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  • #76
    Originally posted by Phil H View Post
    The killer started a fire after he killed her (around 4:00 am)for light, mutilated her, took her heart out and cooked it in the kettle and probably then ate it (why cook a heart).

    Would clothes have burned fiercely enough to cook a heart and make it capable of being eaten? What did he use for kindling?

    Did he remove the remains and any juices from the kettle and take them away - we know Abberline examined the kettle?

    Finally, wasn't this subject - cooking and eateing the heart discussed recently on Casebook? I seem to recall a conclusion that it was impractical - but maybe I missed something.

    Phil
    Hi Phil

    It seems like there was a good amount of clothes left by maria and if they were dry and made of cotton and wool then yes. I know that cotton at least burns very hot and does not need kindling.

    If the fire was hot enough to melt the pot then it propably was hot enough to cook a heart and boil awy any remaining juice.

    Serial killers do many impractical things and if cannibalism is involved I don't think they are picky about it.
    "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

    Comment


    • #77
      Hi.
      According to Mrs Prater, Kelly went out on Thursday night at 9pm, wearing a jacket and bonnet, both these articles were burnt in the fire.
      The jacket which was of black velvet, was owned by Kelly, and its a good bet that the bonnet was the one that Mrs Harvey left on thursday.
      Its intresting that Mary Kelly wore that bonnet and jacket out initially, on the eve of the 8th, but at midnight according to Cox, was in different clothing.
      It is also worth noting that the jacket was burnt according to the police, because of it being bloodstained.
      Question . What made the police believe that?, why would the killer be concerned to conceal that fact?
      Would the jacket and bonnet, be a clue to the police if they had not have been burnt?
      Mysteries folks.
      Regards Richard.

      Comment


      • #78
        It might be of use to ascertain what the jacket and bonnet were made of - wasn't the bonnet crepe? Some materials burn faster and hotter than others - wool smolders forever, cotton burns relatively well, silk may tend to burn rather quickly. I doubt any fabric would cause heat enough to melt solder off a kettle. That says to me it was rather a continuously fed, red-hot fire. When a fire is burned down to being really hot coals, it doesn't smoke so much. A very hot coal fire could possibly consume a jacket that was not a heavy material like wool or double velvet quite quickly.

        What sort of stove was it? A pot belly stove with a door could generate that heat, and the flue would have been hotter and taken care of the smoke more efficiently than open fire - on a cold night in London, who'd notice an extra bit of smoke from a chimney?

        Comment


        • #79
          Sally et al.,

          The fire was hot enough to melt the kettle -

          We do seem to go through this every few months, however:
          a) As pointed out by others, the kettle did not melt, only the solder that held spout to kettle body;
          b) There are many different solders, each with a different melting point. Some have a quite low melting point and would be used for cheap products, like the kettle one might imagine Mary and Joe owning.
          c) This is because kettles are used to boil water and so long as there is water in the kettle that acts as a heat sink and keeps the heat under control. Only when the water has boiled away does the kettle get really hot--hot enough to melt some solders. Nor does it take a roaring fire, just steady heat (as with a barbeque).

          Don.
          "To expose [the Senator] is rather like performing acts of charity among the deserving poor; it needs to be done and it makes one feel good, but it does nothing to end the problem."

          Comment


          • #80
            Sorry for going over old ground, Don, and thanks for the information.

            If the solder melted simply as the kettle was left to boil dry, it stands to reason she had the kettle on right before the attack, which sort of implies she was settled in. I have trouble seeing her taking the time to make a nice cup of tea for anyone but a friend or a regular john, if somebody did indeed accompany her home.

            And if the kettle did boil dry and there'd been a body part in it, wouldn't there have been a fair amount of residue in it?

            Comment


            • #81
              The kettle could have been used for a brew-up the night before, still left hanging but empty over the fireplace.
              Just from the phrases used in press reports I can't see that we can easily distinguish whether the spout was detached in one piece, as would be the case if the solder had melted. Or, if the spout was cast of aluminum and had melted away to nothing.

              We can't say what style of fireplace it was, or even if it was a range. As the room was only a partitioned off it is unlikely it was a full kitchen range, like below:



              Or like so:



              Most likely her fireplace was only a typical backroom fireplace consisting of a Iron Firebasket set into the wall:



              How you might stand a kettle on a fire box not intended for utilities like pans & kettles is hard to imagine.
              Perhaps the kettle was just sat on top of the coals.
              If that was the case then how could anyone have burned clothes on the fire with the kettle sitting there?
              Was the kettle actually on the fire when the police entered the room, or have we just assumed it was?
              In other words, possibly, there is no direct connection between the melted spout and the 'last' fire in her fireplace?

              Regards, Jon S.
              Regards, Jon S.

              Comment


              • #82
                Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
                How you might stand a kettle on a fire box not intended for utilities like pans & kettles is hard to imagine.
                Perhaps the kettle was just sat on top of the coals.
                If that was the case then how could anyone have burned clothes on the fire with the kettle sitting there?
                Was the kettle actually on the fire when the police entered the room, or have we just assumed it was?
                In other words, possibly, there is no direct connection between the melted spout and the 'last' fire in her fireplace?

                Regards, Jon S.
                I always assumed it was a plain fireplace with those horizontal hooks in the side that swing in and out for kettles and pots and stuff.

                A spout of a kettle is made with much thinner material that than the body. So a kettle made of one of the more conductive metals like copper could easily melt the spout long before the tank. Or if the solder melted and it fell off intact, once in contact with the fire it would have melted quickly, which could lead to the assumption that it melted while still on the kettle.
                The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

                Comment


                • #83
                  There's no way any copper or aluminium melted on that fire

                  It was the solder that melted

                  Supe is correct in that the water acts as a heat sink

                  If you make a paper cup and fill it with water and put it over a candle, the water will boil before the paper burns (bit of a magic trick that one..)

                  Comment


                  • #84
                    Originally posted by Nemo View Post
                    There's no way any copper or aluminium melted on that fire

                    It was the solder that melted

                    Supe is correct in that the water acts as a heat sink

                    If you make a paper cup and fill it with water and put it over a candle, the water will boil before the paper burns (bit of a magic trick that one..)
                    Nemo, I know what Supe suggested is correct, I am not disagreeing with the fact that water acts as a heat sink.
                    What I am saying is that from the press reports we have no way of knowing whether Supe's interpretation as to the type of assembly is correct, or as an alternate, the spout melted away completely due to the spout being made from cast aluminum and riveted on, with copper rivets.

                    What is more important is where was this kettle when found, because if it was in-situ on the fireplace then the burned clothes & bonnet must have been placed under the kettle. Odd, to say the least.
                    Alternately, if the kettle was only sitting by the fire on a hearth, or the floor, then there is no firm connection to this 'last' fire event. In other words it may have lost it's spout long ago.

                    Regards, Jon S.
                    Regards, Jon S.

                    Comment


                    • #85
                      How Did He Do It?

                      Good Evening Everyone,

                      I'm slightly bemused that a thread entitled, "How Did He Do It?" (murder his victims) now includes pictures of Victorian fireplaces and theories about the damage to Mary Kelly's kettle - interesting topic though that is.

                      I subscribe to the view that manual strangulation was the cause of death and that the bodies were mutilated, from the right side, once they had sunk to the floor. I think that's consistent with the evidence, set out in earlier posts. It also lends credence to the belief that the killer would have had little or no blood-staining, because the heart would have stopped beating, before the throat was cut.
                      I won't always agree but I'll try not to be disagreeable.

                      Comment


                      • #86
                        Originally posted by Bridewell View Post
                        I subscribe to the view that manual strangulation was the cause of death
                        Hi Bridewell.
                        We do have contemporary medical opinion on 'cause of death', none ascribed CoD to strangulation.
                        Where stated CoD is said to be attributed to syncope, which is in effect fainting, due to blood loss, which in turn was due to the cut throat.

                        Regards, Jon S.
                        Regards, Jon S.

                        Comment


                        • #87
                          Wickerman,

                          Aye that. I think that those who freely talk of strangulation (which is, technically, choking unto death) do not realiue that the act can take upwards of five minutes with a healthy individual. More tenable is a theory that allows for a temporary cessation of the flow of blood to the brain by digital pressure followed almost immediately by the cut to the throat.

                          Don.
                          "To expose [the Senator] is rather like performing acts of charity among the deserving poor; it needs to be done and it makes one feel good, but it does nothing to end the problem."

                          Comment


                          • #88
                            How He Could Have Done It

                            I have lately been under the impression that the Ripper killed them in a couple of different ways. One or two with their backs toward him, another attacked while standing and facing him and one for the life of me, I cant remember which, while laying on the ground. I think it was Annie Chapman but correct me if Im wrong, that was found with both hands behind her back underneath her -for lack of a better word- butt. Now that is an unusual position to have just fallen into. So what Im thinking happened is that she was getting ready for intercourse with her hands underneath her raising her up a little off of the ground when Jack got on her and straddled her with his legs with one hand covering her mouth and the other holding the knife while cutting her throat. That would explain why she had been found with her hands underneath her. Again, I could be wrong about it being Annie Chapman who was found like that and if I am than it was another and the same conclusion applys.

                            Comment


                            • #89
                              Get up, stand up, stir it up

                              Hi RedBundy

                              no need to lie on the ground for a quick intercourse.

                              Comment


                              • #90
                                Originally posted by RedBundy13 View Post
                                .....and one for the life of me, I cant remember which, while laying on the ground. I think it was Annie Chapman but correct me if Im wrong, that was found with both hands behind her back underneath her -for lack of a better word- butt.
                                Maybe I can help you find this mysterious victim, take a look at these Inquest accounts, lets us know when you find her..
                                Regards, Jon S.

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