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The could be knife Thomas Coram found on October the 1st 1888

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  • #76
    Originally posted by Debra A View Post
    Niko, Chris, here are the full 1911 census details.
    Thanks very much for posting those details.

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    • #77
      Thank's alot for the information Deb, I think it's the same Hyman Cohen, as Eddie's farther name was Marcus and Hyman's youngest son in the 1911 censor is also called Marcus. BUT there's something dodgy here. On the birth certificate I have of Marcus Cohen his mother's name is given as Tobeh Cohen formerly ( Yerusalimski ) and in the 1911 censor his wife is Debra Cohen, and on the birth certificate Marcus Cohen was born in October 1898 at 8 Ely Place. I supose that Hyman married twice or something, Thank's for tour interest Deb, all the best, Agur.

      niko

      P.S

      Is there any way of tracking down Eddie ( A.R Cohen ), the last I knew of him he was single and with no kid's....

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      • #78
        Originally posted by niko View Post
        Thank's alot for the information Deb, I think it's the same Hyman Cohen, as Eddie's farther name was Marcus and Hyman's youngest son in the 1911 censor is also called Marcus. BUT there's something dodgy here. On the birth certificate I have of Marcus Cohen his mother's name is given as Tobeh Cohen formerly ( Yerusalimski ) and in the 1911 censor his wife is Debra Cohen, and on the birth certificate Marcus Cohen was born in October 1898 at 8 Ely Place. I supose that Hyman married twice or something,
        As I said above, and as Debs confirmed, according to the 1911 census Debra Cohen stated that she had been married for 30 years, so it must just have been a case of using an "Anglicised" form of the name Taube (though it was actually a Hebrew name with a different root).

        She died in 1951, and her death was registered under the name Tauber Cohen at Hackney (she was aged 88, agreeing with the ages given in the censuses).

        Here is the announcement of her death from the Jewish Chronicle of 24 August 1951:

        Click image for larger version

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        Regarding "A. R. Cohen," I think it would help if you could just go over the information again. Have I understood correctly that he was known as "Eddie" (and presumably traded under that name), but that one one occasion he revealed that his real name was A. R. Cohen? And that the "A" stood for Aaron? Obviously the middle initial is rather crucial, as there were quite a few Aaron Cohens, but only one Aaron R. Cohen of around the right age. Did that middle initial definitely come from Eddie himself?

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        • #79
          Forgive me Deb and Chris,my mistake, I misunderstood the censor, thought the 30 was her age, " oops sorry ". As to Eddie, yes he told a friend and I his real name " Aaron " although he preferred " Eddie ".

          This are some detail's I have about Eddie -

          Aaron, Raphael, Cohen.

          Born the eleventh of March 1921.

          Farther - Marcus Cohen.

          Mother - Ada Cohen formerly Bloom.

          I know Eddie inherited a Victoirian house in Bow, going towards Stratford from Whitechapel, the house was on the left hand side of Mile End Rd, Bow Rd just before Bow church.

          I have tried to locate Eddie from people I know in the East End, but he has lost contact with the people I have spoken with. thank's alot Deb and Chris for your co-operation, It would be great to find Eddie still alive, all the best, Agur.

          niko

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          • #80
            Hi everyone, just a thought, "am I barking up the wrong tree", hhmmmmm, "Nathan Kaminsky", all the best, Agur.

            niko

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            • #81
              Hi everyone, just a thought, "am I barking up the wrong tree", hhmmmmm,

              No, but definitely trying to pull a few legs, I'd say.

              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


              • #82
                Originally posted by Supe View Post
                Hi everyone, just a thought, "am I barking up the wrong tree", hhmmmmm,

                No, but definitely trying to pull a few legs, I'd say.

                Don.
                "Don, pull the other one it's got bell's on it" only jokeing,I'v, only said what Eddie told me, I'm not lying nor making it up, and I am only expressing my thought's on the forum. I can also qarantee " I ai'nt trying to pull's nobody's leg". All this happened over twentyfive year's ago. All the best, Agur.

                niko

                ps

                Don what would I gain by trying to pull a few leg's ?

                Comment


                • #83
                  I don't understand !!

                  Hi everyone, expressing my thoughts again. I just don't understand why the knife Thomas Coram found stained with blood was of no importance to the police in 1888 or even today is of no importance to researcher's of the Whitechapel murder's.

                  Daily Telegraph, 4 October 1888

                  MUCH IMPORTANCE is attached to a blood-stained knife which was found in Whitechapel, Road as detailed in the inquest, but nothing has yet been found to throw light on how it got there nearly twenty-four hour's after the murder was committed.

                  It was such a weapon as might have inflicted the wound's, but whether it really is the knife which the miscreant used cannot be ascertained. If it is, the finding of it in a doorway in Whitechapel Road would point to the inference that the man lives somewhere in Whitechapel.


                  The evening news Monday, October 1, 1888

                  Early this morning a police-constable was passing on his beat in the Whitechapel-Road, when he came upon a black-handled knife, keen as a razor, and POINTED like a CARVING knife. The blade was ten inches long, about the length of weapon assumed by Dr Phillips to have been used in the Hanbury-Street murder. It is looked upon by the policeas supplying a link in the "Man from Southapton arrest"
                  Attached Files

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                  • #84
                    Intuition

                    Hi to everyone,I mean everyone. I personally think I have very good intuition, my intuition tell's me that the forum member's and visitor's think I'm "nut's" or a crank, "I can't argue with that because I am a bit of a nutter" but I can asure you I'm not "stupid". What deeply disturb's me is that you think I'm making my statemrnt up or inclusive"that I'm a liar" or pulling your leg's like one forum member mentioned.

                    I belive myself to be a honest and noble person, like the majority of Basque people, I am as transparent as one can be, (Basque people are known and respected for there true word and honesty). Like I've said before it deeply disturb's me on you all thinking I'm making the story up,"I do'nt think even Stephen Spilburg could make my story up".

                    This are my statement's.


                    1. The knife has been in my possesion since 1983.


                    2. In 1981 I witnessed the police searching the arch with metal detector's


                    3. Eddie was the propitor of the arch, his real name was Aaron R Cohen he was a polish jew who was born in the Whitechapel area, I also witnessed him searching the arch floor with a metal detector, On Eddie's sixteeth birthday he told a friend and I that he was going to get alot of money for something a relative of his had done in the past.


                    4. Seventeen year's later I discover the finding of the Coram knife in Whitechapel (on the internet) and the discription written about the knife is simular "if not identical" to the knife I found, you know the bent blade, the string tied on the handle and the hankerchief wrapped around the handle.


                    5. Whilst here on the forum I came to the conclusion, that the knife I poses is a french cook's Sabatier knife, which was possitvely in circulation in 1888.



                    I really enjoy reading the "new posts" and searching through the board's, I read the "new post's" nearly every day. I read everyone's opinion's and theories, which I highly respect "one thing we should all do".

                    I have tried to find out about the "link" the police had regarding the knife with "the Southampton arrest" but no luck nor more press-report's regarding the Coram knife exept it's finding. Forgive me for the long post, the following is a hypothesis that I have invented.


                    Let's say Martha Tabram was Jack's first victim, Elizabeth Stride was the second and Catherine Eddowes was the third, let's also say that the Coram knife was the ripper knife, also saying that the ripper carried a smaller knife as well. Let's go back to stride and on murdering this happen's (I have copied this from casebook).

                    Liz Stride- The bottom edge of the scarf showed sign's of being cut at the same time as the throat, following the same pattern. The cut in the scarf could obviously have been caused by the knife jerking suddenly. Why ? now here come's the hypothesis. As the incision tapered off so the killer tried again to reassert pressure, but his hand slipped down the blade of the cumbersome weapon and cut himself. He then swiftly wrapped a hankerchief around the wound but not before his blood had permeated the knife and dripped onto stride's hand.

                    I also read somewhere that he cut himslf with his knife and in a temper turned the edge and blunted the blade, quote- "and it's edge turned by rubbing apparently on a stone such as a kerbstone, it evidently before was a sharp knife".

                    OK then the murderer recover's from his wound and goes in persuit of his third victim and find's her Catherine Eddowes and murder's her, that night angry with the idea he cut himself with his own knife, he bend's the knife's blade with an angry strike against a wall or something, then blunt's the edge. He then leaves the knife along the Whitechapel Road to be found, (remember the knife was found nearly 24 hour's after the double event).


                    OK this show's three murder's before Coram found the knife, hmmm, could the three notches I have found on the knife's handle that I poses indicate the three murder's prior the finding of the knife. Did the Ripper engrave the three notches onto the handle of the knife with the smaller knife he carried to indicate his three murder's he had committed untill that time.


                    Remember the knife was analized by expert's, which found primative male DNA from inside the wooden handle grips of the knife, possibly by blood filtering into the handle. I would love to know to whom this DNA belonged, remember this is just a hypothesis I've invented, all the best. Agur.

                    niko

                    Comment


                    • #85
                      Hi Niko. The knife isn't/wasn't regarded as important because it was discarded where it was found 24 hours AFTER the murders, and it's tip was ruined. The ruined tip is almost certainly the reason it was discarded by its owner, but the doctors then and students now don't believe that the killer(s) of Stride and Eddowes would have gone to work with a dulled knife and return to a nearby street the next day to toss it away. The Coram knife and the Ripper's knife are unreleated.

                      I'm not going to accuse you of lying, but if you really believe you are in possession of the Coram knife, then I'd say you've been had, much like those who've spent money on the Eddowes shawl.

                      Yours truly,

                      Tom Wescott

                      Comment


                      • #86
                        Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View Post
                        Hi Niko. The knife isn't/wasn't regarded as important because it was discarded where it was found 24 hours AFTER the murders, and it's tip was ruined. The ruined tip is almost certainly the reason it was discarded by its owner, but the doctors then and students now don't believe that the killer(s) of Stride and Eddowes would have gone to work with a dulled knife and return to a nearby street the next day to toss it away. The Coram knife and the Ripper's knife are unreleated.

                        I'm not going to accuse you of lying, but if you really believe you are in possession of the Coram knife, then I'd say you've been had, much like those who've spent money on the Eddowes shawl.

                        Yours truly,

                        Tom Wescott
                        Hi Tom, if the knife's owner threw it away because it was blunted or pointless "why did he wrap a hankerchief around it tied with a string and covered it with blood" ?

                        Yes when I unburried the knife the blade was "dulled", it took me less than ten minutes to regain it's sharpness with a grinding stone, "how long doe's it take to unsharpen, blunt or dull a knife ?

                        Tom yes I know the the knife was found twentyfour hour's after Eddowes murder, and if Iv'e been had, " I've had myself ",lol, as I myself came to the conclusion this is the Coram knife, on it's apperance when found. Nowhone has sold it to me like in the case of Eddowes shawl.

                        What do you say about the three notches carved onto the handle of the knife ?


                        I noticed the three notches after seventeen year's of the knife in my possesion. One day I decided to examine the knife with a magnifing glass, in search of halmark's or something and "bingo" I discovered the three well made notches on the side of the wooden handle.

                        I have many time's wondered, if this is the Coram knife, did the police who examined the knife "see the three notches" ? I reckon they did'nt, because if they did see the three notches, they would have a different opinion of the Coram knife.


                        It also seem's very risky depositing a large "dulled" knife wraped in a hankerchief covered in blood along the Whitechapel Road at midnight twentyfour hour's after Stride,s and Eddowes murder, too risky I would say (a bit of a twisted mind I would say), there is the possibility of been stoped and searched.

                        Tom I absolutly respect your belive in that this is not the Coram knife.


                        Question - Why and who would bury a 1800 Victorian french cook's knife in a railway arch in the East End, and bother to bend the blade, wrap a rotten cloth around the handle neatly tied with a thin string, was it for a laugh, a hoax or what ?


                        I spoke with Mrs Maggie Bird from the Police history musem, and she confirmed that the police "did" have a knife found in Whitechape at the time of the murder's in there custody, she did not say it was destroyed or anything like that, she simply said it disappered or went missing, like the majority of the evidence from the Jack the ripper case. All the best, Agur.

                        niko

                        Comment


                        • #87
                          Originally posted by niko
                          Hi Tom, if the knife's owner threw it away because it was blunted or pointless "why did he wrap a hankerchief around it tied with a string and covered it with blood" ?
                          Clearly, the handle was wrapped as such because it's owner used it as a work tool and needed to handle it comfortably. Once the knife tip was ruined,which clearly did NOT happen by cutting women, he tossed the knife away. I'm sure it didn't take you long to sharpen the knife, but you're missing the point. Stride and Eddowes were killed by a very sharp knife. So, my question, is why would the Ripper murder, then go home and spend his time ruining his knife, only to return to a street near the Stride scene, and dispose of the knife in broad daylight. Presumably, he was wanting it found quickly and exposed as the killer's knife, so why dull the point and why not dump it at the ACTUAL murder site? The investigators at the time decided it had nothing to do with the murders and the facts haven't changed from then to now. And why on earth would you think a knife you found in some railway arch was the Coram knife?

                          Yours truly,

                          Tom Wescott

                          Comment


                          • #88
                            Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View Post
                            Clearly, the handle was wrapped as such because it's owner used it as a work tool and needed to handle it comfortably. Once the knife tip was ruined,which clearly did NOT happen by cutting women, he tossed the knife away. I'm sure it didn't take you long to sharpen the knife, but you're missing the point. Stride and Eddowes were killed by a very sharp knife. So, my question, is why would the Ripper murder, then go home and spend his time ruining his knife, only to return to a street near the Stride scene, and dispose of the knife in broad daylight. Presumably, he was wanting it found quickly and exposed as the killer's knife, so why dull the point and why not dump it at the ACTUAL murder site? The investigators at the time decided it had nothing to do with the murders and the facts haven't changed from then to now. And why on earth would you think a knife you found in some railway arch was the Coram knife?

                            Yours truly,

                            Tom Wescott
                            Hi Tom and thank's for your interest, let's say he did blunt the knife for some reason or an other (twisted mind) and dumped it to be found. Forgive me but I must correct you on saying "and dispose of the knife in broad day light", the knife was found on October the first on Monday morning at half past twelve (half an hour past midnight), twentyfour hour's after the double event.

                            PC Joseph Drage who took the knife to Leman Street police station said "I had passed the step a quater of a hour before but I don't think the knife was there then".

                            The reason why I think it's the coram knife which I poses, like I've mentioned before, I clearly remember unburrying the knife as if were yesterday, I pulled the knife out oif the ground it's blade was bent (turned) it had a rotten cloth resembling a hankerchief wrapped around the handle, there was also a thin neatly tied string at the base of the handle, oh yes, the blade was also blunt. This is the discription of the knife when I found it.

                            On looking into Jack the ripper on the internet, I read about the knife Thomas Coram found and it's discription is given as I mentioned above includeing the thin string and hankerchief wrapped around the knife's handle, the discription is given in many newspaper's at the time," to much of a coinsidence" . All the best, Agur.

                            niko

                            Comment


                            • #89
                              Hi Niko. I've published like umpteen essays covering all aspects of the Berner Street murder, so the fact that I didn't remember that it was midnight and not day time should tell you how little interest the Coram knife holds for others. Most can't even keep the doctors' comments about it separate from the evidence of Stride's murder, which causes me much frustration. You seem sincere to me, but wishful thinking aside, you shouldn't tell people you have the Coram knife as you're clearly not sure of it and have no evidence for it. And even if you did beyond doubt have the Coram knife, it cannot be supported by evidence to have been a knife used by Jack the Ripper. What you have is a cool story about finding a really old knife at a railroad track. No doubt it has a fascinating history, but you don't really know what that history is. However, if it has piqued your interest in the Ripper murders, you're more than welcome to stick around here and learn and share with the rest of us.

                              Yours truly,

                              Tom Wescott

                              Comment


                              • #90
                                Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View Post
                                Hi Niko. I've published like umpteen essays covering all aspects of the Berner Street murder, so the fact that I didn't remember that it was midnight and not day time should tell you how little interest the Coram knife holds for others. Most can't even keep the doctors' comments about it separate from the evidence of Stride's murder, which causes me much frustration. You seem sincere to me, but wishful thinking aside, you shouldn't tell people you have the Coram knife as you're clearly not sure of it and have no evidence for it. And even if you did beyond doubt have the Coram knife, it cannot be supported by evidence to have been a knife used by Jack the Ripper. What you have is a cool story about finding a really old knife at a railroad track. No doubt it has a fascinating history, but you don't really know what that history is. However, if it has piqued your interest in the Ripper murders, you're more than welcome to stick around here and learn and share with the rest of us.
                                Yours truly,

                                Tom Wescott
                                Hi Tom, firstly I must say thankyou for welcoming me to learn and share with you all on casebook, secondly I should say "I think it could be the Coram knife" as I have no possitive evidence proofing it is the knife, "very differcult to proof I must addmit, if not impossible. I do'nt think there is anyone who can say "oh yeah that's the knife".

                                The U.P.A labarotary found Human DNA (male) between the wooden handle grip's of the knife. The most logcal answer I have come up with for this is - someone useing the knife cut himself, but continued using the knife whilst bleeding, this causeing the blood to filter into the interior of the knife's handle and the blood remaining there until today.

                                I found the knife burried under a railway arch not a railway track, this arch was a London taxi garage, on doing local inquires regarding the arch, I discovered that many arches were stables back in the day, the first arches down the street was a Diary with cow's included. In my opinion the arch floor where I found the knife had not been disturbed in a hundred year's.

                                Forgive me all for my persistence, It's my character which make's me push-on when I think I'm right, although If I'm proved wrong I will proudly addmit I'm wrong, this is my character, also please forgive my spelling. Just a thought, If this is the Coram knife, I think it would change some aspect's of the Whitechapel murder's, as I personally think there is little evidence for such great interest in the Ripper case and a lot of the evidence smell's "fishy" to me e.g the victim's body's being undressed and "washed" before the Doctor's autopsy examination, that's just one of many, ok then mate thank's for your interest and all the best, Agur.

                                niko

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