If you had been to Liverpool Street Station you would know that the platforms are below street level. Even if the station was open at 4 am ish then you would not be able to cut diagonally across the space shown on the map. You would have to go downstairs and around platforms and back up stairs and so forth. It would take longer than just walking around the streets.
This illustrates the problems inherent with trying to make estimates from maps without walking the routes.
I have walked the routes several times with a stop watch.
And as Fisherman pointed out the depot wasn’t on Bishopsgate so the routes taken from Google maps are probably not strictly accurate.
Having said that it is true that a route up Hanbury Street as far as say Booth Street and then via Fournier Street would be shorter (than the full Hanbury Street route) as it would cut off the top bit of Hanbury Street – but I haven’t timed myself over that short cut. The reason I didn’t is that we know that on the morning in question Charles Lechmere’s walked with Robert Paul all the way up Hanbury Street and did not take this short cut... even though he was supposedly late for work.
I also note that the shortest short cut via Hanbury Street takes in Dorset Street.
So thank you Ben for noticing this short cut – which wasn’t taken!
As for Booth’s ‘Black Streets’ – none of the routes stray very far from ‘Black Streets’.
The long and short of it is that the Old Montague Street route is the shortest.
The next shortest is to take the Booth Street cut off via Dorset Street
On the morning of 31st August Charles Lechmere – a carman of twenty years service and someone who had lived in the area for over thirty years – opted to take a longer route despite being so late for work that he thought it was appropriate to abandon a woman who he thought might just be unconscious and in distress.
So far as the later murders are concerned I would assume he took the main road (Whitechapel Road and Commercial Street) as that is where he would find a potential victim and the main roads were fairly busy all night long and so provided anonymity. Hence the argument about Old Montague Street vs Hanbury Street is really restricted to the aftermath of the Nichols murder.
If he was a wimp and worried about being mugged in the dark back streets I would assume he would have walked on the main roads as well. However we know that Bucks Row was regarded as dodgy and he certainly walked down there. So the idea that he would have avoided Old Montague Street can be disposed of.
Incidentally I suspect that he may have taken different routes. You can get bored walking the same route every day. Unless there is a specific purpose, for example because you are late for work and so in a hurry, you may opt to take a slightly longer route sometimes.
Then again some anally retentive types would always take the same route.
This illustrates the problems inherent with trying to make estimates from maps without walking the routes.
I have walked the routes several times with a stop watch.
And as Fisherman pointed out the depot wasn’t on Bishopsgate so the routes taken from Google maps are probably not strictly accurate.
Having said that it is true that a route up Hanbury Street as far as say Booth Street and then via Fournier Street would be shorter (than the full Hanbury Street route) as it would cut off the top bit of Hanbury Street – but I haven’t timed myself over that short cut. The reason I didn’t is that we know that on the morning in question Charles Lechmere’s walked with Robert Paul all the way up Hanbury Street and did not take this short cut... even though he was supposedly late for work.
I also note that the shortest short cut via Hanbury Street takes in Dorset Street.
So thank you Ben for noticing this short cut – which wasn’t taken!
As for Booth’s ‘Black Streets’ – none of the routes stray very far from ‘Black Streets’.
The long and short of it is that the Old Montague Street route is the shortest.
The next shortest is to take the Booth Street cut off via Dorset Street
On the morning of 31st August Charles Lechmere – a carman of twenty years service and someone who had lived in the area for over thirty years – opted to take a longer route despite being so late for work that he thought it was appropriate to abandon a woman who he thought might just be unconscious and in distress.
So far as the later murders are concerned I would assume he took the main road (Whitechapel Road and Commercial Street) as that is where he would find a potential victim and the main roads were fairly busy all night long and so provided anonymity. Hence the argument about Old Montague Street vs Hanbury Street is really restricted to the aftermath of the Nichols murder.
If he was a wimp and worried about being mugged in the dark back streets I would assume he would have walked on the main roads as well. However we know that Bucks Row was regarded as dodgy and he certainly walked down there. So the idea that he would have avoided Old Montague Street can be disposed of.
Incidentally I suspect that he may have taken different routes. You can get bored walking the same route every day. Unless there is a specific purpose, for example because you are late for work and so in a hurry, you may opt to take a slightly longer route sometimes.
Then again some anally retentive types would always take the same route.
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