Originally posted by Rosella
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---Continuing with the idea that Thompson was seeking his prostitute friend in the East End and may have vented his frustrations on similar women of her profession by choosing to kill on this old Catholic church land, it seems a pattern emerges with the choices of each murder location. The first murder happened on Bucks Row which was once named Ducking Pond Lane. Here once pagan witches were routinely tortured and executed. Maps housed in the guildhall, where Thompson read voraciously, include Richard Horwood's map of 1799-1819. It shows the street with the pond situated where the Ripper’s victim would one day be found. The second murder on Hanbury Street was at the rear of a shop whose owner held her weekly Protestant Millennialist Church meetings. The third site on Berner Street was besides the rooms of a meeting hall; the night’s topic by of the hall owned by Jewish socialists was on the necessity of Atheism. The fourth murder occurred in Mitre Square only a few yards from the Great Jewish Synagogue. The fifth murder took place in Millers Court – less than a hundred meters from Protestant Christ Church, built as a bastion against Catholic dissenters, within the shadow of its steeple. It is possible that Thompson justified the murders by killing in certain directions, on specific days and in a particularly ways. He may have thought that crime is relative and murder can be forgiven. A bit of doggerel, written in his unpublished poem ‘A Larger Hope’ might have him best say it, ‘Sinned but in proper time and place and kept official hours of grace. Made of his sin no vulgar rumpus. But profligate by chart and compass’ ---
I believe that Thompson took umbrage at these other faiths, and in the case of atheism, non faith, that were now being celebrated in what was once Catholic land, apart from the practice of prostitution.
Whitechapel is of course named after the then St. Mary's Matefelon. I believe the murders were roughly centered around this church, that after WWII bombings is now a public park. Here is an extract from my book about it's possible significance to the Roman Catholic Thompson and also the Ripper murder pattern.I apologise for the length of the extract, but to me it is more than coincidence that the history of the naming of this Catholic church shows similarities to circumstances of the Ripper murders. I could also include Thompsn discussing the significance of killing on holy ground but I feel I would be given away more than anyone would want to know here.
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The 1st and most salient feature of the crimes is that they happened in a district named Whitechapel. It’s a fact that despite great risk to himself with police concentrating their patrols in this area and with a public so outraged by the crimes that on only individuals but gangs of vigilantes scoured the area for the killer the assassin clung stubbornly to this half-square kilometre of each other. Such a concentrated focus to the murders prompted a member of the police who investigated the crimes, Henry Moore, to remark upon it. Moore was Inspector for the Whitechapel Murders Investigation. In 1905 Moore was interviewed by reporter Henry Cox from America's "Thompson's Weekly News". Moore told the reporter of the Ripper’s obsession with the murder local,
'In nearly every case the murders were committed on the actual spot where the bodies were found, or very close to it...This, as I say, seems to point to the murderer having a system... The murderer never shifted his ground.
We should be asking ourselves who would have been drawn to Whitechapel we would be forgiven for thinking that in a city such as London with its many churches religious sounding names would abound but it is a salient fact that of the eighty-five names of districts of London and its surrounds in the 1880’s, Whitechapel is the only one whose name means a place of religious worship. What many people do not know of course is that the very origin of the name Whitechapel has a history that mirrors the Ripper crimes. The district of Whitechapel was named after Saint Mary‘s church. It was built long before the Protestant reformation in a time when Roman Catholicism was the religion of the land. Its full name was St Mary Matefelon' Spital, but was later renamed Whitechapel, for its tower painted in whitewash. This church stood in the centre of a religious sanctuary that had operated for six centuries. Although the date that St Mary's church was built is uncertain, it is recorded to have existed by 1286 and though it was probably not built until 1250. It stood until 1875. The origins of the name Matefelon are obscure. Historians such as John Stowe's in his “Survey of Westminster” tell that in 1428, during the time of Henry VI, a parish widow in Whitechapel was murdered while she slept. The felon fled with her jewels and he was pursued to the Church of St. George in Southwark, where he claimed the right of sanctuary. The constables ignored his claim and brought him back to the city of London. As the criminal was being transferred, the women of Whitechapel, were so incensed by his murdering ways and disregard for the sanctity of the church land that they flung the filth and dung of the street upon him. Both Whitechapel’s biggest murder case, that of Jack the Ripper and the also its oldest murder case of a women for her jewels bear the striking coincidence for both horrific killings involved that of a woman in her own room and a hunt for the criminal. Such knowledge of Whitechapel’s peculiar history was unknown to only a handful of people and their was only one place in London where it could be researched. This was in a place called the Guildhall library. It was where the original works of the historian Stow and the accompanying medieval maps were kept. Francis Thompson was a voracious reader. Being not only Roman Catholic but also an ex-seminary student he was known to be well versed in religious history. He also happened to have spent great amounts of time at the Guildhall library. It had only recently become open to the public and in a short time it became a draw card for homeless tramps that would seek refuge from the cold winter days by resting in the stalls of the reading room. Guildhall, where Thompson read voraciously for months had London's possibly best public map room. Thompson was almost a permanent fixture there where he would pour over its old books and historical documents. That was until the head librarian grew suspicious of him and had him thrown out onto the streets by the police.
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