Originally posted by curious
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With the establishment of Whitechapel as a Civil Parish (c. 1329), the chapel was re-dedicated and consecrated as 'The Parish Church of St. Mary Whitechapel', not 'St. Mary Matfelon'.*
* This; from everything that I have been able to gather, from my research, thus far.
An image that I compiled about three years ago …
The Parish of St. Mary Whitechapel, County of Middlesex (Click to Enlarge in flickr)
Underlying Aerial Imagery: Copyright Google Earth, 2007
Overlying Plots, Labels and Color-Shadings: Copyright Colin C. Roberts, 2010
The Parish of St. Mary Whitechapel, County of Middlesex*
* A very small portion of the Parish of St. Mary Whitechapel lay within the City of London, until becoming part of the Parish of St. Botolph without Aldgate, in 1900:
- ___ 43-47 Aldgate High Street, Ecclesiastical Parish of St. Botolph without Aldgate, Civil Parish of St. Mary Whitechapel, Portsoken Ward, City of London
- ___ 2, 4, 6 Mansell Street, Ecclesiastical Parish of St. Botolph without Aldgate, Civil Parish of St. Mary Whitechapel, Portsoken Ward, City of London
- Population (1891 Census): 42
The area is not color-shaded, in the image above; but can be seen at the very western edge of the 'Blue' region, on the south side of 'Butcher's Row' (i.e. Aldgate High Street).
Yellow: The Ecclesiastical Parish of St. Jude, Civil Parish of St. Mary Whitechapel
--- Purple: St. Jude's Church
Blue: The Ecclesiastical Parish of St. Mary, Civil Parish of St. Mary Whitechapel
--- Purple: St. Mary's Church; i.e. the Parish Church of St. Mary Whitechapel***
Red: The Ecclesiastical Parish of St. Mark, Civil Parish of St. Mary Whitechapel
--- Purple: St. Mark's Church
--- Blue: Leman Street Police Station
Green: The Ecclesiastical Parish of St. Paul, Civil Parish of St. Mary Whitechapel
--- Purple: St. Paul's Church
*** If the above image is enlarged in flickr, the color-shaded 'footprint' of this church-edifice, which was destroyed by German bombing, in ~1940(?), …
The Parish Church of St. Mary Whitechapel, c. 1937
Courtesy of Casebook.org 'Photo Archive'
… can be seen; along with the brick outline of this church-edifice, which was destroyed by fire, in ~1878(?).
The Parish Church of St. Mary Whitechapel, c. 1870
Courtesy of Casebook.org 'Photo Archive' / Tower Hamlets Local History Library
Again;
Originally posted by robhouse
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- Dorset Street (excepting three-or-four Jewish dwellings, at its western end), and adjoining courts
- Little Paternoster Row
- 8 White's Row (the remainder having been overwhelmingly Jewish)
- Flower & Dean Street (excepting that portion occupied by Rothschild Buildings, i.e. its southwestern quarter), and adjoining courts
- George Street (excepting that portion occupied by Rothschild Buildings and Lolesworth Buildings, i.e. its western side), and adjoining courts
- Thrawl Street (excepting that portion occupied by Rothschild Buildings and Lolesworth Buildings, i.e. its western half), and adjoining courts
- Wentworth Street (northern side, between George Street and Brick Lane)
… all in the Parish of Christ Church Spitalfields
… and …
- Wentworth Street (southern side, between George Yard and Osborn Street)
- George Yard (northeastern quarter)
… both in the Parish of St. Mary Whitechapel
I have yet to pinpoint the 'population-weighted' 'Mean-Center' of the Gentile common-lodging-house 'quarter'; but my non 'population-weighted' preliminary analysis has inclined me to 'guess-timate' that it is located somewhere along the southwestern side of Flower & Dean Street, Parish of Christ Church Spitalfields, more-or-less opposite Elizabeth Stride's last known address, at #32.
I should make note of the fact that the 'population-weighting' will be based on the numbers of female residents, between the ages of 18 and 55, as reported in the 1891 Census.
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My reason for viewing this particular 'Mean-Center' as having been the theoretical murder-site 'Epicenter', is that it can be rightfully seen as having been the 'Hub' of routine activity for the chosen prey of 'Jack the Ripper'.
I am inclined to believe that at any given hour of the day, this 'Hub' would have effectively been the 'Mean-Center' of a 'Normal Distribution' of middle-age, alcoholic, vagrant 'dollymops', going about their normal routines: e.g. begging, drinking, pick-pocketing, shop-lifting, hawking, soliciting, sleeping 'rough', 'dossing', etc.
While I believe that the victims of 'Jack the Ripper' were drawn to the specific sites of their respective murders, by totally random circumstances; I also tend to believe that they each died in areas where they were normally to be found, going about the sort of routine activities that characterized their collective identity: Again; that of the vagrant 'dollymop'.
If the distribution of 'hunter's prey', when grazing in the meadow, was characteristically 'Normal', then so too would the distribution of successful kill-sites have been, when the 'hunting season' had ended: 'Normal'.
At some point (time permitting, and God willing, I am afraid ...), I intend to adjust the 'Mean-Center' of my Geographic Profile, to incorporate a fractional 'weighting' of the 'Mean-Center' of the Gentile common-lodging-house 'quarter'.
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