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  • #31
    Would the killer go down as far as the abandoned stables in Dutfield's Yard though, after being disturbed? If you're looking for a way out you'd hardly go down a cul de sac. It would mean sneaking past those cottages and the printing office where the editor was sitting reading. If anyone had seen him surely it would have looked suspicious.

    Whereas, if he had remained quite near, in the black as night privies for example, he could have peered out, seen what Diemshutz was doing and then when Mr D went into into the club, made a run for the street.

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    • #32
      Originally posted by Rosella View Post
      Would the killer go down as far as the abandoned stables in Dutfield's Yard though, after being disturbed? If you're looking for a way out you'd hardly go down a cul de sac. It would mean sneaking past those cottages and the printing office where the editor was sitting reading. If anyone had seen him surely it would have looked suspicious.

      Whereas, if he had remained quite near, in the black as night privies for example, he could have peered out, seen what Diemshutz was doing and then when Mr D went into into the club, made a run for the street.
      How does it explain the locked from inside though? Its very strange, but almost makes you think there was some kind of secret exit inside the loft?

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      • #33
        Originally posted by RockySullivan View Post
        Are there any books that go into depth on the Pipeman and BSman aspect of the stride murder?
        I've probably mentioned this article before, but two sailors bearing similar descriptions were seen acting suspicious with Rose Mylett just before her death.

        Mr. Charles Ptolomey, whose name was mentioned in our columns yesterday, as having seen two seamen accost the woman near where she was discovered dead, has received a visit from some officers of Scotland yard. Mr. Ptolomey, who is a night attendant at the Poplar Union, made the following statement to a reporter, yesterday:

        "last night some detectives from Scotland Yard came to see me about this mysterious affair. They asked me if I could identify the sailors? I told them I could pick the men out of a thousand. How I came to notice them was in this way: It was about five minutes to eight o'clock on Wednesday night, when I was going to my work. Upon going up England row (nearly opposite Clarke's yard) I noticed two sailors. The shorter one was speaking to the deceased, and the tall one was walking up and down. So strange did it seem that I stopped and 'took account' of them. Then I heard the woman say several times "No! no! no!" and the short sailor spoke in a low tone. The tall one was about 5ft 11in. He looked like a Yankee. The shorter one was about 5ft 7in. It struck me that they were there for no purpose, and that was the reason I took so much notice of their movements. I shall always remember their faces, and could, as I say, pick them out of a thousand. I have been to the mortuary, and seen the deceased. She is the same woman, and she was sober when I saw her with the sailors."

        Evening News, Dec 29, 1888.
        Regards, Jon S.

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        • #34
          Originally posted by Rosella View Post
          Would the killer go down as far as the abandoned stables in Dutfield's Yard though, after being disturbed? If you're looking for a way out you'd hardly go down a cul de sac. It would mean sneaking past those cottages and the printing office where the editor was sitting reading. If anyone had seen him surely it would have looked suspicious.

          Whereas, if he had remained quite near, in the black as night privies for example, he could have peered out, seen what Diemshutz was doing and then when Mr D went into into the club, made a run for the street.
          OR, since the poney and the cart are still there, he could wait in complete darkness until a small crowd assemble and sneak out, pretending to be one of the curious people.
          Is it progress when a cannibal uses a fork?
          - Stanislaw Jerzy Lee

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          • #35
            Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
            I've probably mentioned this article before, but two sailors bearing similar descriptions were seen acting suspicious with Rose Mylett just before her death.

            Mr. Charles Ptolomey, whose name was mentioned in our columns yesterday, as having seen two seamen accost the woman near where she was discovered dead, has received a visit from some officers of Scotland yard. Mr. Ptolomey, who is a night attendant at the Poplar Union, made the following statement to a reporter, yesterday:

            "last night some detectives from Scotland Yard came to see me about this mysterious affair. They asked me if I could identify the sailors? I told them I could pick the men out of a thousand. How I came to notice them was in this way: It was about five minutes to eight o'clock on Wednesday night, when I was going to my work. Upon going up England row (nearly opposite Clarke's yard) I noticed two sailors. The shorter one was speaking to the deceased, and the tall one was walking up and down. So strange did it seem that I stopped and 'took account' of them. Then I heard the woman say several times "No! no! no!" and the short sailor spoke in a low tone. The tall one was about 5ft 11in. He looked like a Yankee. The shorter one was about 5ft 7in. It struck me that they were there for no purpose, and that was the reason I took so much notice of their movements. I shall always remember their faces, and could, as I say, pick them out of a thousand. I have been to the mortuary, and seen the deceased. She is the same woman, and she was sober when I saw her with the sailors."

            Evening News, Dec 29, 1888.
            Similar to Schwartz account!

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            • #36
              Originally posted by Rosella View Post
              Whereas, if he had remained quite near, in the black as night privies for example, he could have peered out, seen what Diemshutz was doing and then when Mr D went into into the club, made a run for the street.
              Or he could have just killed Diemshutz if he felt like he was going to get caught. Could have stabbed him by his cart and made off before anyone discovered both bodies. If he was in the yard how can he be sure that adiemshutz isnt going to trap him in the yard by yelling for the attention of others
              there,s nothing new, only the unexplored

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              • #37
                He probably didn't have time to think of all the different scenarios. As soon as it became obvious that the pony and cart were very near, Jack bolted. As he certainly didn't get out when the pony and trap were turning into the Yard (or Mr D. somehow didnt notice) he must have left Liz due to some other noise and left quietly a couple of minutes earlier while the pony and cart were up the road.

                If he didn't do that, then he must still have been in that Yard and went somewhere, IMO to the nearest dark spot offering cover. He then probably joined the curious throng and afterward walked off.

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                • #38
                  Unless Reid was completely wrong, the killer seems to have escaped through a locked loft. If this was the way he escaped, he was probably familiar with the loft and there was some type of secret exit inside. Right? I mean how else could it be locked from the inside with no inside? Unless he was hiding in a box inside that the police never searched..it sounds like there was a trap door or something that led either up or down or into a connected building? Unless there were windows and he climbed out a window up onto a rood like Trevor suggests...but wouldn't the police realize a window could be exited through? Is there also a chance that a key could lock the loft from the outside? Wish we had more info on this

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                  • #39
                    It's described as a lock in one description and a bolt somewhere else. If it was a bolt then it truly is a locked room mystery because you can't undo a bolt from the outside.

                    If this loft was properly built then it might have had a trapdoor. Most of the English lofts I've seen are just the upper halves of small barns, used for storage and are accessible only by ladder. They don't usually have doors.

                    However, if Dutfield had been keeping hay, oats and other supplies there I can understand the necessity for a door in that locale!

                    Didn't anyone bother to get in touch with whoever owned these abandoned buildings after the murder, whether Arthur Dutfield or someone else, to supply a key? The police seem to have been a darn sight quicker in forcing the door to this loft that they were to be at Miller's Court!

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                    • #40
                      Originally posted by Rosella View Post
                      It's described as a lock in one description and a bolt somewhere else. If it was a bolt then it truly is a locked room mystery because you can't undo a bolt from the outside.

                      If this loft was properly built then it might have had a trapdoor. Most of the English lofts I've seen are just the upper halves of small barns, used for storage and are accessible only by ladder. They don't usually have doors.

                      However, if Dutfield had been keeping hay, oats and other supplies there I can understand the necessity for a door in that locale!

                      Didn't anyone bother to get in touch with whoever owned these abandoned buildings after the murder, whether Arthur Dutfield or someone else, to supply a key? The police seem to have been a darn sight quicker in forcing the door to this loft that they were to be at Miller's Court!
                      If there was a trap door and it was a bolt, that definitely suggests the murder used this route to escape. And if so it doesn't it indicate the killer was likely well acquainted with the loft in Dutfield yard? Who was in charge of the loft? Was the loft used by the club or another building? What are the abandoned buildings you speak of Rosella? A great example of poor police work, policemen really are bumbling idiots, the whole lot of them. If Reid haddn;t noted how strange this was I don't think we'd ever have heard of it. Unless they were investigating and chose to downplay this...but then why would Reid mention it in passing?
                      Last edited by RockySullivan; 10-24-2015, 09:30 PM.

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                      • #41
                        The stables, and presumably the loft, weren't really abandoned just empty and disused. Arthur Dutfield had owned a business, A Dutfiield, van and cart builder, in the buildings at the top of the Yard, but he had moved to Pinchin St. (His name was still on the gates.)

                        He probably had used the stables in his business. However, a W Hindley, had a store or workshop up there for his sack manufacturing business. You wouldn't think he would have a loft, but you never know.

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                        • #42
                          Was the door relocked after him?

                          Originally posted by RockySullivan View Post
                          Unless Reid was completely wrong, the killer seems to have escaped through a locked loft. If this was the way he escaped, he was probably familiar with the loft and there was some type of secret exit inside. Right? I mean how else could it be locked from the inside with no inside? Unless he was hiding in a box inside that the police never searched..it sounds like there was a trap door or something that led either up or down or into a connected building? Unless there were windows and he climbed out a window up onto a rood like Trevor suggests...but wouldn't the police realize a window could be exited through? Is there also a chance that a key could lock the loft from the outside? Wish we had more info on this
                          One other idea might be if a confederate locked the door behind Jack after he had escaped, then went out and mingled with the crowd. I know it doesn't work if we presume Jack worked alone, but it is an alternative explanation to your question.
                          Pat D. https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...rt/reading.gif
                          ---------------
                          Von Konigswald: Jack the Ripper plays shuffleboard. -- Happy Birthday, Wanda June by Kurt Vonnegut, c.1970.
                          ---------------

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                          • #43
                            Originally posted by Pcdunn View Post
                            One other idea might be if a confederate locked the door behind Jack after he had escaped, then went out and mingled with the crowd. I know it doesn't work if we presume Jack worked alone, but it is an alternative explanation to your question.
                            Right but like Rosella said Reid claims it was bolted from the inside.

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                            • #44
                              A YouTube I found, gets some details like the Yard being paved wrong, but is interesting. The taller building, I have just read from 'JTR Location Photos, the Whitby Collection' housed the sack business.

                              A black and white vintage film showing the interior of Dutfield's Yard in Berner Street. Location of Elizabeth Stride's Murder at the hands of Jack the Rippe...


                              The smaller building was referred to on Goad's Fire Insurance Map of 1892 as a Forge. That would probably have been used by Dutfield, who was a wheelright. However, he'd moved remember, when Stride was killed.
                              Last edited by Rosella; 10-25-2015, 12:05 AM.

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                              • #45
                                Originally posted by Rosella View Post
                                A YouTube I found, gets some details like the Yard being paved wrong, but is interesting. The taller building, I have just read from 'JTR Location Photos, the Whitby Collection' housed the sack business.

                                A black and white vintage film showing the interior of Dutfield's Yard in Berner Street. Location of Elizabeth Stride's Murder at the hands of Jack the Rippe...


                                The smaller building was referred to on Goad's Fire Insurance Map of 1892 as a Forge. That would probably have been used by Dutfield, who was a wheelright. However, he'd moved remember, when Stride was killed.
                                Moved to Pinchin, you say? Where about do you know? Close to the arch where the Torso was found I wonder?

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