This is an extraordinary farrago of a story!
It is from a much longer article which I am transcribing but this sections tells of an extraordinary woman nicknamed "Murder Mag" (although the first mention of her calls her Murderer Mag!) She was allegedly a close friend of the "first woman killed" but the article does not specify who is meant by that. Mag then wholly or partly loses her reason and becomes obsessed by the murders as you will read.
Even more bizarre, the writer details a theory of Mag's to which he appears to give some credence that one murder was witnessed by a police constable who was too terrified to do anything about it. The description suggests a garbled version of the Kelly murder, and, indeed could not apply to any other in the series, in my opinion.
The location of the lodging house where the writer meets Mag is not specified but is described as "within a block or two of the scene of the first Ripper murder." A detailed description is given which will be in the full article when I post it.
Make what you will of this bizarre tale.
I will post the whole article when done.
Logansport Reporter
20 June 1895
From "Night in Darkest Hell: Edward Marshall Describes a Trip Through Whitechapel"
It was in this lodging house that we met "Murderer Mag." She gained her name from the fact that since the very first of the Ripper murders she has devoted her life to the crude study of the crimes. The first woman killed was her mate, and the crime may have turned her mind. At any rate whenever she has had money enough to pay the miserable rental which would secure the place she has made it a practice to live, for at least a month each in the rooms in which the murders were committed, and to haunt the accursed spots on which the street butcheries took place. She can talk of nothing else and details with a horrid relish the minutest gossip of the bloody killings. It is her theory that the murders were done by a sailor who went on a long voyage after he finished his first series and will come back before long to begin a second. She hailed the news of the recent Butler Street murder with a kind of glee, assuming instantly that her prophecy had come true. But after she had gone posthaste to the scene of the crime and examined its gruesome details, she sorrowfully announced that she was wrong, and that the crime had been by less skilful hands than Jack's. Mag is one of the character's of Whitechapel - horribly in keeping with the place. She followed us when we visited one or two of the murder rooms and her explanations could not be suppressed. She is probably tight in one theory which the police cry out against, viz. that one of the murders was actually witnessed by a constable who was too badly frightened to interfere with the murderer after he had finished. The crime was done in a room opening off a small courtyard at the end of a short blind alley. This court is not more than twelve by sixteen feet in size, and a constable was surely standing in it while the murder and its following horrors were going on. Add to this fact the others that the man could not have done his work without a light, and that the window of the room was curtainless and the proof that the cowardly constable seem complete. But, after all, it is scarcely fair to expect a man who works for thirty shillings a week to risk his life in an encounter with such a desperate cut-throat as Whitechapel's historic murderer must have been.
On the scene of one of the sidewalk murders a tiny cockney was swinging on a chain hanging from the tail of a truck. He observed us with indifference, but when he saw Murder(sic) Mag he scurried away into one of the hole like doorways, as might a frightened rat. She was too horrible for even a case hardened Whitechapel gamin to gaze on with complacency.
It is from a much longer article which I am transcribing but this sections tells of an extraordinary woman nicknamed "Murder Mag" (although the first mention of her calls her Murderer Mag!) She was allegedly a close friend of the "first woman killed" but the article does not specify who is meant by that. Mag then wholly or partly loses her reason and becomes obsessed by the murders as you will read.
Even more bizarre, the writer details a theory of Mag's to which he appears to give some credence that one murder was witnessed by a police constable who was too terrified to do anything about it. The description suggests a garbled version of the Kelly murder, and, indeed could not apply to any other in the series, in my opinion.
The location of the lodging house where the writer meets Mag is not specified but is described as "within a block or two of the scene of the first Ripper murder." A detailed description is given which will be in the full article when I post it.
Make what you will of this bizarre tale.
I will post the whole article when done.
Logansport Reporter
20 June 1895
From "Night in Darkest Hell: Edward Marshall Describes a Trip Through Whitechapel"
It was in this lodging house that we met "Murderer Mag." She gained her name from the fact that since the very first of the Ripper murders she has devoted her life to the crude study of the crimes. The first woman killed was her mate, and the crime may have turned her mind. At any rate whenever she has had money enough to pay the miserable rental which would secure the place she has made it a practice to live, for at least a month each in the rooms in which the murders were committed, and to haunt the accursed spots on which the street butcheries took place. She can talk of nothing else and details with a horrid relish the minutest gossip of the bloody killings. It is her theory that the murders were done by a sailor who went on a long voyage after he finished his first series and will come back before long to begin a second. She hailed the news of the recent Butler Street murder with a kind of glee, assuming instantly that her prophecy had come true. But after she had gone posthaste to the scene of the crime and examined its gruesome details, she sorrowfully announced that she was wrong, and that the crime had been by less skilful hands than Jack's. Mag is one of the character's of Whitechapel - horribly in keeping with the place. She followed us when we visited one or two of the murder rooms and her explanations could not be suppressed. She is probably tight in one theory which the police cry out against, viz. that one of the murders was actually witnessed by a constable who was too badly frightened to interfere with the murderer after he had finished. The crime was done in a room opening off a small courtyard at the end of a short blind alley. This court is not more than twelve by sixteen feet in size, and a constable was surely standing in it while the murder and its following horrors were going on. Add to this fact the others that the man could not have done his work without a light, and that the window of the room was curtainless and the proof that the cowardly constable seem complete. But, after all, it is scarcely fair to expect a man who works for thirty shillings a week to risk his life in an encounter with such a desperate cut-throat as Whitechapel's historic murderer must have been.
On the scene of one of the sidewalk murders a tiny cockney was swinging on a chain hanging from the tail of a truck. He observed us with indifference, but when he saw Murder(sic) Mag he scurried away into one of the hole like doorways, as might a frightened rat. She was too horrible for even a case hardened Whitechapel gamin to gaze on with complacency.
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