Mr P,
Do you think Jack went for prostitutes because they were the target or because of the availability?
I think the latter.
I must also applaud Colins post, so good I read it thrice. I think its pretty much spot on. He wouldnt do what he did, where he did, unless he felt comfortable. That goes without saying. I personally think the chances are high that he was local, evidence supports this
Do you think Jack went for prostitutes because they were the target or because of the availability?
I think the latter.
I must also applaud Colins post, so good I read it thrice. I think its pretty much spot on. He wouldnt do what he did, where he did, unless he felt comfortable. That goes without saying. I personally think the chances are high that he was local, evidence supports this

All we can really say about him is that he wanted to be able to use his knife on women and remain undetected and free to repeat the behaviour. That may well have been enough to dictate where he sought his victims and what sort of woman they would be: unfortunates so desperate that they could be murdered quickly, easily and safely, for the promise of a few pennies, out on the mean anonymous streets east of the city border; not canny inhabitants of some professionally run knocking-shop, high-class or otherwise.
There ain’t no such beast. Doctors and lawyers (or teachers and undertakers), didn’t dare venture into the East End, let alone get to know the geography of the place. If the dirt poor inhabitants got sick, needed a lawyer, wanted to learn to read and write or died, they were obviously left to rot. The London Hospital in Whitechapel, with all its medical and admin staff, is a myth created by early toff theorists, and the only locals who ever managed to get medical treatment had to steal some boots or tramp barefoot to the nearest doctor outside the area. When they got there he had to treat their blisters too.

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