Hi Maria.
In Chief Inspector Swanson’s report on the kidney, 6 November, 1888, he had this to say:
“…it is the kidney of a human adult; not charged with fluid, as it would have been in the case of a body handed over for purposes of dissection to an hospital, but rather as it would be in the case where it was taken from the body not so destined. In other words similar kidneys might and could be obtained from any dead person upon whom a post mortem had been made from any cause by students or dissecting room porter.”
This indicates that the kidney was taken from a body that was not embalmed so it didn’t come from a robbed grave.
As for it coming from Eddowes Dr. Gordon Brown stated that the kidney showed no signs of decomposition so it must have been placed in the spirits of wine almost immediately after it was removed. As Dr. Brown gave the opinion, on 20th of October, that the kidney had not been in the preservative for more than a week while, Dr. Openshaw stated, on the 19th, that the kidney had not been in spirits for more than ten days, it seems impossible to have belonged to Catharine Eddowes.
Wolf.
But I still have a question, to all, but predominantly to Mr. Vanderlinden and to Tom: Pertaining to the kidney, if it was another one (as in, not from Eddowes), would you rather say grave-robbing, or contacts to a hospital/morgue? (The contacts to a morgue unpleasantly reminds me too much of an old theory by Trevor Marriott.)
I for myself would rather imagine grave-robbing or even (drum-roll) the possibility that the kidney came indeed from Eddowes, which in this instance would solve the case, but this is totally a premature thought and not to be discussed presently.
I for myself would rather imagine grave-robbing or even (drum-roll) the possibility that the kidney came indeed from Eddowes, which in this instance would solve the case, but this is totally a premature thought and not to be discussed presently.
“…it is the kidney of a human adult; not charged with fluid, as it would have been in the case of a body handed over for purposes of dissection to an hospital, but rather as it would be in the case where it was taken from the body not so destined. In other words similar kidneys might and could be obtained from any dead person upon whom a post mortem had been made from any cause by students or dissecting room porter.”
This indicates that the kidney was taken from a body that was not embalmed so it didn’t come from a robbed grave.
As for it coming from Eddowes Dr. Gordon Brown stated that the kidney showed no signs of decomposition so it must have been placed in the spirits of wine almost immediately after it was removed. As Dr. Brown gave the opinion, on 20th of October, that the kidney had not been in the preservative for more than a week while, Dr. Openshaw stated, on the 19th, that the kidney had not been in spirits for more than ten days, it seems impossible to have belonged to Catharine Eddowes.
Wolf.
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