East End Photographs and Drawings

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  • Rob Clack
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    Your welcome

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  • Archaic
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    London Kids Playing Cricket, 25 April 1930

    I love this photo of poor children in London playing cricket in the street using a lamp post for their wicket.
    Resourcefulness at its finest.

    Special thanks to Rob Clack for re-formatting the photo so I could post it.

    Cheers,
    Archaic
    Attached Files

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  • SirJohnFalstaff
    replied
    great find. Thanks.

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  • K-453
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  • magoo
    replied
    perhaps the Goulston street graffiti really said "the doves are not the men who will be blamed for nothing"

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  • MrBarnett
    replied
    Originally posted by magoo View Post
    Those pigeons merit further investigation. I recently acquired an old piece of clothing with a stain on it that appears to have come from a bird. I plan on having it tested
    If you use a reputable scientist, he should be able to identify it as a plop group.

    MrB

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  • magoo
    replied
    Those pigeons merit further investigation. I recently acquired an old piece of clothing with a stain on it that appears to have come from a bird. I plan on having it tested

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  • Rosella
    replied
    And what a tale their ancestors could have told!

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  • Jon Guy
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    Originally posted by Rosella View Post
    Are the pigeons stuffed?
    Just found them on Ancestry. The pigeons in the later photo are descendants and still live on the same window sill in Mitre Street.

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  • Rosella
    replied
    Are the pigeons stuffed?

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  • Jon Guy
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    Originally posted by Roy Corduroy View Post
    At right, the Kearley and Tonge sign is gone, but it's the same building. Tayler's building directly ahead was taken down.
    The 5 pigeons are still there ..... !!

    Nice photo Roy, thanks

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  • Roy Corduroy
    replied
    Mitre Square

    1925

    Click image for larger version

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    This is the same view as the 1925 William Whiffen photo in Casebook photo archives. Looking towards Ripper corner.

    At right, the Kearley and Tonge sign is gone, but it's the same building. Tayler's building directly ahead was taken down.

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  • Caligo Umbrator
    replied
    Originally posted by MrBarnett View Post
    It was the Bucks Row photos that most impressed me. If they were taken by someone interested in JTR, it seems strange that they are of the Brady Street end.
    Hi, MrBarnett.
    Interesting that you point that out - I hadn't noticed.
    I have a 1965 copy of 'When London Walked in Terror' by Tom Cullen. The end papers, on the front and back inside covers, are decorated with a white on red map depicting the locations of the murders.
    Unhappily, the map doesn't demonstrate the accuracy one might wish for if one were using it to wander around Whitechapel. The Bucks Row location is incorrectly marked as is the one at Hanbury St.
    If someone with an interest in photographically recording the locations was to use this map as a guide, they might produce the discrepancy you've noted.
    Certainly the vehicles present in the images suggest a date of the early to mid 1960's.
    It would be interesting to know their origin.
    In any case images of this area of London, that represent the original locales more or less intact, are greatly appreciated.

    Yours, Caligo.

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  • Rosella
    replied
    This is fascinating stuff. Thanks for posting the photographs etc. As a young teenager I was taken over some of the sites by a relative who was interested in Jack the Ripper. I presume these photos are from the same vintage, early 1960's? A lot's changed in that area of London in fifty years!

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  • MrBarnett
    replied
    Originally posted by Caligo Umbrator View Post
    Hi, MrBarnett.
    That's a useful link, thank you.
    I've seen the Hanbury St. photographs before but the Mitre Sq. images are new to me. Iregardless of whether they depict the precise scenes of the murders, they certainly serve to illustrate the buildings that overlook the confines of the square. One can imagine, even with lamps and a few window lights, just how dark and treacherous a place it could have been at night.
    Yours, Caligo.
    It was the Bucks Row photos that most impressed me. If they were taken by someone interested in JTR, it seems strange that they are of the Brady Street end.

    Leave a comment:

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