I was reading the thread 'take your pick' concerning who Anderson's witness at the seaside home identification might have been. It caused me to go back and read some of Sir Robert Anderson's memoirs (the lighter side of my official life). It might be this is a well known issue by casebook members, but I was surprised when reading that Anderson states there were six victims, not the usual canonical five. He does not name the victims, so it is not clear who the sixth victim is, other than it was before Mary Ann Nichols' murder. Is he the only police official to go beyond the canonical five and do we know who his sixth victim was?
Extract to which I refer below - my comments in italics:
But this was not all. The second of the crimes known as the Whitechapel murders was committed the night before I took office (which was the night of Mary Ann Nichols murder), and the third occurred the night of the day on which I left London (the night of Annie Chapman's murder). The newspapers soon began to comment on my absence. And letters from Whitehall decided me to spend the last week of my holiday in Paris, that I might be in touch with my office. On the night of my arrival in the French capital two more victims fell to the knife of the murder-fiend (Liz Stride and Catherine Eddowes); and next day's post brought me an urgent appeal from Mr. Matthews to return to London ; and of course I complied.
(He later address the Mary Jane Kelly murder)
Extract to which I refer below - my comments in italics:
But this was not all. The second of the crimes known as the Whitechapel murders was committed the night before I took office (which was the night of Mary Ann Nichols murder), and the third occurred the night of the day on which I left London (the night of Annie Chapman's murder). The newspapers soon began to comment on my absence. And letters from Whitehall decided me to spend the last week of my holiday in Paris, that I might be in touch with my office. On the night of my arrival in the French capital two more victims fell to the knife of the murder-fiend (Liz Stride and Catherine Eddowes); and next day's post brought me an urgent appeal from Mr. Matthews to return to London ; and of course I complied.
(He later address the Mary Jane Kelly murder)
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