some interesting posts there.
Does anyone know where, or have a map of, the main stables in Whitechapel? Would most pubs have had space for a few horses or were there a few main locations? Did they have night watchmen - I'm guessing so?
Also, apart from the very obvious, what did a horse slaughter do? Did they actually cut the meat up or was it just to dispatch (e.g., bolt gun)? Would someone so employed have any particular knife skills?
Thanks
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I need to dig William Tomkins’s death cert out to check the details, but I’m pretty sure from memory that it was Wynne Baxter who certified the death - after a PM.
What the press reports don’t tell you is that WT wasn’t discovered dead, but in an alcoholic coma from which he never recovered.
Presumably there was an inquest, and presumably the finder of the body was called as a witness. Wynne Baxter took a very dim view of the poorer classes indulging in alcohol and I would imagine the son who found the body may have received a bit of a grilling from him.
Might that explain HT’s prickly performance as a witness at the Nichols inquest?
I should add that it seems rather implausible that the son just happened to be passing HB’s yard and found his father’s body outside it. William, Henry and Thomas Tomkins were all horse slaughterers. HB’s yard in Winthrop Street was almost certainly where they all worked.
Last edited by MrBarnett; 01-10-2022, 02:49 AM.
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Originally posted by MrBarnett View Post
Howard Brown found this some time ago. It appeared in The People on April 29th, 1888. It’s an odd little report which isn’t entirely accurate.
It’s a while since I’ve given the Tomkinses much thought.Last edited by MrBarnett; 01-10-2022, 02:26 AM.
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Looking at an 1886 Booth notebook, there’s no explicit mention of a brothel anywhere in Winthrop Street, so perhaps the ones referred to in 1896 weren’t there in 1888.
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Originally posted by Debra A View Post
I think it was quite late in the 90s that the Winthrop St brothel(s) are mentioned? I only know because it also mentioned the brothel and murder at Thomas St that seanr resurrected an old thread about the other day that I started back in 2009 about the murder in a brothel by George Henry Matthews.
https://forum.casebook.org/forum/soc...-matthews-1894
I had a look at Booth for Thomas Street because of our recent discussion about St Botolph and by the time Booth wrote about Thomas St the brothel there had gone and the area gained respectability, in the space of only a couple of years apparently.
“Winthrop Street 3 & 2 storied houses, well paved; on the south side were formerly two brothels; one is still by the look of a woman standing at the doorway.”
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Originally posted by MrBarnett View PostOn the subject of research more generally, it goes on all the time and new things are constantly being discovered. Only today Steve Blomer informed me that researcher Jonathan Tye had discovered a reference in one of the Charles Booth notebooks to there having been one or more brothels in Winthrop Street. It seems there were a few dotted around Bucks Row in the 1880s/90s.
In November, 1888, two young prostitutes suffering from gonorrhoea were admitted to the Whitechapel infirmary from an address in Baker’s Row. It’s seems the premises was ostensibly a coffee shop.
Whether Polly Nichols had enough knowledge of the area to know of such establishments is the question. And was her kind of prostitution the sort that would be conducted indoors? Would her punters have been prepared to pay the extra cost?
Discussion of other criminal cases that have some relation to the Ripper, including various East End murders, other serial killers (both modern and historical), etc.
I had a look at Booth for Thomas Street because of our recent discussion about St Botolph and by the time Booth wrote about Thomas St the brothel there had gone and the area gained respectability, in the space of only a couple of years apparently.Last edited by Debra A; 01-09-2022, 10:08 PM.
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On the subject of research more generally, it goes on all the time and new things are constantly being discovered. Only today Steve Blomer informed me that researcher Jonathan Tye had discovered a reference in one of the Charles Booth notebooks to there having been one or more brothels in Winthrop Street. It seems there were a few dotted around Bucks Row in the 1880s/90s.
In November, 1888, two young prostitutes suffering from gonorrhoea were admitted to the Whitechapel infirmary from an address in Baker’s Row. It’s seems the premises was ostensibly a coffee shop.
Whether Polly Nichols had enough knowledge of the area to know of such establishments is the question. And was her kind of prostitution the sort that would be conducted indoors? Would her punters have been prepared to pay the extra cost?
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This photo of the Fortune of War pub in Islington was taken some time between 1869 and 1882. At least that’s when Charles Ritson was the licensee. John Harrison’s yard was behind it and to the left of it. The Yard men used to drink there and obtain takeaway beer to drink while they were working.
Some of the men standing outside could have been from the yard, the two on the right look as if they might be wearing blood-smeared coats and the large man on the left could have been the bone crushing giant described by Greenwood. And who knows, the small boy could have been a Tomkins.
Wishful thinking?1 Photo
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Originally posted by drstrange169 View PostI noticed, Gary, you commented on this web page (http://thevictorianist.blogspot.com/...elle-isle.html) , any idea where the article was from?
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I noticed, Gary, you commented on this web page (http://thevictorianist.blogspot.com/...elle-isle.html) , any idea where the article was from?
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This seems somewhat topical for the Covid age. Charles Bretton’s father ran the Black Bull Inn in Fyfield in rural Essex. In 1863, when Charles was 4, there was an outbreak of diphtheria in the parish and three of his siblings, aged 2, 3 and 6 died as a result.
You’ll notice that one of his siblings had Mumford as a second name. That’s because his mother was a Mumford. And one of Alfred Barber’s sisters married a Mumford. All very cosy. Very Essex.1 PhotoLast edited by MrBarnett; 01-09-2022, 12:21 AM.
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