What kind of knives were used?

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  • Cogidubnus
    replied
    I would still contend that a bill hook (as used by dock labourers to cut ropes and separate bales) would be a good possibility...suitable for both cutting and ripping and unlikely to break...and for a dock labourer (thousands living in Whitechapel and Wapping) an everyday tool which you'd have an excuse to carry whether at work or not (because you could always claim to be on the way to, or on the way home from, a hiring)...

    Now who was that listed as possessing a hook and strop?

    (snicker)

    Dave

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  • lynn cates
    replied
    skill

    Hello Mike. Thanks.

    Yes, I think that the skill levels were quite different. Kate's wounds were, "Possibly the work of an imitator."

    Cheers.
    LC

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  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
    Hello Mike.

    "The Canonical murders have both upward and downward cuts."

    Certainly true of Kate. Perhaps not of Polly and Annie.

    Cheers.
    LC
    Heartily agree with you there Lynn. There are differentiators among the victims wounds should one be prepared to see them as such. Thats why I believe, as you do, that Polly and Annie met someone different than the later victims.

    Cheers mate,
    Mike R

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  • lynn cates
    replied
    up and down

    Hello Mike.

    "The Canonical murders have both upward and downward cuts."

    Certainly true of Kate. Perhaps not of Polly and Annie.

    Cheers.
    LC

    Leave a comment:


  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Originally posted by Errata View Post
    Sure, Mary Kelly could have ended up like a torso victim. But I have already said that I don't consider her a victim of Jack the Ripper. Who's knives we were discussing. I assure you my analysis of what happened to Mary Kelly is quite different than my analysis of Nichols, Chapman and Eddowes. But it seemed irrelevant to the discussion at hand.

    And all serial killers are fetishistic about something. It's a hallmark of the breed.


    As for a Bowie knife, we have discussed it on another thread. And it would be a good solution to the mystery. But we have a timing problem. The whole Wild West aesthetic didn't make it to England until the 1870s. And in fact didn't really catch on until Buffalo Bill's show came to perform for Queen Victoria's Jubilee in 1887. That would be a very very new knife to be in the hands of a Whitechapel resident. Knives were not cheap, and brand spanking new fashionable knives were even more expensive. Now Sheffield had been making the knives since the 1830s or so, but they were all exported to the United States. I have never found a Bowie type knife from England that predates 1890. Sheffield knives from America, sure. But not from England. So while not impossible, there appears to be an availability problem. But as information on the Victorian London knife market is a tad bit difficult to get, I could be wrong. But it's why I ruled it out.

    Hi errata,

    You made a couple of interesting comments above. Ive made them bold so I can address them;

    I would agree that from what I understand serial killers continue to kill for the same reason they killed once. I would also agree, if this was your intent, that the injuries on other Canonicals speak of someone obsessed with the female abdomen. Cant say with any conviction the murderer of Mary Kelly had that mindset.

    Bowie knives more probably came to England in the hands of the many thousands of Irish soldiers after the end of the Civil War in 1865. Boatloads of these men came to England to re-start their lives. The Bowie knife could be found in many iterations around the world by that time. The design had influenced 3 decades of knifemakers to that point.

    The Canonical murders have both upward and downward cuts, a sharpened spine is almost a given in those cases. Thats why it fits.

    Best regards,

    Mike R

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  • Errata
    replied
    Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View Post
    Hi Errata,

    You make good points I can't disagree with, though I don't feel this is a domestic in the way we would expect it if a recent lover or boyfriend had committed the crime. This guy spent time and truly enjoyed the experience. He was careful not to damage her eyes possibly so that identification would be guaranteed. And he wasn't worried that he'd be suspected. Many serial killers - Ted Bundy comes to mind - are killing someone they know in their mind even as they're killing a stranger. Kelly couldn't have been an amateur job.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott
    True, but I think this was actually personal. Not so much in a boyfriend kind of way, but in a stalker kind of way. A possessive client, a friend, a neighbor. It's like he thought she was cheating on him, and he eradicated every part of her that sinned against him. He attacked her external sex organs, removed her internal sex organs, excised her breasts, minced her lips, made her "watch" and took her heart with him. Clearly he committed other atrocities to her as well, but those seem like a flashing neon sign saying "spurned lover". And there is a certain amount of planning involved with this. Not just planning the murder, but planning the revenge. I don't think she was "generic faithless woman template" for a murderer to vent his frustration towards another. Those tend to come from chance encounters that are almost immediately acted upon. This took more planning than the average substitution murderer bothers with. I think this is a guy who talked to her, and looked in her eyes and said to himself "You will keep those so you can watch me destroy you". Not dissimilar to the whole "To the pain" shtick from Princess Bride.

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  • Errata
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
    Hi again,

    I believe a Bowie style knife covers most of the bases, including the fact it cuts up or down due to the sharpened spine. Most of the doctors spoke of a knife 5-6 inches in length, thats blade length. Couple that with a large ergonomically shaped Handle, from Bolster to Butt maybe 7-8 inches and you have a weapon with a multitude of uses.

    I have an extensive knife and bayonet collection dating back to the 1830's and therefore a broad range of blade sizes and features, but I feel in these cases double sided blades would be impractical, but a Bowie style would allow the kind of cuts upward that we see in some cases. Like Kates clothes....and Kate. Generally a heavy knife, and if sharp, little pressure is needed to cut deeply. I have an example from Col. Bowie's time actually.

    To errata,

    Mary Kelly's arm was almost severed completely, so was her head, and we know that a killer was indeed making torsos of young women that Fall. Which makes "naaahh" seem a little naive.

    The idea that the killer carried different instruments, (although the idea is completely unnecessary based on the wounds), brings 2 additional unpleasant ideas to the table. A man with a black bag....once again....or a fetishist. When they are not required, why introduce them?

    I believe all that was needed in Kellys room was a single sharp blade, and the will to do the deeds. If you feel you would like to examine victims that have evidence that 2 blades were used, try Martha.

    Cheers,

    Mike R
    Sure, Mary Kelly could have ended up like a torso victim. But I have already said that I don't consider her a victim of Jack the Ripper. Who's knives we were discussing. I assure you my analysis of what happened to Mary Kelly is quite different than my analysis of Nichols, Chapman and Eddowes. But it seemed irrelevant to the discussion at hand.

    And all serial killers are fetishistic about something. It's a hallmark of the breed.

    As for a Bowie knife, we have discussed it on another thread. And it would be a good solution to the mystery. But we have a timing problem. The whole Wild West aesthetic didn't make it to England until the 1870s. And in fact didn't really catch on until Buffalo Bill's show came to perform for Queen Victoria's Jubilee in 1887. That would be a very very new knife to be in the hands of a Whitechapel resident. Knives were not cheap, and brand spanking new fashionable knives were even more expensive. Now Sheffield had been making the knives since the 1830s or so, but they were all exported to the United States. I have never found a Bowie type knife from England that predates 1890. Sheffield knives from America, sure. But not from England. So while not impossible, there appears to be an availability problem. But as information on the Victorian London knife market is a tad bit difficult to get, I could be wrong. But it's why I ruled it out.

    Leave a comment:


  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    As you can see, the blade is considerable thinner than most people imagine a true Bowie knife and the spine is sharpened, not just the tip.

    Usually you see flared tips with broad blades and heavy handles. The original as you can see was much more in keeping with the shape many believe could have been used in some Canonical killings.

    Best regards,

    Mike R

    Leave a comment:


  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Hi Beowulf,

    Of the pictures you posted only 1 knife resembles the Bowie knife design patented by Col. Bowies brother Resin, the knife on the right in your second post. There is in fact one original design of that style of knife and as youve pointed out many variations on that theme have led one to believe that Bowie knives are a general term.

    The original 1835'ish bowie knife, or a picture of its closest facsimile is here:
    Attached Files
    Last edited by Michael W Richards; 06-08-2012, 01:29 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Beowulf
    replied
    Originally posted by Hunter View Post
    Interesting discussion and a good thread.

    I will just make a few points from my observations and experiences.

    As a sportsman, I have owned and used many types of knives. For years I used various common hunting knives, which had short, stout blades. Their rigidity enabled me to cut through skin, meat and even skeletal joints fairly effectively. It is still the type of knife I carry in the field and on the water, but I started using long filleting knives at home for skinning and paring. Their thinness actually allows me to cut with more precision and maintain a sharp edge longer. The length is really not an impediment as the point is narrow and sharper than any thicker bladed knife.

    When looking at the injuries to some of the victims, I see some similarities with the use of a reasonably long, thin and narrow pointed instrument. Annie Chapman's uterus was basically gouged out -- with one sweep of the knife as the Lancet article referred to it. The blade had to be reasonably long and narrow to accomplish this in my opinion. Another clue is the apparent unsuccessful attempt at separating Annie's neck vertebra. Due to the need to pry as well as cut, such a knife is impractical, but nevertheless, the murderer made the attempt without success. If the killer had used a shorter, stouter knife, I believe he would have been able to decapitate her. The fact that he wasn't able to is significant.

    Both Elizabeth Stride and Catherine Eddowes were dispatched with one clean cut. In Eddowes' case, this single cut started superficially behind the left ear and quickly deepened as it was being swept around the throat; even to the point that the vertebra were marked. I can only envision a very sharp, thin and narrow pointed knife being able to accomplish this effectively. I realize that we now have very high grade steel, but some of the manufacturers in Sheffield made some fine quality steel. A good quality, somewhat thin blade, could flex without breaking, and with less ressistance cut deeper quicker.

    Just my two cents worth...
    I found this site on the net, shows various Victorian knives that fit some of the descriptions discussed here. They are a little different from what we see today, I guess mostly in the materials used for the handles, but I thought it interesting to share:



    Do roll all the way down, there are several pictures. Most interesting to me was this one:
    Attached Files

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  • HelenaWojtczak
    replied
    Wow what a great thread this turned out to be! Thanks to all, well done, and keep em coming!

    Leave a comment:


  • lynn cates
    replied
    boning-knife

    Hello Jon.

    "On reading this I picture the common butcher's boning-knife . . . "

    Splendid. Just the kind described by Mary Isenschmid.

    Cheers.
    LC

    Leave a comment:


  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post

    I believe a Bowie style knife covers most of the bases, including the fact it cuts up or down due to the sharpened spine.
    Not too long ago we tried to establish precisely what the term "Bowie-knife" was intended to describe. It turns out there is no single design, that there are many different shapes and sizes which all come under the name "Bowie-knife".
    I would have thought this was too large, generally speaking.

    Dr. Phillips did make one suggestion, that a slaughterman's knife, "well ground down" might suffice. On reading this I picture the common butcher's boning-knife, the type I used in butchering when I was just a lad out of school.
    If I recall correctly these blades, though single-sided were about 6" long, and one very thin (well ground down) would fit the bill nicely.


    On the other hand I believe there may have been indications that a double-sided blade was used, like a dagger-style, or stiletto-type.

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  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    Hi Errata,

    You make good points I can't disagree with, though I don't feel this is a domestic in the way we would expect it if a recent lover or boyfriend had committed the crime. This guy spent time and truly enjoyed the experience. He was careful not to damage her eyes possibly so that identification would be guaranteed. And he wasn't worried that he'd be suspected. Many serial killers - Ted Bundy comes to mind - are killing someone they know in their mind even as they're killing a stranger. Kelly couldn't have been an amateur job.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

    Leave a comment:


  • lynn cates
    replied
    decapitation

    Hello Cris.

    "the apparent 'sawing motion' evidenced with Chapman may have just been the killer's abortive attempt at decapitating her"

    Could be. Of course, he tried to decapitate manually as well.

    Cheers.
    LC

    Leave a comment:

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