Tonight I attended a talk on a book about the Victorian artists ,"The Pre-Raphaelites"and their muses.The author ,referring to Lizzie Siddal in particular, who was once their favourite model ,said Lizzie made several mysterious and rather lengthy visits to Hastings in her youth .Having researched Lizzie Siddal extensively, the author came to the conclusion that as Hastings was known in Victorian times as the place to go to get an abortion"Lizzie had quite likely gone there to obtain an abortion.
Klosowski had trained as a "barber surgeon" in Poland but when he came to England he was only allowed to practice as a barber.However,it was known that in Victorian times , some barbers would still practise aspects of "surgery",most often healing wounds of one kind or another which was why they had and some still do have, a barber"s red and white pole outside their shops,signifying a bandage .Amongst these would be found illegal abortionists,and it is interesting to note that very early on in Klosowski"s murder trial of 1903,the witness Wolff Levisohn,a fellow Pole and also a barber surgeon or "feldscher" by training,claimed Klosowski had told him during the period between 1888 and 1890 that previously he had worked at the Praga Hospital in Warsaw as an assistant surgeon.Levisohn reported s,"I talked to the accused about medicine,[some time between 1888 and 1890] and he asked me if I could get him a certain medicine,but I said No,I did not want to get twelve years."
During Victorian times abortions were often obtained through procuring illegal substances-we have just such a case happening when another ripper suspect Francis Tumblety was arrested in 1857 in Montreal, Canada, for selling a local prostitute a bottle of pills and a liquid that he allegedly said would abort her pregnancy.
On his arrest Klosowski was found to have kept a little book in Polish which contained "500 Prescriptions for Diseases and Complaints"- and part of his Polish medical training had been in the science needed to become an apothecary.
He had lived in Hastings for about a year in 1897 ,and had tried to strike up an affair with a local girl ,unbeknown to his wife.Around the same time he had called into a chemist shop there
and bought some poison to kill his wife,just before they returned to London,where she died.
Klosowski had trained as a "barber surgeon" in Poland but when he came to England he was only allowed to practice as a barber.However,it was known that in Victorian times , some barbers would still practise aspects of "surgery",most often healing wounds of one kind or another which was why they had and some still do have, a barber"s red and white pole outside their shops,signifying a bandage .Amongst these would be found illegal abortionists,and it is interesting to note that very early on in Klosowski"s murder trial of 1903,the witness Wolff Levisohn,a fellow Pole and also a barber surgeon or "feldscher" by training,claimed Klosowski had told him during the period between 1888 and 1890 that previously he had worked at the Praga Hospital in Warsaw as an assistant surgeon.Levisohn reported s,"I talked to the accused about medicine,[some time between 1888 and 1890] and he asked me if I could get him a certain medicine,but I said No,I did not want to get twelve years."
During Victorian times abortions were often obtained through procuring illegal substances-we have just such a case happening when another ripper suspect Francis Tumblety was arrested in 1857 in Montreal, Canada, for selling a local prostitute a bottle of pills and a liquid that he allegedly said would abort her pregnancy.
On his arrest Klosowski was found to have kept a little book in Polish which contained "500 Prescriptions for Diseases and Complaints"- and part of his Polish medical training had been in the science needed to become an apothecary.
He had lived in Hastings for about a year in 1897 ,and had tried to strike up an affair with a local girl ,unbeknown to his wife.Around the same time he had called into a chemist shop there
and bought some poison to kill his wife,just before they returned to London,where she died.
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