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When was Elizabeth Stride actually killed?

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  • When was Elizabeth Stride actually killed?

    Schwartz is the key witness in putting a timeline on Stride till the discovery of her body a short time after in Dutfield’s Lane.

    But remove Schwartz and use Fanny Mortimer's statements, then when was Liz killed? Mortimer saw nothing out of the ordinary while she was on her door step, contradicting Schwartz’s tale of himself as the victim. Note: Charles Letchford tends to support Mortimer over Schwartz.

    Following Mortimer's statement, could it mean Liz was killed earlier, probably more than 40 minutes earlier than being discovered? That it happened before she was out on her doorstep seeing nothing?

    So as an exercise (only) could Liz have been killed earlier? This is a “what if” scenario just looking at facts differently.

    We have Constable William Smith seeing a couple he later thought was Stride and a man at 12.30am in Berner St. At the Inquest, he thought he saw a flower on the woman’s jacket “proving” it was Liz.

    He described the man as being about 28 years of age, 5ft 7in tall, wearing a dark overcoat and trousers. He also wore a hard felt deerstalker hat and was described as 'respectable' looking. ……….. Smith heard no conversation, the couple appeared sober and were not acting in a suspicious manner.
    Yet at 12.45 am James Brown saw a very similar couple.

    The man was described as being about 5ft 7in tall and stoutly built, wearing a long overcoat which went down almost to his heels. He was wearing a hat, but Brown was unable to describe it. It was quite dark, so he could not tell if the woman was wearing a flower on her jacket, but both appeared sober.
    The woman spoke without an accent , so that would preclude it was Liz, Smith never heard the woman speak.

    We have two couples almost identical, or the same couple seen 15 minutes apart?

    For this exercise I am going to say, one couple seen twice and that couple was not Liz and a man.

    So when was Liz last seen?

    William Marshall said he saw a couple between 11.45am and midnight again a description close to who Smith and Brown saw

    Because there was no lamp nearby, Marshall could not see the man's face clearly, but was able to furnish the inquest with other particulars - he was middle-aged and stout, about 5ft 6in tall, respectably dressed in a small black cut-away coat and dark trousers. He was wearing a small peaked cap, "something like a sailor would wear". He had the appearance of a clerk. The woman was wearing a black jacket and skirt and a black crape bonnet, but did not see the flower that was pinned to the jacket.
    So is there a definitive sighting of Liz really? Joseph Gardner’s statements clearly show a lot of information was in the public domain prior to the Inquest. Especially the dead women had a flower in her jacket, that undermines Smith’s testimony as he was “recalling” the couple. He already knew the corpse had a flower in her jacket.

    Gardner corroborated all that Best said respecting the conduct of the man and the woman at the Bricklayers' Arms, adding "before I got into the mortuary to-day (Sunday), I told you the woman had a flower in her jacket, and that she had a short jacket. Well, I have been to the mortuary and there she was with the dahlias on her right side of her jacket.
    My "what if", is could Liz have been killed earlier from between 11.30pm to 12.30am?

    Thomas Coram found a bloody knife nearby at 12.30am.

    He was returning home from seeing friends at 16 Bath Gardens, Brady Street in the early hours of 1st October 1888, when at about 12.30am he passed No. 253 Whitechapel Road (a laundry business belonging to Mr Christmas) and noticed a knife lying on the bottom of two steps that led to the front door. A bloodstained handkerchief was folded and twisted round the handle and the blade was 9 to 10ins long.
    He told Constable Drage who………..

    Drage picked up the knife and saw that it was smothered with dried blood and that a blood-stained handkerchief had been tied round the handle with string. On being asked how he came upon the knife, Coram replied that he was looking down when he caught sight of something white. Drage took down his details and the two went, with the knife, to Leman Street Police Station.
    The knife was later considered unlikely to be the murder weapon by Bagster Phillips but was never fully investigated,

    Drage was certain the knife had not been there 15 minutes before Coram found it i.e. at 12.15am. Again it was never investigated any further.

    So could that be the weapon that killed Liz between 12 midnight and 12.15am?

    The main stumbling block to Liz being killed earlier becomes Joseph Lave who said he was in Dutfield’s Lane itself at 12.40am and saw nothing. Yet it was to dark to see anything.

    In a statement to the press, he claimed that he had gone into Dutfield's Yard at 12.40am to get a breath of fresh air: "So far as I could see I was out in the street about half an hour, and while I was out nobody came into the yard, nor did I see anybody moving about there in a way to excite my suspicions."

    It was so dark in the yard that he had to feel his way along the wall of the club to find his way back in.
    If Lave did not see Liz because it was to dark, then is there any hard evidence as to when Liz was seen and when she was killed? So could have Liz been killed before 12.30am and the couple seen by Marshall, Smith and Brown been another couple entirely?

    The point of the post flows onto to Eddowe’s death, it gives JtR much longer time to get to get to Mitre Square. It gives him more time to “write" the infamous graffiti in Coulston Place.

    I disregard “time of death” findings as the endless debate on Annie Chapman’s death shows it was an inexact science in that era.

    Selective use of facts can “prove” anything of course, for example two witnesses universally disregarded are Isaac Kozebrdsky and Edward Spooner who both independently say it was approximately 12.40am they were at Dutfield’s Lane to see the body.

    So exact timing down to exact minutes is extremely perilous and mostly wish fulfilment to support a theory because the limited facts available can be shuffled round to support any theory.


    Note all quotes come from the witness segments on this Board.

  • #2
    Coram found the knife in the early hour of the next day, Oct. 1st, not Sept. 30 -- the morning the murders were committed.

    Also, P C Smith filed his report before any description of Stride was common knowledge. In fact, it was Smith's description of the man he saw with Stride that was first circulated by the police.
    Best Wishes,
    Hunter
    ____________________________________________

    When evidence is not to be had, theories abound. Even the most plausible of them do not carry conviction- London Times Nov. 10.1888

    Comment


    • #3
      time

      Hello Sunbury. Thanks for starting this thread.

      I think that, given the forensic evidence, a time BEFORE 12.30 can be ruled out.

      Dr. Phillips and the club members both assigned a time around 12.45 for her death. I see no reason to doubt that.

      Cheers.
      LC

      Comment


      • #4
        And let´s not forget Blackwell:

        Coroner: "How long had the deceased been dead when you saw her?"

        Blackwell: "From 20 minutes to half an hour when I arrived"

        Blackwell arrived at 1.16 sharp, so he believed she died in the interval 00.46 - 00.56.

        All the best, Sunbury. And thanks for lifting the discussion over to the correct place!

        Fisherman
        Last edited by Fisherman; 05-13-2014, 05:54 AM.

        Comment


        • #5
          As will be noted, the Blackwell estimation seemingly allows for the Schwartz scenario.
          To this discussion belongs that snippet from The Scotsman of October 2, actually fleshing out on an article from the Echo the day before:

          "The club itself, which is next door to the large gate, was yesterday closed; but all the forenoon members and others who have special business there were admitted after knocking at the door. The committee of the institution held a meeting yesterday morning, at which the crime was talked over, and it was decided not to admit any stranger without the payment of a fee. This fee, the secretary explained, was to assist the propaganda. The committee, it seems, did not fix the amount to be charged, but, in reply to a question, the secretary said he thought 5s. would not be too much. In the course of conversation the secretary mentioned the fact that the murderer had, no doubt, been disturbed in his work, as about a quarter to one o'clock on Sunday morning he was seen - or, at least, a man whom some persons regard as the murderer - being chased by another man along Fairclough Street which runs across Berner Street, close to the club, and which is interesected on the right by Providence Street, Brunswick Street, and Christian Street, and on the left by Batty Street and Grove Street, the two latter running up into Commercial Road. The pursued escaped, however, and the secretary of the club cannot remember the name of the man who gave chase, but he is not a member of their body."

          To me, this has always very much sounded like a description of Schwartz fleeing down Fairclough Street, Pipeman hot on his heels. The scenery has mistakenly been interpreted as the murderer being chased, while it fact would have been Schwartz.

          I believe it is the closest thing to a corroboration of the Schwartz story we have.

          The best,
          Fisherman

          Comment


          • #6
            Now that's a good observation, Christer. Thanks.

            Comment


            • #7
              The pursued escaped, however, and the secretary of the club cannot remember the name of the man who gave chase, but he is not a member of their body.

              This bit's interesting, especially if the pursuer was "Pipeman", as it would imply that his name was taken at some point, perhaps at the club as a visitor, even if he wasn't a regular there.

              Comment


              • #8
                and the secretary of the club cannot remember the name of the man who gave chase, but he is not a member of their body."
                So he was known , but just not remembered ?? Corroboration and conspiracy all in one post , gotta love that

                moonbegger ..

                Comment


                • #9
                  T
                  To me, this has always very much sounded like a description of Schwartz fleeing down Fairclough Street, Pipeman hot on his heels. The scenery has mistakenly been interpreted as the murderer being chased, while in fact it would have been Schwartz.
                  Or both if Schwartz was the murderer? Given that his account is out of kilter with that of the other witnesses, and that he ran from the scene of one of the murders, I've often wondered why he seems never to have been under serious consideration as a suspect.
                  I won't always agree but I'll try not to be disagreeable.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Fair point Colin!

                    All the best

                    Dave

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      1888
                      Kind regards, Sam Flynn

                      "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        I bet our good friend, Michael Richards is out buying a stopwatch and will be up all night compiling an Excel spreadsheet.

                        Just messin' with you, Michael.

                        c.d.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Fisherman View Post

                          "The club itself, which is next door to the large gate, was yesterday closed; but all the forenoon members and others who have special business there were admitted after knocking at the door. The committee of the institution held a meeting yesterday morning, at which the crime was talked over, and it was decided not to admit any stranger without the payment of a fee. This fee, the secretary explained, was to assist the propaganda. The committee, it seems, did not fix the amount to be charged, but, in reply to a question, the secretary said he thought 5s. would not be too much. In the course of conversation the secretary mentioned the fact that the murderer had, no doubt, been disturbed in his work, as about a quarter to one o'clock on Sunday morning he was seen - or, at least, a man whom some persons regard as the murderer - being chased by another man along Fairclough Street which runs across Berner Street, close to the club, and which is interesected on the right by Providence Street, Brunswick Street, and Christian Street, and on the left by Batty Street and Grove Street, the two latter running up into Commercial Road. The pursued escaped, however, and the secretary of the club cannot remember the name of the man who gave chase, but he is not a member of their body."

                          To me, this has always very much sounded like a description of Schwartz fleeing down Fairclough Street, Pipeman hot on his heels. The scenery has mistakenly been interpreted as the murderer being chased, while it fact would have been Schwartz.
                          Because this is obviously repeated second hand, it seems like a garbled account of someone watching Diemschitz & Kozebrodski run across Fairclough St. Whoever saw this must have assumed one was chasing the other, in actual fact they were together.

                          "I ran off at once for the police. I could not find a constable in the direction which I took, so I shouted out "Police!" as loudly as I could."
                          Diemschitz.

                          "I went to look for a policeman at the request of Diemschitz or some other member of the club, but I took the direction towards Grove-street and could not find one. I afterwards went into the Commercial-road along with Eagle, and found two officers."
                          Kozebrodski.
                          Regards, Jon S.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Time.

                            About 12:51. There I said it. Deal with it.
                            Valour pleases Crom.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
                              Because this is obviously repeated second hand, it seems like a garbled account of someone watching Diemschitz & Kozebrodski run across Fairclough St. Whoever saw this must have assumed one was chasing the other, in actual fact they were together.

                              "I ran off at once for the police. I could not find a constable in the direction which I took, so I shouted out "Police!" as loudly as I could."
                              Diemschitz.

                              "I went to look for a policeman at the request of Diemschitz or some other member of the club, but I took the direction towards Grove-street and could not find one. I afterwards went into the Commercial-road along with Eagle, and found two officers."
                              Kozebrodski.
                              But the secretary of the club, remember, claimed that the chasing man was not a member of the club.
                              If you are correct, then botch the chaser and the chased man WERE club members. Why did the secretary fail to recognize one man and falsely claim that the other was not a club member?

                              And would he not hear Diemschitz yelling for the police?

                              It does not pan out, does it?

                              The best, Jon!
                              Fisherman

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