Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing
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At the mortuary our reporter saw three men who had their suspicions raised on Saturday night by the conduct of a man and a woman in Settles-street, Commercial-road:
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John Gardner, labourer, 11, Chapman-street, corroborated all that Best said respecting the conduct of the man and the woman at the Bricklayers' Arms, adding "before I got into the mortuary to-day (Sunday) I told you the woman had a flower in her jacket, and that she had a short jacket. Well, I have been to the mortuary, and there she was with the dahlias on the right side of her jacket.
I COULD SWEAR She is the woman I saw at the Bricklayers' Arms, and she has the same smile on her face now that she had then."
So we have three witnesses stating that the flower was red (only), and the police witnesses stating that the flower was a rose, compared to the earliest witness (Gardner), who believed it to be a dahlia. We also have Spooner describing the flower as red and white.
The theory: Spooner describes the flower pinned to Stride's jacket as being red and white, because a flower of those colours is what he was expecting to see, due to having seen Stride wearing a red and white flower, earlier in the evening.
Support for this theory would require Spooner stating, or have been witnessed, having been at the same place as Stride, earlier in the evening. Failing that; in the vicinity of a location at which Stride was seen by another witness or witnesses.
It also requires more evidence that the original flower had been replaced with another. A witness who sees Stride between the time she is seen at the pub by the three labourers, and when found dead, and who is explicit about not seeing a flower on the victim's jacket, would fit the bill.
Re 1st requirement:
J. Best, 82, Lower Chapman-street, said: I was in the Bricklayer's Arms, Settles-street, about two hundred yards from the scene of the murder on Saturday night, shortly before eleven, and saw a man and woman in the doorway. They had been served in the public house, and went out when me and my friends came in. It was raining very fast, and they did not appear willing to go out. He was hugging her and kissing her, and as he seemed a respectably dressed man, we were rather astonished at the way he was going on with the woman, who was poorly dressed.
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I have been to the mortuary, and am almost certain the woman there is the one we saw at the Bricklayers' Arms.
The man was about 5ft. 5in. in height. He was well dressed in a black morning suit with a morning coat. ... He had a thick black moustache and no beard. He wore a black billycock hat, rather tall, and had on a collar. I don't know the colour of his tie. ... The man was no foreigner; he was an Englishman right enough.
The address of the Bricklayer's Arms was 34 Settles Street. Located on the eastern side of Settles Street at the southern corner of the junction with Fordham Street. A church stood nearby. At its southern end, Settles Street joins Commercial Road opposite Christian Street. Source
Spooner: On Sunday morning, between half-past twelve and one o'clock, I was standing outside the [Beehive Tavern] at the corner of Christian-street and Fairclough-street, along with a young woman. We had been in a beershop at the corner of Settles-street, Commercial-road, and remained till closing time. I stood at the top of Christian-street for a few minutes, and then walked down the street.
Re 2nd requirement. MA, Oct 6:
William Marshall, 64, Berner-street, deposed - I am a labourer in an indigo warehouse. I have seen the body of the deceased at the mortuary. I saw deceased on Saturday evening in Berner-street, about three doors off from where I am living. She was on the pavement opposite No. 58. She was between Boyd-street and Fairclough-street. It was then about a quarter to twelve o’clock at night. She was standing on the pavement talking with a man.
How did you know this was the same woman? - I recognised the deceased was the same woman by her face and her dress. She was not wearing a flower in her breast. She and the man were talking quietly. There was no lamp near. The nearest lamp was some yards off. I did not see the face of the man distinctly.
Did you notice how he was dressed? - Yes, he had a black small coat and dark trousers.
How old was he, do you think - young, or old, or middle-aged? - He seemed to me to be a middle-aged man. He was not wearing a hat; he was wearing a round cap with a small peak to it, something like what a sailor would wear.
What height was he? - He was about 5ft. 6in.
Was he thin or stout? - Rather stoutish.
Did he look well dressed? - Yes, sir, he looked decently dressed.
What class of man did he look? - He looked as if he worked at some respectable business.
Everybody works at a respectable business. - (Laughter.) - He did not look like a dock labourer nor a sailor. He had more the appearance of a clerk than anything I can suggest. I do not think he had any whiskers. He was not wearing gloves. He had no stick or umbrella in his hand. He had a cutaway coat.
Are you sure it was not me? - (Laughter.) - No, sir. - (Laughter.) I am sure deceased is the woman. I did not take much notice as to whether she had anything in her hand. I was standing at my door.
What attracted your attention to them? - I was first attracted by their standing there for some time, and he was kissing and cuddling her.
Did you overhear anything they said? - I heard the man say to the deceased, "You would say anything but your prayers."
So the apparent sequence is:
flower at pub > no flower on street > flower in yard
In terms of the type of flower:
Dahlia at pub > nothing on street > Rose in yard
It's notable that Bricklayer's Arms Man seems similar in appearance, behaviour and ethnicity, to Lower Berner Street Man, except for a crucial difference - the headwear; a black billycock hat, rather tall goes to a round cap with a small peak to it.
It would also seem that I like coining monikers
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