Originally posted by miss marple
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Washing up in public
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Originally posted by Harry D View PostI have a vague memory of someone mentioning a report of a suspicious man seen washing his shoes after one of the murders(?). I'm not putting any stock into it, it was most likely completely innocent, but can someone clear up the source of this?
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Originally posted by RockySullivan View PostThe shoes would be likely to get bloodied no?
It wasn't so much that I was inquiring about, but the origin of the story itself.
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Originally posted by RockySullivan View PostI think washing up in the public sink is a very possible idea but wouldnt somone notice the blood stained water near the murder site in the hours after? I was also thinking about the second hand clothes recently since Liz Jackson's dismembered remains were found in the LE Fisher underwear bought used from a servant, I had wondered if that was Torso's connection to his victim. Wouldn't make much sense though. I wonder if the ripper had access to a supply of used or new clothes, if his clothes would be bloodied from each kill that's quite alot of sets of clothes to lose. Perhaps he had a method for only getting blood on his hands and sleeves?
In 1869 there was a murder that would become the subject of a memoir by the Surete detective who handled it, Gustave Mace, entitled "My First Case". Mace was assigned to find out the fate of one Bodasse, a wealthy miser. His family and friends had not seen him in weeks, though at night some noticed his shadow in his apartment (the apartment's curtains and shades were drawn, but there was light from inside and someone moving. It subsequently turned out that the killer of Bodasse, a police informer and spy named Pierre Voirbo, had very cleverly set up his activities in searching Bodasse's apartment in such a way that it looked to outsiders that it was Bodasse moving about, not Voirbo, and that Bodasse would be reported "as alive' long after he actually was murdered.
The case has been called the best example of "diamond-cut-diamond" in the 19th Century, as every action of Voirbo was painstakingly undermined by Mace's stick-to-it-ness until a brilliant conclusion involving an experiment with a sloping floor where the murder was committed.
However, for our purposes there was one intriguing moment showing a clever murderer overcoming police inquiry. Bodasse's body was cut up ,and parts dumped in wells and the Seine. But it required iron nerve (which Voirbo had plenty of), and on one occasion he was carrying a bag of Bodasse's remains to a corner of the Seine and dumping the pieces in casually. Two gendarmes came over to ask him what he was doing. "Oh," he said calmly, "I'm sorry gentleman, I am a fisherman, and I am just dumping some scraps of meat here to attract the fish - I will come back in the morning to get some good fishing done!" The gendarmes looked at him calmly tossing the fragments into the river, and wished him well with his fishing!
Now, granted bloodied water soon after a horrible murder on a nearby locale is not like a man with a bag of "meat" fragments dropping them into the Seine to improve the fishing, but this shows you that a calm killer might very well talk himself out of a similar type of enquiry.
Jeff
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Major Henry Smith, Acting Commissioner of the City Police at the time of the murders, wrote in his memoirs that he was within five minutes of catching Jack (in his opinion) as out on the City streets he had come across a public wash basin with bloodied water in it down an alley way after the Mitre Square murder. His memoirs were titled 'From Constable to Commissioner: The Story of Sixty Years Most of them Misspent' (1910). Only trouble is, Smith was supposed to be a very amusing man but not strictly reliable, to say the least!
I wouldn't put too much faith in lodging houses having coppers for boiling water. One observer of a lodging house kitchen at the time described it as reeking, and with inches of dirt all over the floor and walls. Any lodgers probably had a basin and a jug of cold water as part of the facilities, and that would be it.
The Drinking Fountain and Cattle Trough Association maintained lots of drinking fountains with cold water taps and basins outdoors, near pubs in London. (They wanted to promote temperance.)
There were indeed lots of second hand clothing markets, many run by Jewish people, in Victorian London. For a sixpence or so the Ripper would probably be able to buy a pair of trousers or a jacket. Or he could go to a public wash-house. That's always supposing of course that Jack got a lot of blood on his clothes or that he wasn't employed in a job where blood would go unnoticed.
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G'day Rosella
I wouldn't put too much faith in lodging houses having coppers for boiling water. One observer of a lodging house kitchen at the time described it as reeking, and with inches of dirt all over the floor and walls. Any lodgers probably had a basin and a jug of cold water as part of the facilities, and that would be it.
From some reports I've read I really doubt that some of them even had that, maybe a cold water spigot, sometimes outside on a verandah that they could use for a scrub if they could get a bit of soap from someone [remember the puch up over a sliver of soap].G U T
There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.
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