Originally posted by Trevor Marriott
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Same motive = same killer
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostAmong the less well-off, I don't suppose there was a difference. It's not as if most of them had the luxury of choosing between daywear and nightwear, and many people lived, and slept, in their everyday clothes. The very fact that this chemise was dirty and tatty suggests that it was worn very frequently, not just for a few hours a night.
You are saying that the chemise being dirty and tatty suggests that it was worn frequently, not just for a few hours a night, but that has to be something that we cannot know. Obviously, the chemise may have been dragged along a dirty floor, victim inside, and then it was thrown onto what was basically a scrap-heap in Pinchin Street. It would be extremely odd if it was shiny white at that stage, methinks.
However, IF the chemise was supplied by the killer as per my possible scenario, I would have expected it to be clean at that stage, although it is no absolute prerequsite for my thinking to work.
A final point: You are saying that among the less well-off, chemises were worn day and night, no difference made. And as I said, I agree. But do we know that the victim WAS less well-off? The guess is a useful one, but still a guess only.Last edited by Fisherman; 10-25-2017, 07:42 AM.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostI think you are basically correct when saying that there was probably not much of a difference among those not so very well off. However, what I am suggesting is that the chemise may have been supplied by the killer, and thus it may not have been worn at all by the victim before she was killed. Of course, I have not a scintilla of proof to tell me that the chemise was supplied by the killer, but I do have an overall scheme in which such a thing would fit in, hand-in-glove, and so I am interested and intrigued by the possibility. Don´t let that annoy you too much, Gareth!
You are saying that the chemise being dirty and tatty suggests that it was worn frequently, not just for a few hours a night, but that has to be something that we cannot know. Obviously, the chemise may have been dragged along a dirty floor, victim inside, and then it was thrown onto what was basically a scrap-heap in Pinchin Street. It would be extremely odd if it was shiny white at that stage, methinks.
However, IF the chemise was supplied by the killer as per my possible scenario, I would have expected it to be clean at that stage, although it is no absolute prerequsite for my thinking to work.
A final point: You are saying that among the less well-off, chemises were worn day and night, no difference made. And as I said, I agree. But do we know that the victim WAS less well-off? The guess is a useful one, but still a guess only.
IMHO I think if the chemise/s have any significance we should focus on how it was cut and what it was then used for afterward re dumping.
How was it cut again?"Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View PostHI Fish
IMHO I think if the chemise/s have any significance we should focus on how it was cut and what it was then used for afterward re dumping.
How was it cut again?
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostTorn down the middle, and cut from neck lining to the sleeve linings in both directions.
how many other of the torsos or parts were found with a chemise?"Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostOriginally posted by Abby Normalhow many other of the torsos or parts were found with a chemise?Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Unless you were so poor not have a choice, chemises were not sleepwear, i.e. something that you specifically put on for sleeping, that was called a nightdress.
The fact that those that saw it called it a chemise, indicates, rightly or wrongly, that they believed it looked like underwear.dustymiller
aka drstrange
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It was only remnants of a chemise and it wasn't on the body except to cover the neck wound.
The Times, Wednesday, September 25th, 1889
The blood had oozed from the cut surface of the neck. Over the surface of the neck and the right shoulder were the remnants of what had been a chemise. It was of common length and such a size as would be worn by a woman of similar build to the trunk found. It had been torn down the front, and had been cut from the front of the armholes on each side. The cuts had apparently been made with a knife. The chemise was bloodstained nearly all over, from being wrapped over the back surface of the neck. There was no clotted blood on it. I could find no distinguishing mark on the chemise.
Lloyd's Weekly, September 29, 1889
Covering the cut surface of the neck and right shoulder were the remnants of what had been a chemise, of common make, and of such a size as would be worn by a woman of similar build to the trunk found. It had been torn down the front, and had been cut out from the front of the armholes on each side. The cuts appeared to have been made with a knife. The chemise was blood-stained nearly all over, I think from being wrapped over the cut surface of the neck. There was no clotted blood on it, and no sign of arterial spurting. I could find no distinguishing mark on the chemise.
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To be as clear as I can - it cannot be established whether the chemise the Pinchins Street torso was found with was a garment you would sleep in or not. Maybe it was, maybe it was not.
For the garment to fit in with my thoughts, it need actually not have been used as nightwear.
I am absolutely certain that I am not going to be able to prove that it was used the way I think it may have been used, and equally certain that it cannot be disproven that it was.
Regardless of this, it fits in with what I have in mind.Last edited by Fisherman; 10-25-2017, 10:50 PM.
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Originally posted by RockySullivan View Postwould prostitutes wear a chemise under their clothes?Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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