Originally posted by GBinOz
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The big question is: was Neil moving north up Thomas Street or south down Thomas street when entering Buck's row?
All we have to go by concerning Neil's route and his presence on the go around before encountering Polly Nichols body is:
A. Some comments made by Inspector Spratling in an interview:
- "The beat is a very short one, and quickly walked over would not occupy more than 12 minutes".
- Neil "would have been "within sound" of this place in Buck's-row from time to time during the night - more or less during the whole of the night."
- "Constable Neil was the only one whose duty it was to pass through Buck's-row"
B. The newspaper 'Echo' who claimed that one of their journalists obtained the streets to be covered by PC Neils beat:
- “A Correspondent has obtained exact details of those police beats covering the area within which the Buck's row murder was committed the third constable would commence at Brady street, cover Whitechapel road, Baker's row, Thomas street, Queen Anne street, and Buck's row, to Brady street, and all the interior, this consisting of about ten streets, courts, passage, &c.”
- Daily News - 9/3: “Police constable John Neil deposed that on Friday morning at a quarter to four o'clock he was going down Buck's Row, Whitechapel, from Thomas Street to Brady Street, when ....”
- John Neil: I examined the road, but did not see the mark of wheels. The first to arrive on the scene after I had discovered the body were two men who work at a slaughter-house opposite. They said they knew nothing of the affair, and that they had not heard any screams. I had previously seen the men at work. That would be about a quarter-past three, or half-an-hour before I found the body.
- and then Neil makes some mention of being a long White Chapel road at 3:30 am that I'll try to locate again.
There might be a few other nuggets I missed.
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