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Why Didn't the Police Have Schwartz and/or Lawende Take a Look at Hutchinson?

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  • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
    It just reads as though Lewis saw Kelly with him, but she didn't.
    She might have, though, but that's for another thread.

    Suffice to say that the man of "gentlemanly appearance" might have been the man seen by Lewis outside the Britannia, and not Mr Astrakahan.
    Kind regards, Sam Flynn

    "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

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    • Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
      She might have, though, but that's for another thread.

      Suffice to say that the man of "gentlemanly appearance" might have been the man seen by Lewis outside the Britannia, and not Mr Astrakahan.
      hi sam and wick
      I started a new thread about this on Kelly victim section
      "Is all that we see or seem
      but a dream within a dream?"

      -Edgar Allan Poe


      "...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
      quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."

      -Frederick G. Abberline

      Comment


      • Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post

        As I understand it there are no records that show his statement was checked with that lodging house to confirm he had resided there prior to that night..
        He didn't stay there that night, in fact from his own words he seems to have slept at some other address prior to that night.
        He only took up residence at the Victoria Home from the 10th, he came in when it opened in the morning. That is what he said. He couldn't stay at his usual place, as he says, "my usual place was closed".
        Regards, Jon S.

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
          True, and was described as such in the press.

          "The last person to have left the place must have closed the door behind him, taking with him the key from the spring lock, as it is missing."
          Daily Telegraph, 10 Nov. 1888.

          Even though the point of the comment was the missing key, it is also of importance to know this was a spring lock. Meaning the door bolt was spring loaded so the door locked itself when pulled shut.

          These locks had a two knobs on the inside. One knob was slid horizontal to withdraw the door bolt. The other when slid up would retain the bolt in the withdrawn position, or if applied when the bolt was extended, would lock the door.
          Do you have a photo of the sort of lock you're describing, Jon? I'm finding it hard to picture.
          The Pall Mall Gazette 10 Nov describes Bowyer "on knocking at the door was unable to obtain an answer. On looking through the keyhole he found the key was missing."*

          So this sounds to me like a mortice type lock, with a keyhole accessible from both sides and a separate sprung latch to keep the door closed (but not necessarily locked). But this can't be correct as this would need a separate handle on the outside to open. Whereas Barnet's tale implies that the door could be opened solely by turning the key, before it was lost.
          I'm struggling to find Victorian examples of a type of lock which fits all known details.

          *Incidentally, if he told the police this, he may be the source for them believing that the killer had taken the key. And, possibly, their assumption that the door needed unlocking rather than unlatching.

          Comment


          • Hi Joshua.

            Robert posted the link in a previous post.

            We can't be sure this is exactly the same lock, though it represents the same type of lock used at the time.

            Bob Hinton researched a lot into this many years ago. He even built a replica mock-up of the window and door to see if it was physically possible to reach.
            He went to great lengths....
            Regards, Jon S.

            Comment


            • In simple terms the spring lock had a latch that had to be engaged for the door to remain unlocked when closed. Flicking that latch is all it takes to unlock it too.


              In terms of this discussion about Levy, isn't Issacs more interesting in this context?
              Michael Richards

              Comment


              • Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
                Do we know that was the case Sam?
                I see no reason to doubt that it was.
                As I understand it there are no records that show his statement was checked with that lodging house to confirm he had resided there prior to that night.
                There are no records to show that it wasn't checked, either. But, as I said, I've no reason to doubt it.
                Last edited by Sam Flynn; 12-13-2018, 05:54 AM.
                Kind regards, Sam Flynn

                "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Wolf Vanderlinden View Post
                  Back to the coat over the door for a moment...
                  Door? I think you mean window.

                  Walter Dew, I Caught Crippen, 1938:

                  “The room was pointed out to me… I tried the door. It would not yield. So I moved to the window, over which, on the inside, an old coat was hanging to act as a curtain and to block the draught from the hole in the glass.”

                  If this coat was a “fabrication” or a “false memory” or “malarkey” on the part of Walter Dew, would we really expect to find contemporary support for it in an obscure note to an illustration of the room published on 11 November 1888?

                  How do you explain that, Wolf?

                  How incredibly lucky that this old liar and fabricator Dew must have been, writing in the 1930s, to unwittingly have made the same strange "error" (?) that someone else had already made while writing a note to an illustration clear back in November, 1888, only 2 days after the murder.

                  I suppose one could argue that in writing his memoirs Walter Dew hobbled down to the British Library and scoured old bound copies of The Sunday Times until he found this obscure reference and then decided to add it to his memoirs (despite that it clashed with the more well-known accounts) but is that really very likely??

                  Isn’t it far more likely Dew wrote from his actual experience, and this contemporary note confirms the accuracy of his memory?

                  Yes, the contemporary accounts you cite mention a curtain and quote Bowyers calling it a curtain. But recall that after the discovery of Mary Kelly’s body, the court was cordoned off, and two burly constables stood like sentinels on either side of the entry, keeping people out. The windows were boarded up. No reporters writing those initial stories of the murder had any actual access to the room, and wouldn’t know, nor would have particularly cared, what drapes Mary Kelly may have kept over her window. It would have been an irrelevancy to them. And in telling his “narrative” of how this appalling scene was discovered, the nature of the fabric covering the window would have been the last thing on Bowyer's mind. He took no notice but naturally assumed it had been an ordinary curtain of some sort. And, for that matter, there could have been both a curtain and a coat.

                  The Times was the conservative voice of London and probably enjoyed better access to the police than most. A couple of days had passed and the illustrator, possibly working with a police source, got the story right. Dew’s memory confirms it. Minor point, obviously, but it tends to show that Dew was not the blowhard as so often depicted by “Ripperologists.”
                  Last edited by rjpalmer; 12-13-2018, 09:37 AM.

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by Darryl Kenyon View Post
                    Yes, the retaining knob on the inside must have been in the release position for the door to be locked.
                    But i am still at a loss as to why the police did not put their hands through the window to unlock the catch if it was as simple as Abberline says.
                    Maybe i am missing something?

                    Hi Darryl. Is there a reason you dismiss the account given by Inspector Henry Moore? He stated the door lock was jammed and the killer was forced to escape out the window. Finding the key wouldn't have helped; the lock was mechanically stuck.

                    One could dismiss Moore's account as sensationalism, of course, but it does explain why a pick-axe had to be used.

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by Joshua Rogan View Post
                      The Pall Mall Gazette 10 Nov describes Bowyer "on knocking at the door was unable to obtain an answer. On looking through the keyhole he found the key was missing."
                      If Bob was correct about the type of lock, then there was no slot for a key on the inside. Perhaps that is why Bowyer saw no key retained in the keyhole.
                      The key was only used to get in from the outside.
                      Regards, Jon S.

                      Comment


                      • Hi RJ,

                        Is there any particular reason why you choose to believe the crock of old horsefeathers about the door being locked, thus having to be subsequently broken open by McCarthy?

                        Mele Kalikimaka maika'i a me ka makahiki hou maika'i.

                        Regards,

                        Simon
                        Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
                          Isn’t it far more likely Dew wrote from his actual experience, and this contemporary note confirms the accuracy of his memory?
                          If I recall Dew is quoted at some point recollecting "entrails hanging from the ceiling".. if my recollection is correct hardly my go to guy for the "truth" rj.
                          Michael Richards

                          Comment


                          • Hi Michael,

                            I believe this was Inspector Henry Moore, who in December 1899 claimed £77.11s expenses in respect of the Whitechapel Murders.

                            Inspector Moore - Pall Mall Gazette 4th November 1889 [Talking to journalist R. Harding Davis] -

                            "He cut the skeleton so clean of flesh that when I got here I could hardly tell whether it was a man or a woman. He hung the different parts of the body on nails and over the backs of chairs. It must have taken him an hour and a half in all. And when he was ready to go he found the door was jammed and had to make his escape through the larger of those two windows." Imagine how this man felt when he tried the door and found it was locked; that was before he thought of the window - believing that he was locked in with that bleeding skeleton and the strips of flesh that he had hung so fantastically about the room, that he had trapped himself beside his victim, and had helped to put the rope around his own neck."

                            Regards,

                            Simon
                            Last edited by Simon Wood; 12-13-2018, 01:11 PM.
                            Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

                            Comment


                            • Yes, it was Harding Davis's interview with Moore; it had nothing to do with Dew, who was completely circumspect and stated that the 'complete details of that room would only ever be known to those whose duty it was to enter it.' (I quote from memory). No gory details, but let's bash the old boy just the same.

                              Hi Simon. Merry Christmas to you! Let me answer your question with a question. Or maybe ten.

                              Refresh my memory. Who took that exterior photograph of No. 13 Miller's Court? Is it standard procedure to photograph the outside wall of a crime scene, or is it likely that the broken window had some relevance? Or maybe even the other window next to it? If not, why photograph them? What relevance might they have to the murder? Does Henry Moore offer any enlightenment on this point?

                              As for Harding Davis/Moore, what is hanging on the back of the chair in the drawing in Wickerman's post #556? I ask just for jollies, of course. All the best.

                              Comment


                              • Do we know if there were shards of glass in the right lower window pane or was all the glass removed from that corner thus making it safer but a larger gap?

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