Originally posted by Wickerman
View Post
‘By the Jury: When did you see her last alive ? - On Wednesday afternoon, in the court, when I spoke to her. McCarthy's shop is at the corner of Miller's-court.’
McCarthy’s shop was on Dorset Street adjacent to the interconnecting passage. Since Bowyer described it as ‘at the corner of Miller's Court’, it would be safe to assume that he, at least, regarded the passage as being part of the court.
The Daily News, 13 November, 1888, attributed the following to Carrie Maxwell:-
‘I know Mary Jane Kelly by the name simply of "Mary Jane" … I saw her standing at the corner of the court on Friday morning at about eight or half-past eight o'clock. I was then coming out of the house where my husband acts as a deputy ... I said, "Why, Mary what brings you up so early?" She said, "Oh, Carry, I do feel so bad." I asked her if she would have a drink, and she replied, "I have just had half-a-pint of beer and brought it all up again." I saw it in the road, about three yards from where she stood-on the pavement.’
So Kelly was standing ‘at the corner of the court’, ‘on the pavement’, about three yards from a pool of vomit lying ‘in the road’. In other words she was both on Dorset Street and standing at the corner of the court.
Produce as many maps as you like, Jon, but you are completely missing the point. The important factor here, the thing you are refusing to countenance, is not what a surveyor or cartographer would have made of the Dorset Street topography, it was the perception of the locals who knew and inhabited the district. Harry has already informed you of his direct experience of such matters, and the news reports leave no room for ambiguity. The entrance passage, sometimes referred to as ‘the entry’, was considered to have been part of Miller’s Court.
Extraordinarily, you are also expecting us to believe that police accepted what you insist was Hutchinson’s admission that he had stood outside Kelly’s room at a time critical to her death without any further questioning, without any further elaboration. As I’ve stated previously, you have a great deal to learn about police procedures both past and present.
So, in answer to your question, the evidence is overwhelmingly suggestive that when Hutchinson stated that he ‘went to the court’, both he and his police inquisitors understood that he meant he’d looked into the court whilst standing on Dorset Street at the mouth of the interconnecting passage.
Now, if you have any evidence to the contrary …
Comment