All day I came up with the same question. I've asked and commented, this will make 3 times, and I would very much like anyone from a newbie Ripperologist to a Senior one that knows so damn much you may as well have been a witness ....in the case with Eddowes, she was killed in Mitre Square, there was a night watchman there that basically challenged that if the butcher came to his square he'd show him what for. The Ripper came, did his business, and left. He wasn't seen, he wasn't heard, seeing a recently posted pic of mitre square of the time, you see all these windows...no one sees anything. With Mary Kelly, the man spent some serious time with Kelly, having his way, in a flat that Kelly's neighbor upstairs said that she could hear Kelly walking around. Yet the Ripper could waltz in, do his thing, and leave; not a sound. How? There was a hole in Kelly's window for crying out loud.....not a sound. Can you seriously do all that without making noise? Am I naive on this?
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Originally posted by Astatine211 View PostTranscript of letter to Charles Warren re: Silent Shoe trials. Apparently they were successfully quiet but terrible in the rain!
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Originally posted by clark2710 View Post
Today if that were a thing we'd trace the manufacturer of the boots to the areas sold and all that ...but that's today...but still a nice clue
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I think the fact a vigilance committe was created in the first instance was because of the lack of police on the street. Certainly when crimes were being committed locals felt a bobbie was nowhere to be seen. They were a group of people who had lost faith that the police were capable of doing their jobs. The nightwatchman Morris needed to be alerted by the police himself. Hardly a great shining example of vigilance on his behalf.
As for noisless shoes / boots, I really don't feel that is how he remained so quiet - he didn't need to be that quiet. Once the women were subdued, what great noise would you expect to hear?
Footsteps that could have been Jack's were those heard in Miller's Court in the early hours, and those which passed Fanny Mortimer's just before the discovery of Stride's body.Last edited by erobitha; 05-22-2021, 06:11 AM.
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Originally posted by clark2710 View PostAll day I came up with the same question. I've asked and commented, this will make 3 times, and I would very much like anyone from a newbie Ripperologist to a Senior one that knows so damn much you may as well have been a witness ....in the case with Eddowes, she was killed in Mitre Square, there was a night watchman there that basically challenged that if the butcher came to his square he'd show him what for. The Ripper came, did his business, and left. He wasn't seen, he wasn't heard, seeing a recently posted pic of mitre square of the time, you see all these windows...no one sees anything. With Mary Kelly, the man spent some serious time with Kelly, having his way, in a flat that Kelly's neighbor upstairs said that she could hear Kelly walking around. Yet the Ripper could waltz in, do his thing, and leave; not a sound. How? There was a hole in Kelly's window for crying out loud.....not a sound. Can you seriously do all that without making noise? Am I naive on this?
There is another and grimmer possibility.
I'm reminded of 21st century crimes, notably in Cleveland covered in the podcast 'Serial', Season 3 (https://serialpodcast.org/). A number of children shot in the streets, not as the intended victims but caught in the crossfire of gang violence. Police and prosecutors exasperated that no-one comes forward, even when the victims are children. In one case, a man named RJ, a former gang member who tried to attend to one of the victims and save the child's life, named a shooter but by the time the case came to court, he retracted his testimony. The case fell apart.
Why don't people speak up? - RJ when interviewed talks about a 'code' and not snitching but the main reason seems to be fear. You look after your own business and don't get involved. That's how you survive in the roughest neighbourhoods. But what does a 21st century crime and mindset have to do with 19th century Whitechapel? Possibly nothing, unless there is any evidence to suggest similar behaviours at the time.
Consider the murder of Mary Ann Austin in 1901. Murdered in 35 Dorset Street, the same lodging house Annie Chapman had been staying in when she was murdered and same address as given on Polly Nichols death certificate. Austin had been taken to the hospital with appalling injuries, sustained whilst resident in the lodging house. When the investigating police arrived on the scene, they were shown cubicle 44 on the first floor of the house, as the location of the attack. Witnesses from the lodging house confirming this as the location. It later transpired the attack had occurred in cubicle 15.
Maria Moore, a witness in the case, original gave a description of a short man with a dark complexion. Later, she changed her testimony to accuse Mary Ann Austin's estranged husband fitting a different description (and at 6 foot, unlikely to be mistaken for a short man).
Despite Mary Ann Austin having been found in a cubicle of the lodging house after a brutal crime had been committed, no-one from the house summoned the police. The police became involved as a result of the hospital informing them of the crime. Mary Moore when asked why the police were not called, she said 'I didn't know I had to'.
Why did the lodging house residents and staff act deceptively, even outright lying? - Fear and mistrust of the police seem to be plausible explanations.
OK, but that's 1901. In 1888, is there any evidence of such behaviour. Well, maybe. A reporter described Joseph Levy, a witness who may have seen the killer with Kate Eddowes shortly before her death in the following way: ‘Mr Joseph Levy is absolutely obstinate and refuses to give the slightest information. He leaves one to infer that he knows something, but he is afraid to be called on the inquest. Hence he assumes a knowing air.’
People may have heard but decided not to get involved and so did not reveal what they knew. This may well be impossible to prove, but I don't think it can be definitively dismissed.
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Originally posted by clark2710 View Post
....in the case with Eddowes, she was killed in Mitre Square, there was a night watchman there that basically challenged that if the butcher came to his square he'd show him what for. The Ripper came, did his business, and left. He wasn't seen, he wasn't heard, seeing a recently posted pic of mitre square of the time, you see all these windows...no one sees anything.
... the officer on duty was Police-constable Watkins. At half-past 1 o'clock Watkins handed a can of tea to the watchman at Messrs. Kearley and Tongue's, tea merchants, named George James Morris, a naval pensioner, telling him to make it hot in 10 minutes' time, when he would then be round again. Having made the circuit of the square, Watkins left, paraded his beat, and returned at a quarter to 2. On entering the square by Mitre-street, he observed, by the flickering light of the street lamp, something lying in the south-west corner ...
The kettle had been on the boil. The Ripper got lucky.Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing
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Originally posted by clark2710 View Post
With Mary Kelly, the man spent some serious time with Kelly, having his way, in a flat that Kelly's neighbor upstairs said that she could hear Kelly walking around. Yet the Ripper could waltz in, do his thing, and leave; not a sound. How? There was a hole in Kelly's window for crying out loud.....not a sound. Can you seriously do all that without making noise? Am I naive on this?
Evening Standard, Oct 1: Some of the inhabitants of the district have started the theory that, in the case of the murder in Mitre-square, the woman was first chloroformed. The supposition is not sustained by any evidence, and probably is promulgated merely as an explanation of the silence in which the deed was perpetrated.
See this dissertation for more on the subject - DID JACK THE RIPPER USE CHLOROFORM?Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing
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Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post
The sounds after death had to be suspicious for anyone to both notice and remember. What is going on before death to maintain silence, is another question.
Evening Standard, Oct 1: Some of the inhabitants of the district have started the theory that, in the case of the murder in Mitre-square, the woman was first chloroformed. The supposition is not sustained by any evidence, and probably is promulgated merely as an explanation of the silence in which the deed was perpetrated.
See this dissertation for more on the subject - DID JACK THE RIPPER USE CHLOROFORM?
The emboldened bit is mine.
“Might I suggest to all your Members that they should write to The Bodleian Library, Broad Street, Oxford and request all they have on The Whitechapel Murders in their Johnston File written at the time of the murders in 1888. The whole package costing around £5.00 (in 1998 of course) comprises 48 pages together with a few illustrations and much information that the average Ripperologist is unaware of, for example, at the time of Annie Chapman’s death it was suspected that she had been doped with chloroform etc.”Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
I just saw the mention of chloroform and it reminded me that I’d posted this for Fish on another thread. I saw it as I was looking through some old hard copy Ripperologist magazines. It was a letter from the late John Morrison who was the guy that first proposed James Kelly as s suspect.
The emboldened bit is mine.
“Might I suggest to all your Members that they should write to The Bodleian Library, Broad Street, Oxford and request all they have on The Whitechapel Murders in their Johnston File written at the time of the murders in 1888. The whole package costing around £5.00 (in 1998 of course) comprises 48 pages together with a few illustrations and much information that the average Ripperologist is unaware of, for example, at the time of Annie Chapman’s death it was suspected that she had been doped with chloroform etc.”
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I think it was only to be expected by the authorities (medical & law) the killer would use something like chloroform, but chloroform lingers on the skin, and in some cases minor burns can be detected around the lips. The fact they found no trace is what caused the mystery and required the doctors to look a little deeper.
Stride Inquest.
Coroner Baxter - Was there any appearance of an opiate or any smell of chloroform?
Dr. Phillips - There was no perceptible trace of any anaesthetic or narcotic.
It was the first obvious thing to anticipate.Last edited by Wickerman; 05-26-2021, 03:56 PM.Regards, Jon S.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostI think it was only to be expected by the authorities (medical & law) the killer would use something like chloroform, but chloroform lingers on the skin, and in some cases minor burns can be detected around the lips. The fact they found no trace is what caused the mystery and required the doctors to look a little deeper.
Stride Inquest.
Coroner Baxter - Was there any appearance of an opiate or any smell of chloroform?
Dr. Phillips - There was no perceptible trace of any anaesthetic or narcotic.
It was the first obvious thing to anticipate.
Its detection was actually notoriously difficult. Enough quantity and how it would be administered makes all the difference. It could occasionally cause burning on the lips, burning in the throat or burning of the lining of the stomach. Especially, if it was consumed as a liquid.
If it was inhaled off a handkerchief there would be no signs of it. Dr Simpson who introduced Chloroform to the British medical profession in 1847, demonstrated this exact method on his colleagues on 10th November at the Edinburgh Medico-Chirurgical Society.
https://www.thehistorypress.co.uk/ar...f-controversy/
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