Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

PC Thain's Cape

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • PC Thain's Cape

    In another thread last week I was a little surprised to see Fisherman say of PC Thain that, before he went to knock up Dr Llewellyn: "He probably...popped into the slaughterers in Winthrop Street to pick up his cape, but that would not take long."

    I was surprised because I had thought PC Thain must have collected his cape after he visited the doctor. I am aware that he was asked at the inquest if he did collect his cape beforehand but he denied this, as it is stated in the Times report: "When he was sent for doctor he did not first go to the horse-slaughterers and say that as a murder had been committed he had better fetch his cape".

    On looking at the evidence of Henry Tomkins it is clear that Thain visited the slaughterhouse after having summoned the doctor. Tomkins says that Thain came to collect his cape at 4:15 and that, following this, he and a couple of his colleagues went to Buck's Row to see the body. Tomkins said at the inquest that "At that time a doctor and three or four constables were there". Under questioning from the coroner, Tomkins also said that there were also two men at the scene. These must be the two men who PC Thain said he saw by the body when he returned with the doctor.

    So it would appear straightforward that, having returned to Buck's Row with the doctor at about 4:10pm, Thain slipped away for his cape and mentioned the murder to Tomkins. Thain returned to the scene, followed shortly thereafter by Tomkins and his colleagues. The fact that the doctor was on site when Tomkins arrives seems to confirm this chronology.

    That being so, it is fair to say that Thain was not delayed in fetching the doctor because he wanted to first collect his cape.

    So does this mean that we have a timing gap here? If PC Neil discovered the body at 3:45, why was it not until "about 4:00" that PC Thain got to wake up Dr Llewellyn. Why did it take 15 minutes when the walk from Buck's Row to Dr Llewellyn's home at 152 Whitechapel Road should only have taken about 2 minutes at a brisk pace? Well one thing that we should note is that in his statement which was circulated to the press on 31 August, Dr Llewellyn said: "I was called to Buck's row about five minutes to four this morning". While he doesn't seem to have repeated this in the inquest, if 3:55 is more accurate it would bring the gap down to 10 minutes. Given that the time of 3:45 is only approximate it does not seem to be inconceivable that PC Thain only set off for the doctor at about 3:50 (allowing a few minutes for Neil to have examined the body on his own and for Thain to have arrived at the murder site). This means we only need to explain the difference between 2 and 5 minutes. And 3:52 is consistent with "about 3:55". We should also bear in mind that PC Thain probably first woke the doctor's servant who then woke up the doctor so there are potentially a few minutes involved in that situation.

    Fisherman might disagree but I don't think we have another "major gap" in the timings here.

  • #2
    We do have an example to go by.
    Dr. Blackwell took (by his reckoning) six minutes to get to Berner Street.
    A distance that can easily be covered in 80 seconds.
    dustymiller
    aka drstrange

    Comment


    • #3
      Also...

      Think you also need to take into consideration that it would have taken a gentleman far longer to get dressed in Victorian times.

      Wouldn't have been a matter of pulling on a sweater & a pair of jeans. The doctor would have had lots of fiddly buttons to deal with, then perhaps also have taken another minute to check the contents of his medical bag.
      If the doctor was under the impression that the victim was already dead and he could do nothing to save her, he might not have rushed to get ready.
      Amanda

      Comment


      • #4
        That's right, Amanda. Unless the doctor rushed out with just a scarf wrapped round his neck, there would also be the small but fiddly matter of putting studs in his shirt to attach the separate collar, and then tying a cravat and buttoning up a waistcoat.

        If he'd been asleep, too, he would have hardly ran off without sloshing some water on his face and brushing his hair down. All in all, although doctors were used to hurriedly dressing, it could all well have taken three or four minutes or more.

        Gas wasnt usually fitted in bedrooms in the 1880's because of fumes, so all the dressing would have had to be done by the light of a candle.

        Comment


        • #5
          To the above three posters, the critical period is the period between Thain departing the murder site in Buck's Row and arriving at the door of Dr Llewellyn's house in Whitechapel Road. To that extent, what happened after Thain knocked at the door is not quite on the point although, having said that, if it took the doctor a certain amount of time to wake up (get dressed etc.) and then work out what time it was, that could certainly explain why he thought it was closer to 4am when Thain called than 3:45.

          Comment

          Working...
          X