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Toffs in Spitalfields

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  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by Natalie Severn View Post
    the Cambridge Music Hall in Commercial Street,which was situated very close to "Thrawl Street"---it appears to have cornered Commercial Street and Thrawl Street.
    The Cambridge Music Hall was a little further north, Nats - I posted a map excerpt yesterday that showed its location, fronting Commercial Street, but wedged between Hanbury and Great Pearl Streets.

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  • Natalie Severn
    replied
    Sam, Ben,Miss Marple,......have no fear,they wont hurt you......
    I read a most interesting piece when researching Dan Leno earlier.[By the way-in the week leading up to the murder of Mary Kelly he was,according to information I had last year from this site,performing at the Cambridge Music Hall in Commercial Street,which was situated very close to "Thrawl Street"---it appears to have cornered Commercial Street and Thrawl Street ].
    However, The "Foresters " in Cambridge Heath Road ,Whitechapel was where he began to make his name and the research site posted a news item from Tuesday September 4th 1888,Manchester Guardian headed "Forester Attack".
    It states that A woman was leaving the Music Hall on the previous Saturday, when a "well dressed man" approached her and walked alongside her as she neared the point of the Nichol"s murder,when out of nowhere a gang of men and women assaulted her,tore the necklace from her throat and other items of jewelry and when she began to cry out,one of the men held a knife to her throat and threatened to sort her out as the other woman had been[Polly].
    This gives credence tand possibly another dimension to what Roy is suggesting wouldnt you agree?---Its just possible Mary"s Mr Astrakhan man was "known to her" and was kitted out in stolen goods fresh from such a mugging!

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  • Ben
    replied
    Hi Roy,

    The police were still interested in him when he returned to Spitalfields in December. His suspicious behavior and attire in November in the murder district warranted their attention, meaning they had not given up on Hutchinson's description.
    Perhaps not by that stage, but it was shortly thereafter that Hutchinson's evidence was fairly obviously discredited, at least as a means of capturing a potential murderer. Notice also that it was only the press that claimed a similarity between Isaacs and the Astrakhan man. We don't know that the police were interested in him for that reason.

    So this proves you don't have to arrive in a coach or be a lord to look like a toff.
    Not really, Roy, because as Gareth mentioned, there was never any indication that Isaacs was dressed like an Astrakhanian toff. In fact, the chances of a cigar-maker "of no fixed abode" having the financial means to even approximate a Mr. Astrakhan costume was rather remote, suggesting instead that the Astrakhan-Isaacs similarity was based more on height, complexion, moustache etc, along with the obvious "Jewish" factor.

    Best regards,
    Ben

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  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by Natalie Severn View Post
    You really do need to quote chapter and verse to convince me of all this nonsense about Fournier Street being a slum in 1888.
    I posted a link to the 1891 Census, Nats - give it a click. While you're there perusing the endless shoemakers, charwomen, potmen, barmen and hat-blockers, perhaps you can think of an ingenious reason as to why the Fournier Street's demographic content changed so radically in the 2 years or so that separated the Census and Kelly's death in November 1888.

    And, by the way, I don't think anyone's said that Fournier Street was a "slum", only that its occupants weren't perhaps as well-heeled as some might like to believe.

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  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by Natalie Severn View Post
    totally incorrect about Monica Coghlan.She was no high class hooker
    Totally wrong about what I said, Nats, which was that Shepherd Market was infamous for its high-class hookers. What is a high-class hooker, anyway - a woman who drops her aitches only when she has an orgasm?

    I thought that they were hookers who served high-class clients, and charged accordingly, rather than being particularly "fragrant" types per se.

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  • Natalie Severn
    replied
    Now dont get your knickers in a twist Miss Marple! Agatha would be ashamed of you
    Seriously,why not wait just a few days until I get back to London when I can post my photos? You really do need to quote chapter and verse to convince me of all this nonsense about Fournier Street being a slum in 1888.Provide the link and the proof please.2 Fournier Street was the rectory.So chapter ,verse,page numbers please.........

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  • Natalie Severn
    replied
    Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
    You can check out the 1891 Census listing for Fournier Street (then "Church Street"), here:



    Can't see (m)any toffs there, I'm afraid.In Shepherd Market, Mayfair - a place infamous for high-class hookers, and nowhere near as much a "red light area" as Soho, a mile or so to the east. Needless to say, Shepherd Market is decidedly more "up-market" than Soho, or modern-day Spitalfields come to that.No, the judge summed up by asking the jury of Mary Archer "Does she not have elegance? Does she not have fragrance?", which isn't the same as implying that Monica Coghlan was "a bit smelly" at all.

    totally incorrect about Monica Coghlan.She was no high class hooker----my ex was one of the journalists who heard the stories .And the "implication".by the judge,was that Monica was "neither fragrant nor elegant"----think nuance and inference here and you will understand why he drew laughter!

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  • miss marple
    replied
    church

    Sam has beaten me to it! I have just been spending time checking the inhabitants of Church/ Fournier st on 1881 census. And there is not a toff in sight
    The houses were multi occupantcy with between 15 and 30 people in each, many Jews. Small tradesman, tailors, cigar makers,porters ivory tuners etc.
    It is irrelevant how grand they were in the 18th century,by 1880s they were slums . The east end was one of the most populated and poverty stricken parts of the country by 1860
    There is no real evidence that toffs hung out there for immoral purposes, apart from assertion.

    I have read loads of accounts of toffs in West end Brothals

    The West End was full of brothals had catered to every vice,from homosexuality to S&Mm everything was available in discreet comfortable, surroundings.Its nonsense to say men were worried about being recognised in public. The reason to go up west at night was to have a good time. Ladies did not go there, unless escorted to a respectable theatres.There was a constant supply of fresh girls virgins being brought in from the country. Madams used to stand at railway stations and pick them up with a false story about a good job.
    Toffs if they had VD liked a virgin.
    So given a choice of possibly the greatest sex industry in the world,in the West End apart from Paris. we are expected to take on trust that a very fussy snobbish toff, [I dont mean the Oxbridge socialists who actually did good] who had the best of everything, and lived luxury and comfort and who's opinion of the east enders would be on a par with horseshit, [ if they ever entered his consciousness] would in all his finery,rush down to Dorset street to find a drunk middle aged hag, who probably had fleas, and possibly lice. Fleas and lice are never mentioned in the attempt to romanticise the situation, but they were present, and who probably stank, in order to give her one in a back ally. And then go back without being attacked
    Dos not have the ring of veracity about it somehow.
    Miss Marple
    PS As the eastend was the centre of the tailoring trade and even in the 19th century astrakhan cloth was being made, which was a good imitation of the real thing. It very possible for a small tradesman to possess such a coat. Also astrakan was very flash, an english gent would not have worn it.
    Last edited by miss marple; 01-03-2009, 01:16 AM. Reason: adding

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  • Roy Corduroy
    replied
    Ben & Sam, again, thank you for answering my posts. The case of Joseph Isaacs shows us:

    (1) The police were still interested in him when he returned to Spitalfields in December. His suspicious behavior and attire in November in the murder district warranted their attention, meaning they had not given up on Hutchinson's description.

    (2) He answered the published description of a man with an astrachan trimming to his coat. So this proves you don't have to arrive in a coach or be a lord to look like a toff. A toff-looking man doesn't have to just appear out of nowhere, sort of a "Beam Me Up Scotty."

    Roy

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  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by Roy Corduroy View Post
    As an example, a Mr. Oakes said that Joseph Isaacs changed clothes a lot.
    Unfortunately, Roy, we have no evidence of what sort of clothes they were. As Isaacs was "of no fixed abode", and a lowly cigar-maker, I think we can hazard a guess.

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  • Ben
    replied
    Hi Roy,

    A psychopatic murderer could dress this way to procure an invite from the desirable Mary Jane back to her room. Then he kills her.
    That sort of dress was incredibly unlikely to have attracted Kelly, though. It would have aroused her suspicions if anything, considering that the Astrakhan man's appearance pandered very heavily to a lot of the myths that were circulating in relation to the killer's likely appearance (Jewish, well-dressed, conspicious, small black package). An East End prostitute didn't need flashy clothes to be enticed into business - they simply couldn't afford to be choosey, and if shabby ol' Blotch was anything to go on, Kelly clearly wasn't. In that area and that perilous time, the most "attractive" type of client was the unthreatening tried and tested local.

    It wouldn't have mattered how "vicious" the killer was. By attiring himself in a manner almost guaranteed to attract negative attention at the worst possible moment in history, he was really peeing on his own bonfire quite unnecessarily, and the fact that he may not have been "afraid" would not have availed him when set upon by a gang of thugs or wannabe Vigilantes.

    I doubt very much that fake bling was that easily obtainable, and an entire toff costume was probably beyond the means of most men in the district, even if we're not talking solid gold here.

    Best regards,
    Ben

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  • Roy Corduroy
    replied
    Hi again Ben & Sam,

    Again, my point is, you don't have to arrive by coach or be wealthy to be someone who "answered the published description of a man with an astrachan trimming to his coat." You don't have to be a real toff. As an example, a Mr. Oakes said that Joseph Isaacs changed clothes a lot. In Paternoster Row.

    People did change their appearance, you know. The clothing items described by Hutchinson were available anywhere. A psychopatic murderer could dress this way to procure an invite from the desirable Mary Jane back to her room. Then he kills her.

    This type of individual is not going to be afraid of going into a vicious, criminal area. He is the vicious one.

    Roy

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  • Ben
    replied
    Precisely so, Gareth.

    An important clarification, and very well-spotted on your part.
    Last edited by Ben; 01-02-2009, 10:20 PM.

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  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by Ben View Post
    Hi Roy, In theory, you're absolutely right...
    ...except inasmuch as Isaacs was never described as wearing an astrakhan-trimmed coat, Ben. See my previous post.

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  • Ben
    replied
    Hi Roy,

    He was wearing an Astrakhan trimmed coat. Throw some bling on that, with the fancy shoes and cuffs, and you've got Hutch's suspect.
    In theory, you're absolutely right, but the mentality behind any decision to do so is arguably even more ludicrous than the hypothetical toff venturing into a known abyss, dressed in a manner that was virtually guaranteed to attract attention, especially at the height of the murders when anyone remotely out-of-place became the object of instant mob-fuelled suspicion. I doubt very much that any self-respecting member of the strongly represented "vicious, semi-criminal" fraternity would have spent much time pondering over whether or not such a perfect candidate for mugging was genuinely wealthy or simply flashy.

    The bling had only to look real for likely disaster to ensue.

    Best regards,
    Ben

    Leave a comment:

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