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Did The Ripper Die Shortly After His Last Kill?

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  • Did The Ripper Die Shortly After His Last Kill?

    Although I am on the fence about this, for the sake of this discussion I am going to assume Mary Jane Kelly is a Ripper victim.

    After the Ripper kills Nichols, he kills again very quickly. Within the week. His mutilations escalate. Then he doesn't kill again for 3 weeks, at which point he kills Stride, but appears to be interrupted. He then kills Eddowes. The level of violence perpetrated on her is an escalation from the violence done to Chapman. He then disappears for 6 weeks, after which he kills Kelly. Again the violence escalates. It's hard to look at 5 murders and claim a clear pattern, however he does look as if he kills twice within a short space of time. Disappears. Kills twice within a very short space of time. Disappears. Then kills once. I think that, if he were in a position to do so, he would kill again, very quickly, with (if it's possible!) even more violence. But he doesn't. He walks out of Millers Court and disappears.

    I think it might be possible that he himself died within the week or two after that killing. Maybe even within the week. So I'm wondering if any of the archivists in the audience would feel like running a search for deaths with the following parameters:

    - Lives in the East End. Whitechapel, Shoreditch, Aldgate, maybe Hoxton. I wouldn't go further afield than that.

    - No younger than 25. I think he's been a while in the making, and I'd be surprised if he got his act together younger.

    - No older than 45. Actually I think he's probably younger than that, but I'm going to the outside parameters of what I think is possible.

    - If he's Jewish, either someone born in the East End or someone who was brought there very young. After the Leather Apron thing I doubt an East End whore would go anywhere with a Jewish immigrant who spoke with a pronounced accent or looked 'foreign'.

    - Dead within 2 weeks of the murders. Or dead within three weeks after having been incapacitated within 2 weeks.

    People died of all sorts of stuff then: virus, infection. There were no safety standards, so lots of work-related accidents and deaths. A nasty family history could fell Our Boy via a heart attack in his early 30s. However I doubt there would have been hundreds of men dying in that area with those credentials in that time frame. Anyone want to take this on? I'd do it myself but there is a limit how far I can get on a computer over in Canada!

  • #2
    Originally posted by Chava View Post
    I think it might be possible that he himself died within the week or two after that killing. Maybe even within the week. So I'm wondering if any of the archivists in the audience would feel like running a search for deaths with the following parameters:
    I think you can run as good a search as can easily be done in the UK, by going to www.freebmd.org.uk, and specifying deaths in the final quarter of 1888, in a registration district of your choice. You can either run a search without specifying an age and then pick out the men with acceptable ages, or else run a series of searches specifying different ages.

    The numbers wouldn't be unmanageable - it looks as though there might be something like 60 male deaths, with ages 25-45, registered in Whitechapel in the quarter, which would imply about 10 within a fortnight after the murder of Kelly. But unfortunately there's no obvious way of separating these out.

    The only realistic way I can think of going further would be to ask for searches in cemetery records (probably not unreasonable, given the limited time-frame). And then I suppose you could try to research the few dozen who died in or near Whitechapel.

    Comment


    • #3
      Hi Chava
      The main problem you would face would be isolating which men died during a specific 2 or 3 week period. The searchable indices of deaths are sorted not by individual date or even month but by quarter. This is as near as you can get without starting on the time and expense of ordering individual certificates.
      For example the quarter you would be interested in would be Quarter 4 of 1888 which covers the months October to December. If you looked up and found a John Smith listed as dying in e.g. Whitechapel in that Quarter, until you get to see the certificate there is no way of knowing when within those three months he died. That it is to say, he may well have died in early October, before the Kelly murder.
      As a very rough guides the number of deaths registered in this quarter are:
      Whitechapel - 527 (this is male and female)
      St George in the East - 275
      On the very approximate assumption that the ratio of sexes dying may be roughly 50:50 (but I have no evidence of this), you could be looking at a number of male deaths for that quarter in those two districts approaching 400
      Of course as Chris says this would be reduced by the age ranges you mention
      For persons aged 25 to 25 (1e born 1853 +- 10 years) the numbers are for that quarter:
      Whitechapel: 109 (male and female)
      St George East - 32
      London City (for parts of Aldgate) - 73
      Stepney - 33
      Of course if you start including the outlying but feasible districts such as Mile End and Bethnal Green, the numbers increase considerably

      Chris
      Last edited by Chris Scott; 11-03-2008, 06:00 PM.

      Comment


      • #4
        Although it would be nowhere near a comprehensive list, a starting point would be a check of newspaper archives of the period which could give information of noteworthy deaths such as suicides.

        I one listed all the male suicides I could find reported in the Times of London between Nov. 10, 1888 and Jan. 31, 1889. There were at least two or three that looked somewhat plausible as possibilities for suspects, i.e. right age and location. Of course, no mention of Druitt's death is found is that publication or any other online newspaper archive I could find.

        Unfortunately, I no longer have access to the 19th Century British newspaper database.
        Last edited by aspallek; 11-03-2008, 11:32 PM.

        Comment


        • #5
          Ouch! I knew this wouldn't be easy! Thanks Chris for that invaluable website. And thanks Chris Scott for the other info. It'll be a long, hard slog. But I think there is an excellent chance that the Ripper died shortly after his last victim.

          Comment


          • #6
            Hi Chava

            A sentence from Macnaghton's autobiography of 1914, little quoted....

            I incline to the belief that the individual who held up London in terror resided with his own people; that he absented himself from home at certain times and that he committed suicide on or about the 10th of November 1888.....

            Did he know or did he only 'thought he knew' or is he lying?

            'His own people'? Shades of Anderson's comments much discussed here.

            Suicide around Nov 10th 1888? A bit specific that don't you think?
            allisvanityandvexationofspirit

            Comment


            • #7
              Maybe that was just a "censored bit " of Dr Bond"s 10th November ,"Profile of the Ripper"?

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Stephen Thomas View Post
                Hi Chava

                A sentence from Macnaghton's autobiography of 1914, little quoted....

                I incline to the belief that the individual who held up London in terror resided with his own people; that he absented himself from home at certain times and that he committed suicide on or about the 10th of November 1888.....

                Did he know or did he only 'thought he knew' or is he lying?

                'His own people'? Shades of Anderson's comments much discussed here.

                Suicide around Nov 10th 1888? A bit specific that don't you think?
                This statement is an echo of Farquharson who claimed that this "son of a surgeon" committed suicide on the night of the last murder, indicating at least partial reliance upon Farquharson on the part of Macnaghten. Elsewhere Macnaghten displays proper knowledge of the timing of Druitt's demise, indicating that he was found drowned in the Thames on Dec. 31 after having been in the water upwards of a month.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Chava View Post
                  Although I am on the fence about this, for the sake of this discussion I am going to assume Mary Jane Kelly is a Ripper victim.

                  After the Ripper kills Nichols, he kills again very quickly. Within the week. His mutilations escalate. Then he doesn't kill again for 3 weeks, at which point he kills Stride, but appears to be interrupted. He then kills Eddowes. The level of violence perpetrated on her is an escalation from the violence done to Chapman. He then disappears for 6 weeks, after which he kills Kelly. Again the violence escalates. It's hard to look at 5 murders and claim a clear pattern, however he does look as if he kills twice within a short space of time. Disappears. Kills twice within a very short space of time. Disappears. Then kills once. I think that, if he were in a position to do so, he would kill again, very quickly, with (if it's possible!) even more violence. But he doesn't. He walks out of Millers Court and disappears.

                  I think it might be possible that he himself died within the week or two after that killing. Maybe even within the week. So I'm wondering if any of the archivists in the audience would feel like running a search for deaths with the following parameters:

                  - Lives in the East End. Whitechapel, Shoreditch, Aldgate, maybe Hoxton. I wouldn't go further afield than that.

                  - No younger than 25. I think he's been a while in the making, and I'd be surprised if he got his act together younger.

                  - No older than 45. Actually I think he's probably younger than that, but I'm going to the outside parameters of what I think is possible.

                  - If he's Jewish, either someone born in the East End or someone who was brought there very young. After the Leather Apron thing I doubt an East End whore would go anywhere with a Jewish immigrant who spoke with a pronounced accent or looked 'foreign'.

                  - Dead within 2 weeks of the murders. Or dead within three weeks after having been incapacitated within 2 weeks.

                  People died of all sorts of stuff then: virus, infection. There were no safety standards, so lots of work-related accidents and deaths. A nasty family history could fell Our Boy via a heart attack in his early 30s. However I doubt there would have been hundreds of men dying in that area with those credentials in that time frame. Anyone want to take this on? I'd do it myself but there is a limit how far I can get on a computer over in Canada!
                  Great idea Chava. I've always belied he died, was jailed or emigrated a short while after the murders. I dont think anyone who could kill five people in ten weeks would stop voluntarily
                  It was Bury whodunnit. The black eyed scoundrel.

                  The yam yams are the men, who won't be blamed for nothing..

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    I thought he might have emigrated as well--gone on to NY maybe. Of course there are the Nicaragua and Jamaican killings. But the problem is that unfortunately killers of this kind tend to do many things in a similar way. I can't believe that the man who killed Kelly stopped killing and didn't start again until 1889. Although I think this guy is extremely organized, I don't think he is necessarily extremely controlled. Either he left town immediately after the Kelly killing--and found himself shipboard for months--or something major prevented him from going out on his spree. I suspect strongly that what stopped him was extremely incapacitating illness or death. I think that's the only thing that would stop him.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Chava View Post
                      I thought he might have emigrated as well--gone on to NY maybe. Of course there are the Nicaragua and Jamaican killings. But the problem is that unfortunately killers of this kind tend to do many things in a similar way. I can't believe that the man who killed Kelly stopped killing and didn't start again until 1889. Although I think this guy is extremely organized, I don't think he is necessarily extremely controlled. Either he left town immediately after the Kelly killing--and found himself shipboard for months--or something major prevented him from going out on his spree. I suspect strongly that what stopped him was extremely incapacitating illness or death. I think that's the only thing that would stop him.
                      Or with the Kelly killing he achieved his goal, or conversely, found he no longer recieved gratification from "rippings"
                      We are all born cute as a button and dumb as rocks. We grow out of cute fast!

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        You could be right but IMO I can't see Jack just stopping after Kelly. Not of his own volition. Jack was getting his jollies and I believe he would have continued if he could have. Why did he stop? As has been said previously and I agree, he died, he was imprisoned/committed, he emigrated. I'm not an expert by any stretch but I find it difficult to think that Jack would suddenly just go 'No, not doing that any more'. Let's face it, whoever Jack was, he was way out of the sanity stakes by the time he did Kelly.

                        I'm more interested in why he waited so long after Stride and Eddowes before he killed again. I don't think it was because he wouldn't, I think it was because he couldn't and that's why he butchered Kelly. Either he left the area for that time (but then I suppose he could have killed elsewhere) or something or someone happened in his life that stopped him from prowling.

                        I think Chava's idea has a lot of merit but from the replies it sounds like you'd have to be a full time researcher to find out the facts.

                        Personally, I think Jack died after Miller's Ct. I can't prove it but I think that if he was free to kill again, he would have.
                        http://oznewsandviews.proboards.com

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Hi,

                          Simply put, Mary Jane was the Ripper's last victim, in London. He may have killed other women els were after 1888. However, Jack the Ripper started Killing well before 1888. The murders stoped because he simply got old and he was able to control his impulses.

                          Your friend, Brad

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            I have a problem with the idea that Jack suddenly grew old and retired.
                            I don't believe he started with Nicholls. I don't believe Tabram was one of Jack's gets either. He started with animal abuse, arson.

                            Jack didn't stop because he retired. Someone or something made him stop.
                            http://oznewsandviews.proboards.com

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Hi guys,

                              Unfortunately there are two problems with this whole line of questioning.

                              Firstly, we don't even know for sure which was Jack's last victim. Some people say he murdered ten, some say five and some say three. A number of people, myself included, hold serious doubts as far as Mary Kelly is concerned and hesitate to include her among the Ripper victims. I also believe he started with Nichols.
                              That would be interesting, because if true, then we have three murders intensely committed during a period of just one month.
                              But the point is, that the question asked in the subject line of this thread is nearly impossible to answer since we can't know when the Ripper murders actually did stop and with which victim.

                              Secondly, it is a misconception that serial killers can't stop on their own (ort at least take extremely long cooling off periods) - on the contrary, we have people like Dennis Rader (BTK Killer) who are proof of this.

                              All the best
                              The Swedes are the Men that Will not Be Blamed for Nothing

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