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  • Trevor Marriott
    replied
    Well its nice to know I have one avid reader all i have to do is convert Sam and the rest hallelujah !!!!!!!!
    Last edited by Trevor Marriott; 10-08-2009, 12:29 AM.

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  • Monty
    replied
    Originally posted by Stewart P Evans View Post
    As a matter of psychological and academic interest, are you one of Trevor's readers Neil?
    Damned if I do and....

    Oh I am indeed Mr Evans. Avid I believe the word is.

    Monty

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  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by Stewart P Evans View Post
    As a matter of psychological and academic interest, are you one of Trevor's readers Neil?
    The precise same thought occurred to me

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  • miss marple
    replied
    Good Finds !Sceptic Blue
    Mann seems to have had a horrible life, a lifetime in workhouses, in the East End bad food, hard labour, sensory deprIvation,no stimulation, family or change. His mental capacities would be much reduced or underdeveloped. Hardly surprising he had fits. Poor Man, a lifetime of poverty equals lifetime of imprisonment.
    Miss Marple

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  • dixon9
    replied
    i am pretty sure i read that the police went to the workhouse just before 5 am to tell him a body was at the mortuary(Polly Nichols),so will the prog say he killed Polly went back to the workhouse and awaited the police to tell him he had a body to deal with?

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  • Stewart P Evans
    replied
    Interest

    Originally posted by Monty View Post
    Way to attack your readership Trevor.
    Monty
    As a matter of psychological and academic interest, are you one of Trevor's readers Neil?

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  • lynn cates
    replied
    report

    Hello Joe. Please be sure to give us a report on the show Sunday. I look forward to it.

    Cherrs.
    LC

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  • Septic Blue
    Guest replied
    1861
    - Registration District: Whitechapel
    - Civil Parish: St. Dunstan Stepney
    - Registration Sub-District: Mile End New Town
    - Enumeration District: "Union Workhouse", i.e. Whitechapel Union Workhouse
    - Page 17
    - "Mann, Robert"
    - "Inmate"
    - "25"
    - "Labourer"
    - "Middlesex, M E N Town"

    I believe that Robert Mann lived his entire life in the same Poor Law Facility; …

    - Parish Workhouse of Christ Church Spitalfields ( -~1842)
    - Whitechapel Union Workhouse (~1842-1872)
    - Whitechapel Union Infirmary (1872- )

    … Charles Street / Baker's Row / Vallance Road, Hamlet of Mile End New Town.

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  • Septic Blue
    Guest replied
    Originally posted by Septic Blue View Post
    Mann appears to have lived most of his life in the facility that was the Whitechapel Union Workhouse from ~1842 to 1872, and the Whitechapel Union Infirmary thereafter. He is listed as either a resident 'inmate' or 'pauper' in each of the census-years 1851, 1871 and 1881.
    Originally posted by miss marple View Post
    So he should be in the census of 1891 age 56,
    He is!

    I didn't scroll through the pages of the enumeration district "Baker's Row Infirmary (Whitechapel Union)", during my initial search: I simply 'searched' his name/birth-year/residence. It must have been incorrectly transcribed by ancestry.co.uk.

    1891
    - Registration District: Whitechapel
    - Registration Sub-District: Mile End New Town
    - Enumeration District: "Baker's Row Infirmary (Whitechapel Union)", i.e. Whitechapel Union Infirmary
    - Page 8
    - "Robert Mann"
    - "Pauper Inmate"
    - "56"
    - "General Laborer"
    - "London, M E N Town"

    Judging from the four references to place of birth, …

    - 1851: "n.k." (not known?)
    - 1871: "Middx Stepney"
    - 1881: "Middlx Mile End New Town"
    - 1891: "London, M E N Town"

    … I would venture to guess that Mann was actually born in the Parish Workhouse of Christ Church Spitalfields, which was replaced (on site) by the Whitechapel Union Workhouse, in ~1842.

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  • Septic Blue
    Guest replied
    Originally posted by Chris View Post
    ... his workhouse uniform would have made him very conspicuous, and presumably liable to be arrested by any policeman who saw him.



    http://www.casebook.org/press_report.../18880918.html
    "Robert Manns (an old man in workhouse uniform) said he was keeper of the Whitechapel mortuary. He received the body in the morning and left it in the mortuary. After having breakfast he returned and, with the assistance of a man named Hatfield, he undressed the body.

    The Coroner - Oh, yes, and the inspector was present while this was done, was he not?

    Witness - No; we two were alone.

    The Coroner (in astonishment) - Surely you make a mistake. Think again.

    The witness adhered to his statement, and after some further examination, the coroner remarked that Manns' evidence was quite unreliable. He was subject to fits, and apparently his memory was impaired. (It will be remembered that on a previous occasion that Inspector Helston deposed to being present while the body was being stripped).

    James Hatfield, another old man, also in the workhouse uniform, said he assisted Manns to strip the body, and he described how this was done. They cut some of the clothes and tore others, to get them off. He and Manns were quite alone. The deceased did not have any stays on.

    A juryman (indignantly) - Why when we in the yard you showed me the stays. You even put them on to show me how small they were. (Laughter.)

    The witness said he had no recollection of such a thing, and the Coroner remarked that it was useless to examine this witness further, as he, too, evidently had an impaired memory."

    Originally posted by Chris View Post
    And of course none of the witnesses describes anyone resembling "an old man in workhouse uniform" near any of the murder sites.
    Perhaps Mann was dressed in Nichols's clothing – which ironically included a portion of the uniform worn by inmates of the Parish Workhouse of St. Mary Lambeth (Princes Road) – when he encountered Chapman; and likewise dressed in Chapman's clothing on the night of the so-called 'Double Event'; etc …

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  • Radical Joe
    replied
    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
    Radical Joe writes:

    "I'll wait until sunday to see how he counters these (and other) objections."

    A sound advice indeed, Joe. I´d like to chime in with Claire here and say that I had no intention of bullying you - you are perfectly welcome to your wiew, of course!

    The best,
    Fisherman
    That's fine, as with Clare, I never had the idea that you were bullying me anyway! I'm up for a good debate about relevant issues, and even a bit of banter as a side dish. Disagreements are par for the course on here, and I wouldn't want it any other way. It's only when it gets personal and nasty that I don't like.

    And, touch wood, I haven't encountered any nasty remarks yet.

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  • miss marple
    replied
    No need to answer this, about whether Mann was in the workhouse in 1888. Answers have been coming in thick and fast, so we know he was the inmate of two workhouses in the censuses till 1881
    .In 1881 he was described as a dock labourer pauper age 46.
    He was still in the whitechapel workhouse in 1888 when he is a mortuary attendant at the inquest of P.N
    So he should be in the census of 1891 age 56,
    He died in 1896 age 60 in whitechapel. The death cert would b useful.
    i would think at some point he would have been one of the 'casuals' who waited in the mornings to get a day's work at the docks. These casuals were often unemployed, they had none of the advantages of the permenant dock labourers.If he had worked in the docks when younger, he must have been fairly strong
    Can someone look him up in 1891 census? I've had no luck on freecen, which never comes up with anything.

    Miss Maple
    Last edited by miss marple; 10-06-2009, 08:50 PM.

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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Radical Joe writes:

    "I'll wait until sunday to see how he counters these (and other) objections."

    A sound advice indeed, Joe. I´d like to chime in with Claire here and say that I had no intention of bullying you - you are perfectly welcome to your wiew, of course!

    The best,
    Fisherman

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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Claire asks:

    "excellent stuff, Fisherman...do you have a date for that?"

    That would be September 18, Claire! And Mann was described as "the poor old mortuary keeper" in the East London Advertiser of the 22:nd. He does not come across as the typical Ripper, exactly...

    The best,
    Fisherman

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  • Trevor Marriott
    replied
    If he was wandering the streets he would have been in company with hundreds of others all doing the same.

    In some workhouse some residents were allowed to come and go freely

    I can now see other people will be coming out of the woodwork all trying to put forward names of someone in the specified catergories i.e butcher,slaughterman, doctor, student, just because they vaguely match the FBI profile and either live or work in the Whitechapel area. To me the FBI profile isnt worth the paper its written on.

    You cannot totally blame Trew if this all turns out to be a lame duck. You have to blame the Discovery channel for commissiong it. Whoever did that had obviously no knowlege of The Whitechapel murders. But the trouble is the public will view it and will no doubt beleive what they have seen and heard.
    Last edited by Trevor Marriott; 10-06-2009, 07:43 PM.

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