By happy chance, on what was a sunny day in London, I had the opportunity to visit Durward Street again to collect a little bit more data. I wanted to fill in a gap in the timings because I had previously not timed the walk down the modern route from Doveton Street to Durward Street through the Sainsburys walkway. I suspect this was the route that Fisherman took in the TV documentary with Andy Griffiths although it did not exist in 1888. The exact route was: from Doveton Street into Wickford Street then into Cephas Street then down Cambridge Heath Road into Darling Row through the Sainsburys walkway across Brady Street into Durward Street.
There were two differences between the walk I did and Fisherman's presumed walk. Firstly, I started the journey from the front door of one of the houses in the middle of Doveton Street whereas Fisherman and AG appear to have started from the street (saving a few seconds). Secondly, it is not currently possible to walk to the exact site of the murder due to construction work for Crossrail so I had to end the walk at a barrier some distance from where the body was found.
The philosophy behind this walk was to walk slowly at a leisurely pace but not ridiculously slowly. To give you an idea, while it was certainly much slower than my normal work (which is quite fast), I nevertheless overtook a couple of middle aged/elderly Asian women at one point while I was walking along Cambridge Heath Road. I also matched the pace of a couple of other adult males at points during the walk before they turned off the route. So I don’t think I was walking unreasonably slowly.
I wasn't delayed by any traffic; I did quicken my pace while crossing part of Cambridge Heath Road on both occasions due to cars coming (and didn't attempt to compensate for this at any point).
I carried out the walk in both directions and thought I had done it at the same pace on both occasions but the timings were as follows:
1st attempt: 8 minutes and 25 seconds
2nd attempt: 8 minutes and 50 seconds
Don't forget that it would have taken me at least another 30 seconds at this pace to reach the murder site. Adding on those 30 seconds makes the totals 8:55 and 9:20 respectively.
My conclusion is that a walk of 9 minutes along this modern route is not unreasonable.
I did one extra walk along the same route at what I tried to keep at a more brisk pace, not fast (a bit slower than my normal walk but probably a bit faster than average pace). That took me 6 minutes and 5 seconds.
Finally, and separately, I walked from the end of Durward Street towards the construction barrier and back at both paces just to give an idea of timing over this short distance. At the slow pace I walked it in 1 minute and six seconds at the more normal, brisker, pace it was 46 seconds.
There were two differences between the walk I did and Fisherman's presumed walk. Firstly, I started the journey from the front door of one of the houses in the middle of Doveton Street whereas Fisherman and AG appear to have started from the street (saving a few seconds). Secondly, it is not currently possible to walk to the exact site of the murder due to construction work for Crossrail so I had to end the walk at a barrier some distance from where the body was found.
The philosophy behind this walk was to walk slowly at a leisurely pace but not ridiculously slowly. To give you an idea, while it was certainly much slower than my normal work (which is quite fast), I nevertheless overtook a couple of middle aged/elderly Asian women at one point while I was walking along Cambridge Heath Road. I also matched the pace of a couple of other adult males at points during the walk before they turned off the route. So I don’t think I was walking unreasonably slowly.
I wasn't delayed by any traffic; I did quicken my pace while crossing part of Cambridge Heath Road on both occasions due to cars coming (and didn't attempt to compensate for this at any point).
I carried out the walk in both directions and thought I had done it at the same pace on both occasions but the timings were as follows:
1st attempt: 8 minutes and 25 seconds
2nd attempt: 8 minutes and 50 seconds
Don't forget that it would have taken me at least another 30 seconds at this pace to reach the murder site. Adding on those 30 seconds makes the totals 8:55 and 9:20 respectively.
My conclusion is that a walk of 9 minutes along this modern route is not unreasonable.
I did one extra walk along the same route at what I tried to keep at a more brisk pace, not fast (a bit slower than my normal walk but probably a bit faster than average pace). That took me 6 minutes and 5 seconds.
Finally, and separately, I walked from the end of Durward Street towards the construction barrier and back at both paces just to give an idea of timing over this short distance. At the slow pace I walked it in 1 minute and six seconds at the more normal, brisker, pace it was 46 seconds.
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