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  • Originally posted by DrB View Post
    I was surprised by the quick response of local doctors to the murder scenes from the east end - I wonder how many docs lived within 2 to 5 miles of the murders??
    Hello Dr B

    Dr Llewellyn lived on the Whitechapel Rd, just around the corner from Bucks Row, and the Policeman on the beat would know where the local Doctor lived.

    Dr Killeen lived in Brick Lane, a stone`s throw from George Yard.

    Dr Phillips was the H Div police Surgeon and lived in Spital Sq, less than a five minutes walk from Hanbury St and Dorset St.

    Dr`s Johnson and Blackwell lived and worked at the top of the next street to Berner St.

    On discovery of a body, the Doctor was the first call for a policeman, then the duty Inspector and so on

    Comment


    • Dear Ben/Jon,

      I'm not completely settled on this guy having no surgical knowledge - this was 1888 - a time of grave robbers and body snatchers - he took some organs - why? maybe to study them - the kidney, uterus and heart - it was a time of great surgical discovery and the surgery was butchery - he seems to know the cuts to make and what he's looking for . The smart dress thing depends on what u want to include and exclude really from the witnesses reports. The doctors living in the area - is this a full list - what about the docs from the local whitechapel hospital ? I bet there were more than 10 doctors in that area. Just some thoughts.

      All the best

      DrB

      Comment


      • Hi DrB,
        Originally posted by DrB View Post
        he took some organs - why? maybe to study them - the kidney, uterus and heart - it was a time of great surgical discovery
        If he were a doctor or medical student, there were easier ways of getting hold of organs. Indeed, they'd already have studied anatomy at medical school, so there was little or nothing to gain by performing extra-curricular dissections in the street. Also, the great time of surgical discovery had long gone - there's very little that a 19th Century medic (or reader of medical books) would have known about gross anatomy that hadn't already been discovered, and documented, a century or more before. The fine structure of most organs was well-understood by the mid/late 1800s, and the study of the microscopic anatomy of cells and tissues (histology) had started in earnest as far back as the mid 17th Century.
        Kind regards, Sam Flynn

        "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

        Comment


        • Removel of Kidney

          Hello All
          Do you know what I have always found interesting? How did JTR locate and remove the kidney of Eddowes in the short space of time it is believed he had when so many medical people say that the kidney is a very difficult organ to locate.JTR did it in a dark corner of Mitre Square!
          Steve
          _____________________________________________
          Oh for a time machine to go back to 1888 and lurk about Whitechapel and see who was JTR

          Comment


          • Originally posted by Steve F View Post
            Hello All
            Do you know what I have always found interesting? How did JTR locate and remove the kidney of Eddowes in the short space of time
            That's a topic in itself, Steve, and specific to Eddowes - you might like to try this thread: http://forum.casebook.org/showthread.php?t=384&page=3
            Kind regards, Sam Flynn

            "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

            Comment


            • Thanks

              Thank you for the direction Sam
              Steve
              _____________________________________________
              Oh for a time machine to go back to 1888 and lurk about Whitechapel and see who was JTR

              Comment


              • I agree with those who say it's someone unknown and unfortunately for those if us fascinated by the case, most likely unknowable.

                For the most part, serial murderers have turned out to be nobodies famous only for their crimes. Their identities are household names today only because they got caught.

                Historically speaking, if Charles Manson had been hit by a truck or his “family” lost in the desert they were hiding in at the time, who 100 years from now would have him on their suspects list? He wasn’t even a blip on the Police’s radar back in 1969 and the theories that the authorities were working under at the time didn’t even come close to his Helter Skelter motive. What author or amateur “Masonologist” could have conceived of something as bizarre as the actual truth behind the Tate-Labianca murders?

                If they weren’t eventually captured would anyone have suspected Ted Bundy?, or Richard Ramirez? Would a single author a century from now have hit on Wayne Williams as the culprit in the Atlanta Child murders or have concluded the Son of Sam shootings were committed by a nut named David Berkowitz who believed his neighbors dog was speaking to him thru the walls?

                I believe it was Donald Rumbelow who ended one of his books by saying, and I’m paraphrasing here, “When all the Ripperologists are standing in front of the Lord on Judgment day and ask him the name we’ve so long sought, I can’t help but believe upon finally hearing it we’ll all turn to one another and exclaim, Who?”

                Comment


                • What you say makes a lot of sense, 6. You even have the Rumbelow "Who?" paraphrase more or less correct, except that it comes in the middle of his Complete JtR, not at the end.

                  When I first read that line in 1975 I fervently hoped that he was wrong but, as it turns out, he ain't.

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by The Grave Maurice View Post
                    What you say makes a lot of sense, 6. You even have the Rumbelow "Who?" paraphrase more or less correct, except that it comes in the middle of his Complete JtR, not at the end.

                    When I first read that line in 1975 I fervently hoped that he was wrong but, as it turns out, he ain't.
                    Thank you. Not bad considering I read that book some 20-odd years ago.

                    Comment


                    • Probably the best solution

                      Hi #6
                      As dissappointing as it sounds I think you are probably right!I often think of the quote about if we ever do find out who it was we will all say ''who'' too I don't think in history of serial killers has it ever turn out to be a prime suspect and the coppers ended up saying ''we told you it was him''
                      Steve
                      Steve
                      _____________________________________________
                      Oh for a time machine to go back to 1888 and lurk about Whitechapel and see who was JTR

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by Steve F View Post
                        Hi #6
                        As dissappointing as it sounds I think you are probably right!I often think of the quote about if we ever do find out who it was we will all say ''who'' too I don't think in history of serial killers has it ever turn out to be a prime suspect and the coppers ended up saying ''we told you it was him''
                        Steve
                        Thank you for the nice welcome, it's good to be around so many knowledgeable people. I'm putting you all on notice right now; I expect to learn a lot from you all!

                        Back to the subject at hand, I’ve often wondered if one of the hallmarks of serial killers, perhaps even one of the reasons they do what they do, is the fact that their basically nobodies.

                        Famous and wealthy people have other outlets for their…”eccentricities” shall we say.
                        Frustration and the gnawing belief that the world somehow “owes them something” along with a false sense of superiority may contribute to whatever mental weaknesses they have.

                        Undoubtedly it’s a combination of many factors, some we no doubt do not yet understand that creates the so called “serial killer.” But social anonymity does seem to be a common factor. I’m afraid our friend Jack was most likely one of the unseen, overlooked “everymen” that populate our daily lives, famous now only for his crimes.

                        Still, it’s the hunt itself that’s 90% of the fun.

                        Comment


                        • An aside

                          Hi #6
                          I see from your profile that you are from sunny Hollywood and in the entertainment industry(surprise surprise! ) and I couldn't let it go by without saying that we lost a true screen great today,Paul Newman RIP
                          I spent some time in California many years ago 1979/80 as I had an Aunt who married a GI during the war and moved to Reseada in 1945 and I was lucky to visit her on a couple of occasions.Ah the sunshine
                          Steve
                          _____________________________________________
                          Oh for a time machine to go back to 1888 and lurk about Whitechapel and see who was JTR

                          Comment


                          • I incline to the view that it was an impotent Whitechapel builder,a specialist in all manner of erections,who went by the name of Drew Peacock.

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by tradesman121 View Post
                              I incline to the view that it was an impotent Whitechapel builder,a specialist in all manner of erections,who went by the name of Drew Peacock.
                              I couldn't disagree more. I believe he was a well-endowed Irish male stripper, named Miles o'Toole.
                              Kind regards, Sam Flynn

                              "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

                              Comment


                              • Suspicion was cast on an unbalanced Chinese sailor -Won Hong Lo.

                                Roy
                                Sink the Bismark

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