disappeared. "The Whitehall Mystery" and "The Pinchin Street Murder" have often been suggested to be the work of a serial killer, for which the nicknames "Torso Killer" or "Torso Murderer" have been suggested. Whether Jack the Ripper and the "Torso Killer" were the same person or separate serial killers of uncertain connection to each other (but active in the same area) has long been debated.[26]

[edit] 1890 June 21st - Sir Edward Bradford replaces Monro as Commissioner.

[edit] 1891 February 13th - Frances Coles murdered. Minor wounds on the back of the head suggest that she was thrown violently to the ground before her throat was cut. Otherwise there were no mutilations to the body. Her body is found by PC Thompson at 2.15 a.m. at Swallow Gardens a passageway under a railway arch between Chamber Street and Leman Street, Whitechapel. Superintendent Arnold and Inspector Reid arrive soon afterwards from the nearby Leman Street police station and by 5am Chief Inspectors Swanson and Moore who had been involved in the previous Whitechapel murders investigation arrive. [27]A man named James Sadler, seen earlier with her, is arrested by the police and charged with her murder. A high profile investigation by Swanson and Moore into Sadler's past history and his whereabouts at the time of the previous Whitechapel murders indicates that the police may have thought him to to be the Ripper himself. March 3rd 1891 - Sadler discharged from court due to lack of evidence.[28]

[edit] 1896 The Whitechapel murder file is closed following the receipt of a final hoax letter. The murderer or murderers were never found and the case remains unsolved.


[edit] References ^ The Metropolitan Police History of Jack the Ripper ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 225 ^ Jerry White (2007) London in the Ninetenth Century: 323-332 ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 51-55 ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 56-62 ^ Paul Begg (2006) Jack the Ripper: The Facts: 42 ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 66-73 ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 114-40 ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 245-6 ^ Martin Fido (1987) The Crimes, Detection and Death of Jack the Ripper: 101 ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 205-09 ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 210-15 ^ Paul Begg (2006) Jack the Ripper: The Facts: 316-17 ^ Martin Fido (1987) The Crimes, Death and Detection of Jack the Ripper: 113 ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 218-22 ^ Walter Dew (1938) I Caught Crippen ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 51-55 ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 56-62 ^ Nicholas Connell (2005) Walter Dew: The Man Who Caught Crippen: 15-16 ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 66-73 ^ Nicholas Connell (2005) Walter Dew: The Man Who Caught Crippen: 19-21 ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 175 ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 245-6 ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 204 ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 205-09 ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 210-15 ^ Martin Fido (1987) The Crimes, Detection and Death of Jack the Ripper: 104-5 ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 218-22

[edit] Further Reading Stewart P. Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates. Sutton: Stroud.

[hide]v • d • eJack the Ripper Victims Mary Ann Nichols · Annie Chapman · Elizabeth Stride · Catherine Eddowes · Mary Jane Kelly Police Frederick Abberline · Robert Anderson · Walter Dew · Donald Swanson Letters Dear Boss letter · Saucy Jacky postcard · From Hell letter Other Jack the Ripper suspects · Jack the Ripper fiction · The Whitechapel Murders (1888-91) · Royal conspiracy theories

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Whitechapel_Murders_%281888-91%29" Categories: CrimeThe Whitechapel murders (1888-91) were a series of eleven unsolved brutal murders of women committed in Whitechapel, London between 1888 and 1891. Some or all of them have been ascribed to the mysterious individual known as Jack the Ripper.[1]All of the victims were prostitutes.

The Murders edit

1. Emma Elizabeth Smith, (c. 1843- April 4th 1888) was an East End prostitute, who at the time of her death was living at a lodging-house at 18 George Street, Spitalfields. She was viciously assaulted and robbed in Osborn Street, Whitechapel in the early hours of April 3, 1888. She survived the attack and managed to walk back to her lodging house with the injuries. Here she told the deputy-keeper, Mary Russell, that she was attacked by a number of men, one of whom was a teenager. Friends brought her to the London Hospital where she fell into a coma and died the next day at 9 a.m. April 4, 1888. Medical investigation revealed that a blunt object had been inserted into her vagina, rupturing her perineum. On the 6th April the police were informed that an inquest was to be held the next day. The inquest was attended by the Local Inspector of the Metropolitan Police, H Division Whitechapel: Edmund Reid. His subsequent investigations, however, proved fruitless and the murderer or murderers were never caught. Walter Dew who was a Detective Constable stationed with H Division at the time describes the investigation:

As in every case of murder in this country, however poor and friendless the victims might be, the police made every effort to track down Emma Smith's assailant. Unlikely as well as likely places were searched for clues. Hundreds of people were interrogated, many of them by me personally. Scores of statements were taken. Soldiers from the Tower of London [which stood within H Division] were questioned as to their movements. Ships in docks were searched and sailors questioned.[2]

Walter Dew thought that Smith was the first victim of Jack the Ripper, though this claim has often been contested by Ripperologists.[3]

2. Martha Tabram (name sometimes misspelled as Tabran; used the alias Emma Turner; maiden name Martha White), born on May 10, 1849, and killed on August 7, 1888. She had a total of 39 stab wounds. Her body was found at George Yard Buildings, George Yard, Whitechapel. Based on the statements of a fellow prostitute and PC Barret who was patrolling nearby some soldiers at the Tower of London were put on an identification parade by Inspector Reid, but with no positive results.[4]

3. Mary Ann Nichols (maiden name Mary Ann Walker, nicknamed "Polly"), born on August 26, 1845, and killed on August 31, 1888. Nichols' body was discovered, lying in a pool of blood at about 3:40 in the morning on the ground in front of a gated stable entrance in Buck's Row (since renamed Durward Street), a back street in Whitechapel, two hundred yards from the London Hospital. She had had her throat slit and their were mutilations to her abdomen. This murder occurred in the territory of the J or Bethnal Green Division of the Met and was initially investigated by detectives from their Bethnal Green Road station. However suspicions that there was now a serial killer at large in London led to the secondment of Detective Inspectors Frederick Abberline, Henry Moore and Walter Andrews from the Central Office at Scotland Yard to assist. Initial investigations into the murderer had little success, though some of the press linked it to the two previous murders and suggested the killing might have been perpetrated by a gang as in the case of Smith.[5]

4. Annie Chapman (maiden name Eliza Ann Smith, nicknamed "Dark Annie"), born in September 1841 and killed on September 8, 1888. Chapman's horribly mutilated body (with some body parts missing) was discovered about 6:00 in the morning lying on the ground near a doorway in the back yard of 29 Hanbury Street, Spitalfields. Chapman, a prostitute, had left her common lodging house at 35 Dorset Street with intention of getting money from a client to pay for the rent at 2am on the same day she was murdered, before meeting with her killer[6]

5. Elizabeth Stride (maiden name Elisabeth Gustafsdotter, nicknamed "Long Liz"), born in Sweden on November 27, 1843, and killed on September 30, 1888. Stride's body was discovered close to 01:00 in the early morning, lying on the ground in Dutfield's Yard, off Berner Street (since renamed Henriques Street) in Whitechapel.

6. Catherine Eddowes (used the aliases "Kate Conway" and "Mary Ann Kelly," from the surnames of her two common-law husbands Thomas Conway and John Kelly), born on April 14, 1842, and killed on September 30, 1888, on the same day as the previous victim, Elizabeth Stride. Her horribly mutilated body was found in Mitre Square, in the City of London.

7. Mary Jane Kelly (called herself "Marie Jeanette Kelly" after a trip to Paris, nicknamed "Ginger"), reportedly born in either the city of Limerick or County Limerick, Munster, Ireland c. 1863 and killed on November 9, 1888. Kelly's severely mutilated body was discovered shortly after 10:45 in the morning lying on the bed in the single room where she lived at 13 Miller's Court, off Dorset Street, Spitalfields.

8. Rose Mylett (true name probably Catherine Mylett, but was also known as Catherine Millett, Elizabeth "Drunken Lizzie" Davis, "Fair" Alice Downey, or simply "Fair Clara"), born in 1862 and died on December 20, 1888. She was a known prostitute and twenty six years old at the time of her death. Her body was discovered by a patrolling constable in Clarke's Yard, High Street, Poplar. She was reportedly strangled "by a cord drawn tightly round the neck". However, at the Inquest the head of CID Sir Robert Anderson contested the verdict of four doctors present that she had been strangled and stated his belief that she had accidentally suffocated herself on the collar of her dress while in a drunken stupor. Despite this the jury returned a verdict of 'wilful murder against some person or persons unknown' and the case was added to the Whitechapel murder file. The identity of the murderer was never discovered[7]

9. Alice McKenzie (nicknamed "Clay Pipe" Alice and used the alias Alice Bryant), a prostitute, born circa 1849 and killed on July 17, 1889. She reportedly died from the "severance of the left carotid artery" but several minor bruises and cuts were found on the body. Her body was found in Castle Alley, Whitechapel. Police Commissioner James Monro initially believed this to be a Ripper murder and one of the pathologists examining the body, Dr Bond, agreed, though later writers have been more circumspect. Evans and Rumbelow suggest that the unknown murderer tried to make it look like a Ripper killing to deflect suspicion from himself.[8]

10. "The Pinchin Street Murder," a term coined after a torso was found in similar condition to the body which constituted "The Whitehall Mystery," though the hands were not severed, on September 10, 1889. The body was found under a railway arch in Pinchin Street, Whitechapel. An unconfirmed speculation of the time was that the body belonged to Lydia Hart, a prostitute who had disappeared. "The Whitehall Mystery" and "The Pinchin Street Murder" have often been suggested to be the work of a serial killer, for which the nicknames "Torso Killer" or "Torso Murderer" have been suggested. Whether Jack the Ripper and the "Torso Killer" were the same person or separate serial killers of uncertain connection to each other (but active in the same area) has long been debated.[9]

11. Frances Coles (also known as Frances Coleman, Frances Hawkins and nicknamed "Carrotty Nell"), born in 1865 and killed on February 13, 1891. Described as 'young and pretty'.[10] Minor wounds on the back of the head suggest that she was thrown violently to the ground before her throat was cut. Otherwise there were no mutilations to the body. Her body was found under a railway arch at Swallow Gardens, Whitechapel. A man named James Sadler, seen earlier with her, was arrested by the police and charged with her murder, and was briefly thought to be the Ripper himself. However he was discharged from court due to lack of evidence on 3 March 1891. After this eleventh and last "Whitechapel Murder" the case was closed.[11]

Investigation Timeline edit

1888 edit

  • April 3rd - Emma Smith viciously assaulted and robbed in Osborn Street, Whitechapel in the early hours of the morning. She survives the attack and manages to walk back to her lodging house at 18 George Street, Spitalfields with the injuries. Here she tells the deputy-keeper, Mary Russell, that she was attacked by a number of men, one of whom was a teenager. Friends bring her to the London Hospital.
  • April 4th - Smith falls into a coma and dies at 9 a.m. April 4, 1888. Medical investigation reveals that a blunt object had been inserted into her vagina, rupturing her perineum.
  • April 6th - the police are informed that an inquest is to be held the next day.
  • April 7th - the inquest is attended by the Local Inspector of the Metropolitan Police, H Division Whitechapel: Edmund Reid. His subsequent investigations, however, prove fruitless and the murderer or murderers are never caught.
  • August 7th - Martha Tabram murdered. Her body is found at George Yard Buildings, George Yard, Whitechapel with a total of 39 stab wounds inflicted on it. Based on the statements of a fellow prostitute and PC Barret who was patrolling nearby some soldiers at the Tower of London were put on an identification parade by Inspector Reid, but with no positive results.[12]
  • August 31st - Mary Ann Nichols murdered. Nichols' body is discovered, lying in a pool of blood at about 3:40 in the morning on the ground in front of a gated stable entrance in Buck's Row (since renamed Durward Street), a back street in Whitechapel, two hundred yards from the London Hospital. She has had her throat slit and their are mutilations to her abdomen. This murder occurs in the territory of the J or Bethnal Green Division of the Met and is initially investigated by detectives from their Bethnal Green Road station. However suspicions that there is now a serial killer at large in London led to the secondment of Detective Inspectors Frederick Abberline, Henry Moore and Walter Andrews from the Central Office at Scotland Yard to assist. On the same day James Monro resigns as the head of the CID. Initial investigations into the murder have little success, though some of the press link it to the two previous murders and suggested the killing might have been perpetrated by a gang as in the case of Smith.[13]In his memoirs Walter Dew records widespread panic in London at this time due to the killings.[14]
  • September 2nd - Superintendant Arnold, in charge of H (Whitechapel) Division of the Met goes on leave.
  • September 7th - Anderson goes on sick leave to Switzerland.
  • September 8th - Annie Chapman murdered. Chapman's horribly mutilated body (with some body parts missing) is discovered about 6:00 in the morning lying on the ground near a doorway in the back yard of 29 Hanbury Street, Spitalfields. Chapman, a prostitute, had left her common lodging house at 35 Dorset Street with intention of getting money from a client to pay for the rent at 2am on the same day she was murdered, before meeting with her killer[15]This precipitates a mob attack on the Commercial Road police station, on the suspicion that the police were harbouring the murderer there.[16]
  • September 10th - a notorious local character called John Pizer, dubbed 'Leather Apron', with a reputation for terrorising the local prostitutes, is arrested by the police on suspicion of the murders, but is found to have an alibi. At this time the Whitechapel Vigilance Committee under the chairmanship of George Lusk is set up and offered a reward for the apprehension of the killer, something the Met refuses to do. The Society also employs two private detectives to solve the case.
  • September 15th - overall direction of the murder enquiries is confused and hampered by the fact that the head of the CID, Sir Robert Anderson is on holiday in Switzerland, leading the Chief Commissioner of the Met Sir Charles Warren to appoint Superintendent Donald Swanson to co-ordinate the enquiry from Scotland Yard.
  • September 25th - further confusion is caused by the Dear Boss letter hoax in which the Central News Agency is informed that the preceding murders had been committed by 'Jack the Ripper'.
  • September 30th - Elizabeth Stride and Catherine Eddowes murdered. Stride's body is discovered close to 01:00 in the early morning, lying on the ground in Dutfield's Yard, off Berner Street (since renamed Henriques Street) in Whitechapel. Eddowes' mutilated body is found in Mitre Square, in the City of London. One of Eddowes' kidneys has been removed by the killer. Due to the location of this murder the City Police under Detective Inspector James McWilliam are also engaged in the enquiry. At 3am a blood-stained fragment of Eddowe's apron is found lying in the passage of the doorway leading to 108 to 119 Model dwellings Goulston Street, Whitechapel. Above it on the wall is a graffito inscribed: "The Juews [sic] are the men that will not be blamed for nothing". At 5am Commissioner Warren attends the scene and orders the words erased. Superintendant Arnold returns.
  • October 1st - The Saucy Jack postcard from 'Jack the Ripper' posted and received by the Central News Agency. It describes the murders of Stride and Eddowes as the "double event", a designation which has endured to this day.
  • October 15th - the head of the CID, Anderson eventually gets back from holiday and takes charge of the investigation on the part of Scotland Yard. On the same day the "From Hell" letter is dispatched, also known as the "Lusk letter".
  • October 16th - the letter is received by George Lusk of the Whitechapel Vigilance Committee. Lusk opens a small box to discover half a human kidney, later said by a doctor to have been preserved in "spirits of wine" (ethanol). The writer claims that he had extracted it from the body of Eddowes and that he had "fried and ate" the missing half.
  • November 8th - Charles Warren resigns as Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police.
  • November 9th - Mary Jane Kelly murdered. Kelly's severely mutilated body is discovered shortly after 10:45 in the morning lying on the bed in the single room where she lived at 13 Miller's Court, off Dorset Street, Spitalfields.
  • December 1st - James Monro appointed new Commissioner of Metropolitan Police.
  • December 20th - Rose Mylett murdered. Her body was discovered by a patrolling constable in Clarke's Yard, High Street, Poplar. She was reportedly strangled "by a cord drawn tightly round the neck". However, at the Inquest the head of CID Sir Robert Anderson contests the verdict of four doctors present that she had been strangled and states his belief that she had accidentally suffocated herself on the collar of her dress while in a drunken stupor. Despite this the jury returns a verdict of 'wilful murder against some person or persons unknown' and the case was added to the Whitechapel murder file. The identity of the murderer was never discovered[17]

The Metropolitan Police Commissioner's report for 1888 records that the Whitechapel murderer remains undiscovered despite 143 extra plain clothes men deployed in Whitechapel in November and December[18]

1889 edit

  • July 17 - Alice McKenzie murdered. She reportedly died from the "severance of the left carotid artery" but several minor bruises and cuts were found on the body. Her body is found in Castle Alley, Whitechapel. Police Commissioner James Monro initially believes this to be a Ripper murder and one of the pathologists examining the body, Dr Bond, agreed, though later writers have been more circumspect. Evans and Rumbelow suggest that the unknown murderer tried to make it look like a Ripper killing to deflect suspicion from himself.[19]
  • September 10th - "The Pinchin Street Murder," a term coined after a torso was found in similar condition to the body which constituted "The Whitehall Mystery," though the hands were not severed in this case. The body is found under a railway arch in Pinchin Street, Whitechapel. An unconfirmed speculation of the time is that the body belonged to Lydia Hart, a prostitute who had disappeared. "The Whitehall Mystery" and "The Pinchin Street Murder" have often been suggested to be the work of a serial killer, for which the nicknames "Torso Killer" or "Torso Murderer" have been suggested. Whether Jack the Ripper and the "Torso Killer" were the same person or separate serial killers of uncertain connection to each other (but active in the same area) has long been debated.[20]

1890 edit

1891 edit

  • February 13th - Frances Coles murdered. Minor wounds on the back of the head suggest that she was thrown violently to the ground before her throat was cut. Otherwise there were no mutilations to the body. Her body is found by PC Thompson at 2.15 a.m. at Swallow Gardens a passageway under a railway arch between Chamber Street and Leman Street, Whitechapel. Superintendant Arnold and Inspector Reid arrive soon afterwards from the nearby Leman Street police station and by 5am Chief Inspectors Swanson and Moore who had been involved in the in the previous Whitechapel murders investigation arrive. The head of the CID Anderson arrives later in the morning, demonstrating how important the Met thought this case.[21]A man named James Sadler, seen earlier with her, is arrested by the police and charged with her murder. A high profile investigation by Swanson and Moore into Sadler's past history and his whearabouts at the time of the previous Whitechapel murders indicates that the police may have thought him to to be the Ripper himself.
  • March 3rd 1891 - Sadler discharged from court due to lack of evidence.[22]

1896 edit

  • The Whitechapel murder file is closed following the receipt of a final hoax letter.

The murderer or murderers are never found and the case remains unsolved to this day.

References edit

  1. ^ The Metropolitan Police History of Jack the Ripper
  2. ^ Walter Dew (1938) I Caught Crippen, quoted in Nicholas Connell (2005) Walter Dew: The Man Who Caught Crippen: 8-9
  3. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 47-50
  4. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 51-55
  5. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 56-62
  6. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 66-73
  7. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 245-6
  8. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 205-09
  9. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 210-15
  10. ^ Martin Fido (1987) The Crimes, Death and Detection of Jack the Ripper: 113
  11. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 218-22
  12. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 51-55
  13. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 56-62
  14. ^ Nicholas Connell (2005) Walter Dew: The Man Who Caught Crippen: 15-16
  15. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 66-73
  16. ^ Nicholas Connell (2005) Walter Dew: The Man Who Caught Crippen: 19-21
  17. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 245-6
  18. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 204
  19. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 205-09
  20. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 210-15
  21. ^ Martin Fido (1987) The Crimes, Detection and Death of Jack the Ripper: 104-5
  22. ^ Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates: 218-22

Further Reading edit

Stewart P. Evans and Donald Rumbelow (2006) Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates. Sutton: Stroud. Category:Crime