I have a general question to ask everyone on this board regarding the murders. It may have crossed your minds that plenty of things happen around the world every moment of every day - but what are the main things of a spectacular or notorious nature that happen on a given day.
In this case, on the days of all the murders.
Put another way. Say on November 10, 1888 Mary Jane Kelly was alive and well and looking for her next client for the money for her next meal. Say on Nov. 8 to 9, nobody had been murdered. What would have been the sensational story of that day in London?
Now the reason I ask this has to do with a bit of chance research I just stumbled on. I was looking into the subject of famous bridges. One was the Brooklyn Bridge. In 1885, an athletic instructor named Robert Odlum was killed diving off the bridge as a stunt. The following year Steve Brodie supposedly dived off the bridge but survived, and due to the reports of the act spread by Brodie and his chums, and one in particular in the New York Times, he was credited with doing the jump successfully (he'd built a career on this for the rest of his life - it is now generally questioned if he ever dived off the bridge). A month after, in May 1886, a young man (a typesetter for the Police Gazette) named Larry Donavan jumped off the bridge before witnesses, landed in the East River, and survived and swam away. Today he is considered the first man to successfully achieve the stunt, not Brodie.
This may seem all secondary to us today - after all, what has jumping off the Brooklyn Bridge in 1886 have to do with the murders in Whitechapel in 1888? By itself nothing. But it is the figure of Larry Donavan that caught my attention. Except for some problems with the authorities about risking his neck and causing a public disturbance, he did begin a daredevil reputation regarding making impressive dives off various bridges in the U.S. and Canada (the Niagara Suspension Bridge was one of them). He hoped to make a career and income from being a daredevil, but the returns were frequently smaller than he expected. As a result, in 1888 Donavan returned to England to see if his career might improve by daring actions. For example he jumped off London Bridge but this led to his arrest there. He was also stopped from a chance to jump off Tower Bridge. Later he was allowed to jump from Waterloo Bridge (it was lower than the others). Then came two controversial jumps at the Clifton Suspension Bridge. By August 1888, Donavan was in serious financial straits. While out drinking on August 6, 1888 he was talking to some men who suggested he try jumping off Hungerford Bridge in London. To avoid police interference (like he had at Clifton Suspension Bridge), it was suggestion that he do the jump early in the morning. So on August 7, 1888, at 2:00 A.M., Donavan jumped into the Thames from the Hungerford Bridge. He did hit the water, but soon nobody could see him. Later they found his body - he had drowned because he was swept away by the heavy currents at that time. The author of the Wikipedia entry for Donavan (where I found all this) explained that this last jump was done on the spur of the moment for the cash offered at that time - the other jumps had been better planned (including having rescue boats ready nearby to help Donavan if he needed help).
Now, at 2:00 A.M., Martha Tabram was seen accompanied by her male client headed for the George Yards. Somewhere between 2:00 A.M. and 3:30 A.M. she was murdered. Of course, on August 7, 1888 the size of the Whitechapel Murders had not really been taken into anything like the story's eventual size as it would be by November 10, 1888. But Tabram's murder probably knocked the death of the daredevil Donavan off the main feature of local sensational news.
In this case, on the days of all the murders.
Put another way. Say on November 10, 1888 Mary Jane Kelly was alive and well and looking for her next client for the money for her next meal. Say on Nov. 8 to 9, nobody had been murdered. What would have been the sensational story of that day in London?
Now the reason I ask this has to do with a bit of chance research I just stumbled on. I was looking into the subject of famous bridges. One was the Brooklyn Bridge. In 1885, an athletic instructor named Robert Odlum was killed diving off the bridge as a stunt. The following year Steve Brodie supposedly dived off the bridge but survived, and due to the reports of the act spread by Brodie and his chums, and one in particular in the New York Times, he was credited with doing the jump successfully (he'd built a career on this for the rest of his life - it is now generally questioned if he ever dived off the bridge). A month after, in May 1886, a young man (a typesetter for the Police Gazette) named Larry Donavan jumped off the bridge before witnesses, landed in the East River, and survived and swam away. Today he is considered the first man to successfully achieve the stunt, not Brodie.
This may seem all secondary to us today - after all, what has jumping off the Brooklyn Bridge in 1886 have to do with the murders in Whitechapel in 1888? By itself nothing. But it is the figure of Larry Donavan that caught my attention. Except for some problems with the authorities about risking his neck and causing a public disturbance, he did begin a daredevil reputation regarding making impressive dives off various bridges in the U.S. and Canada (the Niagara Suspension Bridge was one of them). He hoped to make a career and income from being a daredevil, but the returns were frequently smaller than he expected. As a result, in 1888 Donavan returned to England to see if his career might improve by daring actions. For example he jumped off London Bridge but this led to his arrest there. He was also stopped from a chance to jump off Tower Bridge. Later he was allowed to jump from Waterloo Bridge (it was lower than the others). Then came two controversial jumps at the Clifton Suspension Bridge. By August 1888, Donavan was in serious financial straits. While out drinking on August 6, 1888 he was talking to some men who suggested he try jumping off Hungerford Bridge in London. To avoid police interference (like he had at Clifton Suspension Bridge), it was suggestion that he do the jump early in the morning. So on August 7, 1888, at 2:00 A.M., Donavan jumped into the Thames from the Hungerford Bridge. He did hit the water, but soon nobody could see him. Later they found his body - he had drowned because he was swept away by the heavy currents at that time. The author of the Wikipedia entry for Donavan (where I found all this) explained that this last jump was done on the spur of the moment for the cash offered at that time - the other jumps had been better planned (including having rescue boats ready nearby to help Donavan if he needed help).
Now, at 2:00 A.M., Martha Tabram was seen accompanied by her male client headed for the George Yards. Somewhere between 2:00 A.M. and 3:30 A.M. she was murdered. Of course, on August 7, 1888 the size of the Whitechapel Murders had not really been taken into anything like the story's eventual size as it would be by November 10, 1888. But Tabram's murder probably knocked the death of the daredevil Donavan off the main feature of local sensational news.
Comment