Hello all,
I was surprised to find that a man sought in connection with the Millers Court murder had no Suspects file created for him.
This fellow seems very interesting indeed....according to Mary Cousins, landlady of a lodging house on Little Paternoster Row, Mr Isaacs moved into her house a single man a few nights before the Millers Court murder. He was said to act strangely while there, pacing about while in his room. The night of Mary Janes murder he disappeared, leaving behind a violin bow. He apparently had a few instruments, none of which he played.
There is an article in the Daily News of December 8th that sheds some more light on this story...
"At Worship street Police court yesterday, Joseph Isaacs, 30, who said he had no fixed abode, and described himself as a cigar maker, was charged with having stolen a watch, value 30s., the goods of Julius Levenson. The prisoner, who was brought up in the custody of Detective Sergeant Record, H Division, is the man who was arrested in Drury lane on Thursday afternoon on suspicion of being connected with the Whitechapel murders. It transpired during the hearing of this charge that it was committed at the very time the prisoner was being watched as a person "wanted." The prosecutor Levenson said that the prisoner entered his shop on the 5th inst. with a violin bow, and asked him to repair it. Whilst discussing the matter the prisoner bolted out of the shop, and witness missed a gold watch belonging to a customer. The watch had been found at a pawnshop. To prove that the prisoner was the man who entered the shop a woman named Mary Cusins was called. She is deputy of a lodging house in Paternoster row, Spitalfields, and said that the prisoner had lodged in the house as a single lodger for three or four nights before the Dorset street murder - the murder of Mary Janet Kelly, in Miller's court. He disappeared after that murder, leaving the violin bow behind. The witness on the house to house inspection gave information to the police, and said she remembered that on the night of the murder she heard the prisoner walking about his room. After her statement a look out was kept for the prisoner, whose appearance certainly answered the published description of a man with an astrachan trimming to his coat. He visited the lodging house on the 5th and asked for the violin bow. It was given to him, and the witness Cusins followed him to give him into custody as requested. She saw him enter Levenson's shop and almost immediately run out. Detective Record said that there were some matters alleged against the prisoner which it was desired to inquire into. Mr. Bushby remanded the prisoner. "
I have put the underline and bold characters in there, but consider the possible ramifications here.
We know Mary was seeing someone named "Joe" aside from Barnett, many assume it was Flemming, we have a sighting of someone with Mary wearing an astrakan coat, ....and, more obscurely, we have a few references to someone commonly know as "Isaacs" accompanying Louis Diemshutz when he goes for the police....most reports suggest this was actually Isaac Kozebrodski. But an interesting sidebar here is that Joe Isaacs is a cigar maker, and we know cigar makers lived in the cottages in the passage to Dutfields Yard.
He was 30, a cigar maker, and an immigrant Polish Jew. And he was incarcerated for stealing on Dec 14th and sentenced to 3 months hard labor. Interesting to note that the next murder after Mary Kelly that some thought Jack the Ripper guilty of came in the Spring of 1889.
Does anyone have any additional information on this fellow that they could share here?
My best regards
I was surprised to find that a man sought in connection with the Millers Court murder had no Suspects file created for him.
This fellow seems very interesting indeed....according to Mary Cousins, landlady of a lodging house on Little Paternoster Row, Mr Isaacs moved into her house a single man a few nights before the Millers Court murder. He was said to act strangely while there, pacing about while in his room. The night of Mary Janes murder he disappeared, leaving behind a violin bow. He apparently had a few instruments, none of which he played.
There is an article in the Daily News of December 8th that sheds some more light on this story...
"At Worship street Police court yesterday, Joseph Isaacs, 30, who said he had no fixed abode, and described himself as a cigar maker, was charged with having stolen a watch, value 30s., the goods of Julius Levenson. The prisoner, who was brought up in the custody of Detective Sergeant Record, H Division, is the man who was arrested in Drury lane on Thursday afternoon on suspicion of being connected with the Whitechapel murders. It transpired during the hearing of this charge that it was committed at the very time the prisoner was being watched as a person "wanted." The prosecutor Levenson said that the prisoner entered his shop on the 5th inst. with a violin bow, and asked him to repair it. Whilst discussing the matter the prisoner bolted out of the shop, and witness missed a gold watch belonging to a customer. The watch had been found at a pawnshop. To prove that the prisoner was the man who entered the shop a woman named Mary Cusins was called. She is deputy of a lodging house in Paternoster row, Spitalfields, and said that the prisoner had lodged in the house as a single lodger for three or four nights before the Dorset street murder - the murder of Mary Janet Kelly, in Miller's court. He disappeared after that murder, leaving the violin bow behind. The witness on the house to house inspection gave information to the police, and said she remembered that on the night of the murder she heard the prisoner walking about his room. After her statement a look out was kept for the prisoner, whose appearance certainly answered the published description of a man with an astrachan trimming to his coat. He visited the lodging house on the 5th and asked for the violin bow. It was given to him, and the witness Cusins followed him to give him into custody as requested. She saw him enter Levenson's shop and almost immediately run out. Detective Record said that there were some matters alleged against the prisoner which it was desired to inquire into. Mr. Bushby remanded the prisoner. "
I have put the underline and bold characters in there, but consider the possible ramifications here.
We know Mary was seeing someone named "Joe" aside from Barnett, many assume it was Flemming, we have a sighting of someone with Mary wearing an astrakan coat, ....and, more obscurely, we have a few references to someone commonly know as "Isaacs" accompanying Louis Diemshutz when he goes for the police....most reports suggest this was actually Isaac Kozebrodski. But an interesting sidebar here is that Joe Isaacs is a cigar maker, and we know cigar makers lived in the cottages in the passage to Dutfields Yard.
He was 30, a cigar maker, and an immigrant Polish Jew. And he was incarcerated for stealing on Dec 14th and sentenced to 3 months hard labor. Interesting to note that the next murder after Mary Kelly that some thought Jack the Ripper guilty of came in the Spring of 1889.
Does anyone have any additional information on this fellow that they could share here?
My best regards
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