Originally posted by curious
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Originally posted by The Grave Maurice View PostActually, the alias she used was Mary Ann Kelly (and, remember, her companion's name was Kelly). But even if Mary Something Kelly was a fairly common name, you're right, it is a coincidence.
I realize both Dorset and Flower and Dean had lots of lodgers on them, so they would be easy places to come up with if you'd rather not leave your own name and address, but when you imagine that she does this twice in her last 24 hours and that both aliases together contain as much as roughly 90% of Mary Jane Kelly's known name and street address,.... it does raise my eyebrow anyway.
Particularly when the next alleged Ripper victim is in fact one Mary Jane Kelly of 26 Dorset Street.
Best regards Maurice
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Originally posted by The Grave Maurice View PostActually, the alias she used was Mary Ann Kelly (and, remember, her companion's name was Kelly). But even if Mary Something Kelly was a fairly common name, you're right, it is a coincidence.
You're right. Apparently my brain rolled the two into one.
Mary was a very common name in those days, as well as Kelly, I suspect, but the coincidence seems very peculiar to me.
Curious
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Originally posted by lynn cates View PostHello Observer. Since you are tutoring logic (as per your dictum) perhaps you can explain what kinds of modal semantics are consistent with the axiom schemata of S4 and S5. In particular, what sorts of Kripkean models would support them?
Mediaeval logic differs little from contemporary logic. In fact, about the only major difference is Frege's revision of Aristotle's existential assumption made in the 1870's.
Looking forward to my next session. Perhaps you can help me pin down the first occurrence of De Morgan's theorem. 12 th c or 14 th c? There are reasons to accept either.
The best.
LC
"I suppose one could claim Lawende did not see Kate, that she was already inside Mitre square at the time. On this scenario, perhaps Jack was hiding inside one of the empty houses."
Markedly strange. But as you say this is not the place for things Catherine Eddowes. Chapmans TOD 5:30, Richardson could not have failed to see her had she been there when he entered the Yard at 4:45 a.m.
All the best
Observer
PS Hope you can understand this post, they’re having a bad grammar witch hunt at the mo, all very tiring. What of people who have had strokes, who have problems stringing sentences together, and with large chunks of their former vocabulary missing due to brain damage?Last edited by Observer; 12-01-2009, 03:16 AM.
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This section from a Timeline on Annie Chapmans death including witnesses and times, courtesy of Casebook Productions...through Annies Victims folder, may lend some additional light.....
"SAT, SEP 8, 1888
1:00am-Simmons saw Annie leave Crossingham's (#35 Dorset St), believing she went to the Brittannia pub, (located on the north-west corner of Dorset St and Commercial St).
1:30-1:45am-Annie returned to the lodging-house and was eating a baked potato in the kitchen. Donovan sent the night watchman, John Evans, for her doss money. Annie went to Donovan and said, "I haven't sufficient money for a bed, but don't let it. I shall not be long before I am in." "You can find money for your beer, and you can't find money for you bed," replied Donovan. "Never mind, Tim. I shall soon be back. Don't let the bed," Annie responded. (Donovan thought Annie was drunk.)
c.1:50am-Evans escorted Annie outside. Annie then said, "I won't be long, Brummy. See that Tim keeps the bed for me.' Annie then walked up Little Paternoster Row, into Brushfield St, and turned towards the Spitalfields Church. (Evans thought Annie was the worse for drink.)
2:30am-Emily Walter was in the backyard of 29 Hanbury St with a man. He was 37; Dark beard and moustache; foreign accent; dark vest and pants; black scarf and felt hat; short dark jacket.
Hanbury St curves south-east from Commercial St to the junction of Baker's Row and Old Montague St. #29 was on the North side of the street, between Wilkes St & Brick Ln. 27 Hanbury St was next door on the West side of #29.
29 Hanbury St, a 3-story building with residents living on each of the three floors and in the attic with a small business on the ground floor and one working out of the cellar. On the left-hand side of the buildings' front was two doors: the door on the right led to the shop. The door on the left opened to a passageway containing stairs to the residences and another door leading to the backyard.
#29 was owned by Mrs Amelia Richardson, who ran a packing case business out of the cellar and was assisted by Francis Tyler and her son, John Richardson. A cat's meat shop was in the ground floor front room and was used by Mrs Harriet Hardyman and her 16 year old son. The ground floor back room was a kitchen. Mrs Richardson and her 14 year old grandson slept in the first floor front room. The first floor back room was occupied by Mr Waker and his adult, retarded son. Mr Thompson, his wife, and their adopted daughter slept in the second floor front room. Two unmarried sisters, Misses Copsey, lived in the second floor back room. Living in the front room of the attic was John Davis with his wife and three sons, and occupying the attic's back room was Mrs Sarah Cox. The passageway was sometimes occupied by unknown people at unusual hours, and the backyard was frequented by prostitutes. The door to the street was a latch-type, and the door to the yard was self-closing or swing-door. Typically, neither door was locked as a courtesy to the residents.
Three small stone steps led to the yard, which was about 14' x 12'. The yard was part dirt and part paving stone. About 3' to 3'-6", left of the doorway, was a 5'-6" high fence made of wooden pailings, separating the yards of #27 & #29. To the right of the doorway, were cellar doors, which led to a workshop. Two feet away, on the right, was a water pump. At the yard's far left corner was a storage shed, and at the far right corner was a privy.
3:00am-Davis woke up.40
c.3:50am-Thompson left for work without going into the back yard. Mrs Richardson, dozing fitfully, heard him pass her room and called out, "Good morning."
4:45am-John Richardson stopped by to check the cellar door padlock, which he often did since it had been broken into some months earlier. He was not actually in the yard, since he could see the padlock from the top of the steps.
Richardson sat on the steps, trying to trim a piece of leather from his boots with a table knife that he brought from home.
4:50am-Richardson left.
4:51am-Dawn broke.
5:00am-Davis fell back asleep.
(A case of mistaken identity had incorrectly placed Annie at the Ten Bells pub.)
Mrs Elizabeth Long left her house at 32 Church Row for the Spitalfields Market.
Spitalfields Market opened.
c.5:15am-Albert Cadoche of 27 Hanbury St woke up.
5:20am-Cadoche went into the backyard of #27. Upon his return to the house, he heard voices quite close to him. Of which, he could only make out the word "No."
5:25am-Sun rose.
c.5:25am-Cadoche re-entered his backyard and heard a fall against the fence. Cadoche returned to the house and prepared to leave for work.
5:30am-Davis woke back up.
Walking South down Brick Ln, Long neared Hanbury St, noting the time from the clock of the Black Eagle Brewery, Brick Ln. She then turned westerly onto Hanbury St.
c.5:32am-Cadoche passed by the Spitalfields Church.
Long saw a man and woman standing near 29 Hanbury St, talking. The man had a shabby, genteel, and foreign appearance. He had a dark complexion; wore a brown deerstalker and a dark coat; He seemed 40-ish; and, was slightly taller than the woman "Will you?" the man asked. "Yes," said the woman.
A Few Minutes After 5:30am-Long reached the Spitalfields Market.
5:45am-Davis and wife got out of bed as the Spitalfields Church clock struck the quarter hour. They had some tea.
c.5:55am-Davis went downstairs, noticing that the passageway door to the street stood wide open, which was not unusual. Davis then opened the other door to enter the backyard and saw the body.
Annie was lying on her back, parallel with the fence, which was to her left; Her head was about 2' from the back wall and 6"-9" left of the bottom step; Her legs were bent at the knees; Her feet were flat on the ground, pointing toward the shed; Her dress was pushed above her knees; Her left arm lay across her left breast; Her right arm at her side; The small intestines, still attached by a cord, and part of the abdomen lay above her right shoulder; 2 flaps of skin from the lower abdomen lay in a large quantity of blood above the left shoulder; Her throat was deeply cut in a jagged manner; A neckerchief was around her neck.
Davis immediately left the yard and ran out into the street."
That seems to me to be to be a very useful tool that Casebook gave us.
Cheers mates.Last edited by Guest; 12-01-2009, 03:26 AM.
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Only just saw this, from the Echo, September 19th:
"Dr. G.B. Phillips, the divisional surgeon, has had another consultation with the police authorities respecting certain theories advanced. There are three points upon which there is agreement - that Annie Chapman was lying dead in the yard at 29 Hanbury street, when John Richardson sat on the steps to cut a piece of leather from his boot, his failure to notice the deceased being explained by the fact that the yard door, when opened, obstructed his view; that the poor creature was murdered in the yard, and not in a house, as had been at one time suggested; and that the person who committed the deed was a man with some knowledge of human or animal anatomy."
This is a week after Phillips witnessed and gave his estimations as to the time of death. And now the Echo says that he and the police agreed that Annie was in the yard as Richardson cut away at his boot...?
Anybody seen anything to support this take on things? Or is it very Echoish?
The best,
FishermanLast edited by Fisherman; 08-23-2013, 08:18 PM.
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Yes Christer, the article has been suggested to contain an assumption with respect to Richardson.
Apparently, it was Insp. Chandler who assumed the door would have obstructed Richardson's view because Chandler was not aware that Richardson had sat down on the steps, just that he had looked into the yard after opening the door. This was deemed to be the source of the confusion.
This might be the exchange (Witness is Insp. Chandler):
[Coroner] Did you see John Richardson? - I saw him about a quarter to seven o'clock. He told me he had been to the house that morning about a quarter to five. He said he came to the back door and looked down to the cellar, to see if all was right, and then went away to his work.
[Coroner] Did he say anything about cutting his boot? - No.
[Coroner] Did he say that he was sure the woman was not there at that time? - Yes.
By the Jury: The back door opens outwards into the yard, and swung on the left hand to the palings where the body was. If Richardson were on the top of the steps he might not have seen the body. He told me he did not go down the steps.Last edited by Wickerman; 08-23-2013, 09:25 PM.Regards, Jon S.
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Looking at the celebrated photos of the crimescene, if Richardson had just glanced into the yard from a standing position at the doorway, door half open, and hadn't bothered stooping to check the cellar entrance...and hadn't sat on the step as he testified...then the Echo account might just've had some credence...
However, as we all, without exception, accept Richardson's testimony wholesale, including the fact that not only did he at least stoop to check the padlock on the cellar door, but he also sat on the step to trim his bootleather, then the Echo is clearly wrong? Yes?
All the best
Dave
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Thanks for the comments, guys. However, Chandler´s commentaries on Richardson were given in at the inquest on the 13:th. The article in the Echo was printed on the 19:th, a good many days after, and it does of course not mention Chandler. It instead has it that the police and Phillips have agreed that Richardson must have missed Chapman due to that door.
If that all transpired before the 13:th, then why is it in the Echo many days later?
The best,
Fisherman
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