Hi all,
Beginning with the very first account of Tumblety’s arrest on November 18, 1888, newspapers began to report that -according to a London cable- he was arrested ‘on suspicion’ of being implicated in the Whitechapel murders. His November 16 payment of bail at Marlborough Street Court seems to have made the press aware of Tumblety’s arrest.
Few newspapers commented upon what caused Scotland Yard’s suspicion, and merely go into Scotland Yard re-arresting him for what we now know of as ‘gross indecency’. So, what was the suspicion that caused them to arrest Tumblety for the Whitechapel murders in the first place?
I have found a couple of accounts that actually did report what the suspicion was. My plan is to use this thread to compile these suspicions, so if anyone finds any others, please add them.
Sincerely,
Mike
New York Sun, 25 Nov 1888
ASTOUNDING MURDERS. "Jack the Ripper" Not Alone in History.
(P.7)… An American doctor named Twomblety is now held because he is an erratic character (1), and because one theory is that some American medical institution wants specimens of the female uterus (2), which it happens that Jack the Ripper often takes from the bodies of his victims. It has been thought that Jack is a…
The Evening World, December 3, 1888
DR. TWOMBLETY IN TOWN. He Arrives on La Bretagne, and Is Traced to Tenth Street.
Dr. Francis Twomblety, the eccentric American physician who was arrested in London suspected of the Whitechapel murders… Men who were well acquainted with Twomblety during his life in this city and in Brooklyn say that they did not know by what right he assumed the title M.D. Reasons which led some of them to believe that Twomblety is the fiend who so successfully eluded the London police are that the “Doctor” had an inveterate hatred for women (3) and kept an anatomical museum in which portions of human bodies similar to those cut from the Whitechapel victims predominated (4). The London police are anxiously searching for samples of his handwriting to compare with that of “Jack the Ripper.”
New York Tribune, December 4, 1888
DR. TUMBLETY ARRIVES IN NEW-YORK.
DETECTIVES KEEPING THEIR EYE ON HIM-HIS ARREST IN LONDON HAS EXCITED PEOPLE HERE SOMEWHAT.
Doctor Francis Tumblety, or, as is known in England, Twomblety, is in New-York. He was arrested on suspicion of being implicated in the Whitechapel butcheries... He has been charged with a fondness for collecting anatomical specimens (4), and this has made his connection with the Whitechapel atrocities appear probable. It is a fact that after he was discharged for lack of evidence from the accusation of being implicated in the Whitechapel horrors he was re-arrested in London for a violation of the “Maiden Tribute” act, and released under 500 pounds bail. He “jumped” his bail and came to America…
Bucks County Gazette, 13 December 1888
…He calls himself "Doctor Francis Tumblety," and though the oddity of the name suggests that it is assumed, he has been called by it ever since he was first known in America, though the Rochester witnesses think it was there spelled Twombletey (sic). His "herb doctoring" finally became unprofitable in America; so he went to London, located near the Whitechapel road and for a while did a big business. His oddity of manner, dress and speech soon made him notorious as the "American doctor"; but he enjoyed notoriety and turned it into money, till the Whitechapel horrors caused a general overhauling of suspicious characters (1)… He talked a great deal about the butcheries, dropped mysterious hints (5) and was arrested…
Evening Star (Washington, D.C.), 27 November 1888
A few years ago the pimple-banishing enterprise was moved to London, where the doctor for a time is said to have made money. It was his queer method of spending his money which first attracted the Scotland Yard detectives to him, and after a slight investigation (6) he was arrested, the idea being that if he were not the Whitechapel fiend, he is a dangerous character, and is not entitled to his liberty.
Littlechild letter to Sims, 1913
I never heard of a Dr D. in connection with the Whitechapel murders but amongst the suspects, and to my mind a very likely one, was a Dr. T. (which sounds much like D.) He was an American quack named Tumblety and was at one time a frequent visitor to London and on these occasions constantly brought under the notice of police, there being a large dossier concerning him at Scotland Yard. Although a 'Sycopathia Sexualis' subject he was not known as a 'Sadist' (which the murderer unquestionably was) but his feelings toward women were remarkable and bitter in the extreme, a fact on record (3)
.
Beginning with the very first account of Tumblety’s arrest on November 18, 1888, newspapers began to report that -according to a London cable- he was arrested ‘on suspicion’ of being implicated in the Whitechapel murders. His November 16 payment of bail at Marlborough Street Court seems to have made the press aware of Tumblety’s arrest.
Few newspapers commented upon what caused Scotland Yard’s suspicion, and merely go into Scotland Yard re-arresting him for what we now know of as ‘gross indecency’. So, what was the suspicion that caused them to arrest Tumblety for the Whitechapel murders in the first place?
I have found a couple of accounts that actually did report what the suspicion was. My plan is to use this thread to compile these suspicions, so if anyone finds any others, please add them.
Sincerely,
Mike
New York Sun, 25 Nov 1888
ASTOUNDING MURDERS. "Jack the Ripper" Not Alone in History.
(P.7)… An American doctor named Twomblety is now held because he is an erratic character (1), and because one theory is that some American medical institution wants specimens of the female uterus (2), which it happens that Jack the Ripper often takes from the bodies of his victims. It has been thought that Jack is a…
The Evening World, December 3, 1888
DR. TWOMBLETY IN TOWN. He Arrives on La Bretagne, and Is Traced to Tenth Street.
Dr. Francis Twomblety, the eccentric American physician who was arrested in London suspected of the Whitechapel murders… Men who were well acquainted with Twomblety during his life in this city and in Brooklyn say that they did not know by what right he assumed the title M.D. Reasons which led some of them to believe that Twomblety is the fiend who so successfully eluded the London police are that the “Doctor” had an inveterate hatred for women (3) and kept an anatomical museum in which portions of human bodies similar to those cut from the Whitechapel victims predominated (4). The London police are anxiously searching for samples of his handwriting to compare with that of “Jack the Ripper.”
New York Tribune, December 4, 1888
DR. TUMBLETY ARRIVES IN NEW-YORK.
DETECTIVES KEEPING THEIR EYE ON HIM-HIS ARREST IN LONDON HAS EXCITED PEOPLE HERE SOMEWHAT.
Doctor Francis Tumblety, or, as is known in England, Twomblety, is in New-York. He was arrested on suspicion of being implicated in the Whitechapel butcheries... He has been charged with a fondness for collecting anatomical specimens (4), and this has made his connection with the Whitechapel atrocities appear probable. It is a fact that after he was discharged for lack of evidence from the accusation of being implicated in the Whitechapel horrors he was re-arrested in London for a violation of the “Maiden Tribute” act, and released under 500 pounds bail. He “jumped” his bail and came to America…
Bucks County Gazette, 13 December 1888
…He calls himself "Doctor Francis Tumblety," and though the oddity of the name suggests that it is assumed, he has been called by it ever since he was first known in America, though the Rochester witnesses think it was there spelled Twombletey (sic). His "herb doctoring" finally became unprofitable in America; so he went to London, located near the Whitechapel road and for a while did a big business. His oddity of manner, dress and speech soon made him notorious as the "American doctor"; but he enjoyed notoriety and turned it into money, till the Whitechapel horrors caused a general overhauling of suspicious characters (1)… He talked a great deal about the butcheries, dropped mysterious hints (5) and was arrested…
Evening Star (Washington, D.C.), 27 November 1888
A few years ago the pimple-banishing enterprise was moved to London, where the doctor for a time is said to have made money. It was his queer method of spending his money which first attracted the Scotland Yard detectives to him, and after a slight investigation (6) he was arrested, the idea being that if he were not the Whitechapel fiend, he is a dangerous character, and is not entitled to his liberty.
Littlechild letter to Sims, 1913
I never heard of a Dr D. in connection with the Whitechapel murders but amongst the suspects, and to my mind a very likely one, was a Dr. T. (which sounds much like D.) He was an American quack named Tumblety and was at one time a frequent visitor to London and on these occasions constantly brought under the notice of police, there being a large dossier concerning him at Scotland Yard. Although a 'Sycopathia Sexualis' subject he was not known as a 'Sadist' (which the murderer unquestionably was) but his feelings toward women were remarkable and bitter in the extreme, a fact on record (3)
.
Comment