There are a number of interesting editorials in the London Evening Post throughout the period of the Whitechapel Murders which I assume have never before seen the light of day. I thought it would make sense to post them all in one thread. I will update this thread regularly, hopefully daily, with further editorials as they are transcribed. Here are two from the same day (i.e. the day after the murder of Nichols):
1 September 1888
It seems pretty clear that Mr. Hyde has broken loose in Whitechapel. Can it be that Mr. Stevenson’s ghoul has a prototype in actual life?
1 September 1888
The police force of London is on its trial. Until the perpetrators of the latest diabolical murder in Whitechapel are swinging beneath the scaffold the force will rest under a responsibility which, unfulfilled, will seriously lower it in public estimation. The police have on their hands a number of tasks unperformed. There is the murder of a woman in broad daylight in a shop in North London, there is the murder of the Marylebone dressmaker, the murder of the unfortunate who was found hacked to death a few weeks back on the landing of an East-end lodging house, and now there is this culminating horror. It has been suggested that a lunatic is at large in the East-end, but this theory does not bear examination. No lunatic was ever yet so methodically mad. What is more probable is that there exists in the East-end a gang of hellish ruffians who blackmail the wretched women of the streets and enforce their demands at the point of the knife. They must be tracked out. Every circumstance of this latest crime tends to force the conclusion that a number of people hold its terrible secret. The police must justify themselves; they must be judged, like everybody else, by results; they stand or fall not only by what they do, but by what they fail to do; and if they fail to discover the perpetrators of the murders that have smeared the London streets with blood, first in one neighbourhood and then in another, following each other with awful rapidity, then they must be pronounced incompetent. Judgment will go by default. Dissensions have been rife in Scotland Yard; discord has ruled among the controlling authorities of the force, the resignation of Mr. Munro is ominous; and the very fact that Sir Charles Warren is contemptuously nicknamed by his subordinates as “Colonel Why?” is significant of evil. For justice’s sake, for the sake of the safety of our streets, for the sake of the districts that are becoming more notorious then ever Alsatia was, let us hear no more of these quarrels and frictions of Scotland Yard. They must cease. If Sir Charles Warren cannot silence them Sir Charles Warren must go. There must be a clearing out of the failures in the force. Less than this will not satisfy the public. If the monsters of the Whitechapel murder do not dangle at the end of the hangman’s rope the fact will be put down to police incompetence traceable to dissensions in the controlling office. And we are not sure that the public would be wrong in doing so. Far be it for us to render the task of the police force more difficult than it already is, but the force must be warned that by results alone it will be judged.
1 September 1888
It seems pretty clear that Mr. Hyde has broken loose in Whitechapel. Can it be that Mr. Stevenson’s ghoul has a prototype in actual life?
1 September 1888
The police force of London is on its trial. Until the perpetrators of the latest diabolical murder in Whitechapel are swinging beneath the scaffold the force will rest under a responsibility which, unfulfilled, will seriously lower it in public estimation. The police have on their hands a number of tasks unperformed. There is the murder of a woman in broad daylight in a shop in North London, there is the murder of the Marylebone dressmaker, the murder of the unfortunate who was found hacked to death a few weeks back on the landing of an East-end lodging house, and now there is this culminating horror. It has been suggested that a lunatic is at large in the East-end, but this theory does not bear examination. No lunatic was ever yet so methodically mad. What is more probable is that there exists in the East-end a gang of hellish ruffians who blackmail the wretched women of the streets and enforce their demands at the point of the knife. They must be tracked out. Every circumstance of this latest crime tends to force the conclusion that a number of people hold its terrible secret. The police must justify themselves; they must be judged, like everybody else, by results; they stand or fall not only by what they do, but by what they fail to do; and if they fail to discover the perpetrators of the murders that have smeared the London streets with blood, first in one neighbourhood and then in another, following each other with awful rapidity, then they must be pronounced incompetent. Judgment will go by default. Dissensions have been rife in Scotland Yard; discord has ruled among the controlling authorities of the force, the resignation of Mr. Munro is ominous; and the very fact that Sir Charles Warren is contemptuously nicknamed by his subordinates as “Colonel Why?” is significant of evil. For justice’s sake, for the sake of the safety of our streets, for the sake of the districts that are becoming more notorious then ever Alsatia was, let us hear no more of these quarrels and frictions of Scotland Yard. They must cease. If Sir Charles Warren cannot silence them Sir Charles Warren must go. There must be a clearing out of the failures in the force. Less than this will not satisfy the public. If the monsters of the Whitechapel murder do not dangle at the end of the hangman’s rope the fact will be put down to police incompetence traceable to dissensions in the controlling office. And we are not sure that the public would be wrong in doing so. Far be it for us to render the task of the police force more difficult than it already is, but the force must be warned that by results alone it will be judged.
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