Hi Roy,
I don't know what kind of relationship they had. I was replying to your point about why McCarthy would ever want to kill Kelly and giving an alternative reading of the facts. She had no means of support and no ability to pay her rent, but he was letting her stay on regardless. If I was a copper, I'd like to get to the bottom of that.
The following is completely hypothetical!!!
Hypothesis 1:
- McCarthy is doing a bit of fencing out of his shop. Kelly knows and says she will tell the cops if he doesn't give her a break on the rent.
Hypothesis 2:
- McCarthy has a mistress and a couple of kids stashed away in a salubrious house in Maida Vale. Mrs McC doesn't know anything about this. Kelly says if he doesn't give her a break on the rent, she'll tell her.
Hypothesis 3:
- McCarthy has some, um, strange ways of enjoying himself. Specifically he likes diddling little kids. Kelly knows about this and tells him that if he doesn't give her a break on the rent she'll tell the cops and everyone else in the area.
What I'm saying is that McCarthy was being generous, and as per Pinkerton's newspaper clipping, that wasn't a generous family. If no other woman had been killed, and if Kelly was a one-off, I suspect we'd all be all over McCarthy on the grounds of the rent alone. And blackmail would be an obvious inference. However I'm not ruling out the possibility that he was a generous man who felt sorry for a woman who was down on her luck.
It's not that I suspect him. It's that I won't rule him out arbitrarily. If she didn't owe that back-rent, I'd probably not feel as interested in him as I am.
John McCarthy
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Hi Chava!
Originally posted by Chava View PostI wonder why Kelly didn't remove to Crossingham's Rents when she ceased to be able to afford the more salubrious confines of Millers Court.
Oh, wait a second, she didn't have to worry about paying the rent...
Nice bit of 'thinking outside the box' , as Howard might call it though!
And certainly there's room for speculation in that 'relationship' between Kelly and McCarthy....
WK.Last edited by White-Knight; 01-14-2009, 06:11 AM.
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Few "unfortunates" could have afforded to have moved there in the first place - Crossingham, Cooney and co at least offered the more affordable 4d per night option.
Oh, wait a second, she didn't have to worry about paying the rent...
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Originally posted by Pinkerton View PostBy the way...Do we have a physical description of John McCarthy anywhere?
Short, stocky, Jewish appearance, with a carroty mustache perhaps?
Nobody heard a peep out Mary after roughly 1:30 AM, based on what we think we know. Barring any random yelps of "murder".Last edited by Celesta; 01-14-2009, 04:29 AM.
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Hi Pinkerton,Originally posted by Pinkerton View PostHowever my point is that I don't believe that most lodging house owners knew their tenants as well as McCarthy, since his shop was in the front of Miller's Court.Most of them were likely unaware of most of the customers who came in, as this was left to the deputy.McCarthy on the other hand seemed to know most of his tenants by name according to the news reports.
Besides, why should familiarity with his immediate neighbours not have served to humanise him, rather than have turned him into an exploitative despot? Indeed, he might even have been better-disposed to his Miller's Court residents generally, than those in more far-flung outposts of his (still embryonic) empire.And despite your infirmary figures Sam I still don't think we can categorically state that there were MORE prostitutes living in a lodging house in White's Row than in Miller's Ct.
(Incidentally, Chris Scott transcribed the 1888 records - full credit to him. I did the 1885 ones and added sex, street and illness categories for easier access to the demographic and epidemiological data.)But again it has never been my contention that Miller's Ct. had MORE prostitutes than any other lodging house.
In sum, against speculation based on a few newspaper reports of a handful of people over a few days, we have the infirmary records for the entire year of 1888, the census returns of 1881/1891 and a simple economic argument - all of which point to there being comparatively few prostitutes in Miller's Court.Last edited by Sam Flynn; 01-14-2009, 02:48 AM.
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By the way...Do we have a physical description of John McCarthy anywhere?
Short, stocky, Jewish appearance, with a carroty mustache perhaps?
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostThat was ten years later. Crossingham and his wife lived just across the way from Miller's Court in 1888, if memory serves me right.
And despite your infirmary figures Sam (which are impressive by the way) I still don't think we can categorically state that there were MORE prostitutes living in a lodging house in White's Row than in Miller's Ct. There are too many variables involved. If your figures are correct, we can only say that there appear to be more women who reported to be prostitutes in the infirmary from White's Row than from Miller's Ct during the relevant time. But again it has never been my contention that Miller's Ct. had MORE prostitutes than any other lodging house.
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Originally posted by Pinkerton View PostHowever I don't agree with you that the infirmary records are more accurate than the newspaper accounts OF THE ACTUAL COURT APPEARANCES of these women. If you are a prostitute and an employee of an infirmary asks your PROFESSION, you are much more likely to lie to them
Please refer to my initial post where I attached the screenshot of the table showing the prostitute numbers.However as I said you would concede that there were at least three or four other prostitutes living at Miller's Ct. when MJK lived there, and I would concede that this number is probably not more as a percentage than other (though not all) lodging houses in the area.
As there is no reason to suppose that the proportion of people who fell ill in (e.g.) 8 White's Row would have been significantly greater than those in (e.g.) Miller's Court, the simple conclusion is that, because proportionately more prostitutes attended the infirmary from 8 White's Row than Miller's Court, proportionately more prostitutes lived at 8 White's Row (one of Crossingham's, I believe) than lived at Miller's Court.
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostThey are most certainly relevant inasmuch as they constitute the nearest thing to a "census" we have to the residents of the streets of Spitalfields in 1888. I have made my rationale for using them perfectly clear, together with caveats. Bearing those caveats in mind, the infirmary records are a hugely important and powerful resource for those interested in the demographics of the East End in general, and Whitechapel/Spitalfields in particular.
Given the sheer number of records, and time-frames, involved, the infirmary lists have a significant advantage over those who would prefer to base their imaginings on a clutch of press reports relating to brief instants in time in the lives of a mere handful of people.
However as I said you would concede that there were at least three or four other prostitutes living at Miller's Ct. when MJK lived there, and I would concede that this number is probably not more as a percentage than other (though not all) lodging houses in the area. My only point to posting those two articles of prostitutes at Miller's Ct. was to show that there were prostitutes residing there for at least several years (the fact that there were 3 or 4 there when MJK was there was not an aberration). I AM NOT trying to make the argument that there were MORE prostitutes at Miller's Ct then anywhere else THEREFORE McCarthy must have been a pimp.
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Hi Sam,
McCarthy an ordinary Spitalfields landlord?
He was the only local slum landlord I know of to be invited to Abberline's 1892 retirement dinner.
Regards,
Simon
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Originally posted by Jon Guy View PostHello Pinkerton
Only recently discovered this but Mr Crossingham did live in Dorset St. He lived at 16 Dorset St with his wife and leased 16-20 Dorset St.
McCarthy was, when all's said and done, a rather ordinary Spitalfields landlord - his tenants, and the way he conducted his business with them, would not have been radically different to many others in his line of business.
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