In reading about the case lately I'd noticed something in the various witness statements that surprised me. I mentioned it to a friend who has concurrently reactivated a dormant interest in the 1888 murders, and he'd marked it too--the fact that seemingly every pub and costermonger was up selling at all hours of the night to the denizens of Whitechapel.
I realize that a market like Spitalfields would require preparation for business in the wee hours, but isn't there a mention of someone buying fruit from a man at the front ataout or after one am? Was he(or whoever was selling) just hanging out at that hour, in case a person or two ambled by-on a rainy night, when the profit couldn't have been worth the loss of sleep? Or did shopkeepers just roll out of bed if someone rang?
Not to mention the women continually going back out to grab a beer at three am, or 5:30, so I gather that pubs were legally allowed to be operated 24/7. Is that right? That kind of shocks me as the England I first knew(not to mention here in the US) had strict "Sunday laws", as well as very short business hours on most other days and here in Los Angeles, at least, to avoid continual partying bars are required to close from 2am till 6. Not so in Victorian London?!
I can understand prostitutes being up and about in the early hours, but what about the other tradesmen and sellers? When on earth did any of them sleep? Was it normal for all parts of the London or were the "open all night" hours for the slums only?
I realize that a market like Spitalfields would require preparation for business in the wee hours, but isn't there a mention of someone buying fruit from a man at the front ataout or after one am? Was he(or whoever was selling) just hanging out at that hour, in case a person or two ambled by-on a rainy night, when the profit couldn't have been worth the loss of sleep? Or did shopkeepers just roll out of bed if someone rang?
Not to mention the women continually going back out to grab a beer at three am, or 5:30, so I gather that pubs were legally allowed to be operated 24/7. Is that right? That kind of shocks me as the England I first knew(not to mention here in the US) had strict "Sunday laws", as well as very short business hours on most other days and here in Los Angeles, at least, to avoid continual partying bars are required to close from 2am till 6. Not so in Victorian London?!
I can understand prostitutes being up and about in the early hours, but what about the other tradesmen and sellers? When on earth did any of them sleep? Was it normal for all parts of the London or were the "open all night" hours for the slums only?
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