Here is an October 15, 1888 American medical journal article that I found very interesting, so I thought I'd share it with you.
(I'm not sure if this article has been posted in the past; my apologies if it has.)
It appeared in the October 15, 1888 edition of 'The Medical Times', a semi-monthly journal.
The article was published during the midst of the Whitechapel Murders, 2 weeks after the murders of Elizabeth Stride & Catherine Eddowes and
over 3 weeks before the murder of Mary Kelly. It mentions Forbes Winslow and states that "eight women" had been murdered to date, though unfortunately it does not list the names of those victims.
It discusses rage-induced "madness" as a motive for the murders and critiques current (October 1888) theories regarding the removal of female organs from the victims.
Though it does so without naming names, probably for legal reasons, this article makes also clear reference to Dr. Tumblety.
I'm no Tumblety expert, but I found it particularly interesting that Tumblety was mentioned in an article discussing the Ripper Murders over 3 weeks before his November 7, 1888 arrest.
Towards the bottom there is an odd bit about Yellow Fever and "cleanliness" which seems to signal the end of the Whitechapel Murders discussion, but if you read on, in the very last sentence the journal states that it was "informed that the person who offered $100 each for uteri is a Philadelphia gynecologist who was in London last summer".
It does not name the informant, nor is there is any mention of Coroner Baxter.
-Any thoughts?
Best regards, Archaic
Note: The ' Tait ' mentioned in this article is Dr. Robert Lawson Tait. He was a well-known specialist in Ovariotomy (the surgical removal of the ovaries) and authored books upon the pathology and treatment of diseases afflicting women.
(I'm not sure if this article has been posted in the past; my apologies if it has.)
It appeared in the October 15, 1888 edition of 'The Medical Times', a semi-monthly journal.
The article was published during the midst of the Whitechapel Murders, 2 weeks after the murders of Elizabeth Stride & Catherine Eddowes and
over 3 weeks before the murder of Mary Kelly. It mentions Forbes Winslow and states that "eight women" had been murdered to date, though unfortunately it does not list the names of those victims.
It discusses rage-induced "madness" as a motive for the murders and critiques current (October 1888) theories regarding the removal of female organs from the victims.
Though it does so without naming names, probably for legal reasons, this article makes also clear reference to Dr. Tumblety.
I'm no Tumblety expert, but I found it particularly interesting that Tumblety was mentioned in an article discussing the Ripper Murders over 3 weeks before his November 7, 1888 arrest.
Towards the bottom there is an odd bit about Yellow Fever and "cleanliness" which seems to signal the end of the Whitechapel Murders discussion, but if you read on, in the very last sentence the journal states that it was "informed that the person who offered $100 each for uteri is a Philadelphia gynecologist who was in London last summer".
It does not name the informant, nor is there is any mention of Coroner Baxter.
-Any thoughts?
Best regards, Archaic
Note: The ' Tait ' mentioned in this article is Dr. Robert Lawson Tait. He was a well-known specialist in Ovariotomy (the surgical removal of the ovaries) and authored books upon the pathology and treatment of diseases afflicting women.
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