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Hi all first time post here but I've been lurking on this site for a while and there is something I can't quite figure out (or should I say something needs confirming). How did Annie Chapman (and the Ripper) gain access to the back of #29? Am I right in assuming that they simply walked through the front door, went through the passage way and used the back door? Or was there some other way into #29?
I am sorry if this has been discussed, I've looked and done a quick search on the forum. I may have missed it and I am sorry if I have done this.
"What our ancestors would really be thinking, if they were alive today, is: "Why is it so dark in here?"" From Pyramids by Sir Terry Pratchett, a British National Treasure.
Its remotely possible that he was already in the yard, maybe waiting out Annie and another client....in the privy. It was unlocked, or the lock had been broken, as I recall.
There was also a broken lock on a door in the space over the unused stables in Dutfields Yard I believe.
From what I've read the last time some one saw Annie Chapman was at 5:30 am with the Body being discovered at 6am. It is possible that the Ripper simply walked through the front door again (or hopped over the back fence)? I mean look at Catherine Eddowes, last saw at 1:35am and then found at 1:45am and you all know what happened to her in those 10 short minutes. Is it not possible that within these 30 minutes he did what he wanted and simply left the scene?
But back on topic thanks alot for confirming what I needed to know.
Im working from memory here, but Richardson stated that he came across an unknown man and a woman in the yard some weeks prior to the Chapman murder, alluding to a prostitute and client.
Like I say, I may be wrong. Maybe someone can clarify.
I don't think Richardson gave any specific dates, Monty, although he did say that he'd often found men and women (I don't think he said "together") in the passage at various hours of the night, and had turfed them out. It's possible that they were just crashing out there on an impromptu doss.
It's worth noting, in this context, his mother's report of a man who'd taken to sleeping on the stairs at #29, as he waited for Spitalfields Market to open. He had done so on more than one occasion a month or so before the murder, being found there in the first instance by one of her lodgers. Mrs Richardson's lodger had told her that the man spoke with a foreign accent.
Just the knowledge of an available backyard with an open door and passageway is indication of how intimately the killer must have known his area. If I'm not mistaken, the door had to be opened at each end as well. How could anyone inexpert in the minutiae of the East End have known about this? Blind luck, I suppose.
Just the knowledge of an available backyard with an open door and passageway is indication of how intimately the killer must have known his area. If I'm not mistaken, the door had to be opened at each end as well. How could anyone inexpert in the minutiae of the East End have known about this? Blind luck, I suppose.
Mike
That brings up an interesting point Mike, If Im not mistaken the conventional wisdom on this point is that he was taken to locations, not that he led. That doesnt to me mean it precludes prior knowledge of the location(s), just that he likely didnt take them there on their respective final evenings.
There is a show called Cities of the Underworld on History Channel which recently visited London, and the narrator made too strong an assertion that the sewers were the probable avenues for Jacks movements after murders. He said that sewer grates were accessible to all the Canonicals sites.
To my mind not the most probable answer here, but it did raise an interesting point that with some casual study of the local area and various points of egress/ingress to these tiny little sites someone not raised on those streets might get around fairly swiftly and without much crossing of major thoroughfare depending on his escape directions.
This site at Hanbury could just be a well used Unfortunate site that on that night was used randomly by Annie Chapman, and he still might have known in advance if led there that those doors were unlocked.
One has to wonder if he knew beat information in Mitre Square too. He apparently left via the one of 3 accessways that werent subject to a patrolman at any moment.
There is a show called Cities of the Underworld on History Channel which recently visited London, and the narrator made too strong an assertion that the sewers were the probable avenues for Jacks movements after murders.
The sewers were the avenues for everybody's movements, on a daily basis, Mike
hope someone can help,if 'jack' left 29 Hanbury Street via the back fence what street/road would he of then be on,also were there rows of houses on the other side of the fence?
hope someone can help,if 'jack' left 29 Hanbury Street via the back fence what street/road would he of then be on,also were there rows of houses on the other side of the fence?
Again thanks for any help
dixon9
still learning
Just checking the map here, it looks like if the Ripper had leapt the fence in any direction he would not have been on any street but in the midst of a large area- no doubt crowded with houses- north of Hanbury Street and bordered by Grey Eagle Street to the west and Brick Lane to the east. The intersection of Brick Lane and Woodseer Street was a block or so northeast of #29. Of course if he had vaulted the part of the fence right next to Annie's body he would have found himself in Albert Cadoche's back yard.
By the way, a rather obvious question occurred to me as I was perusing the posts here. If the residents of #29 kept finding undesirables in their back yard and corridor, why not invest in some locks? But then a possible answer occurred to me- too much trouble to get 17 copies made of the key?
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