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Hey Garry,Where are all the prostitutes?
Now there’s a question I don’t get asked every day!
If some estimates of 100,000 are correct,they must have spent daylight indoors.
I tend to think that the typical pattern of behaviour amongst common prostitutes, Harry, involved picking up punters in and around pubs after dark. The prostitution would have financed their drinking, and the drinking would have generated further business in pubs. We also know, of course, that, despite her travails of the previous evening, Mary Ann Cox still dragged herself out of bed at 5-00am in the hope of securing early morning trade amongst the porters at Spitalfields Market. Like any other commodity, therefore, prostitution was governed by the principle of supply and demand.
From the excellent photos of yours,men certainly outnumber women,and on the whole appear well dressed.
Agreed, Harry. It’s a far cry from the ‘make do and mend’ approach that one tends to associate with the Ripper victims and their fellow slum dwellers. But then, I wonder how many of those featured on this thread carried about all their worldly possessions?
All the best.
Garry Wroe.
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I quite agree with your times of activity Garry(not from personnel experience I might add),but with such large numbers of prostitutes,and relatively small number of pubs,(to the reported number of women)there must have been cat fights aplenty over turf rights.
I'll leave it there,don't want to intrude on an excellent thread of photo's.It was just the obsevation that males seemed predominent.
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I doubt that anyone would consider your observations to be an intrusion, Harry. Personally, I regard many of these images as worthy of discussion, particularly since a number of posters harbour a special interest in the social history of the era that extends beyond the blood and guts of the murders.
Thanks once again.
Garry Wroe.
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