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Casebook: Jack the Ripper - Forums > Ripper Discussions > Victims > Catherine Eddowes > The Bloody Piece of Apron
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ChavaG
18th December 2007, 05:08 AM
When he left Catherine Eddowes, our boy cut a piece off her apron to wipe his hands with, and left it below (or wrote, which I doubt) a piece of vague and possibly anti-semitic graffiti. If memory serves, he is also suspected of having washed more blood off his hands at a handy pump on his way through the East End.
Something that strikes me is that he didn't seem to feel the need to wipe himself off after any of the other murders, even though his hands were probably just as sticky and red from shoving portions of organs in his pockets, fiddling around with intestines etc. We don't hear about him cutting off bits of handy aprons from Chapman or Nichols. I'll give him the benefit of the doubt on Stride because he was short of time. And I'm not entirely convinced Kelly was a Ripper victim at all. But he had time and opportunity to clean his hands with Chapman, there was even a handy bowl of water a couple of feet away. But he didn't use it.
So I'm wondering why he bothered to wipe his hands after leaving Eddowes. Was he perhaps heading home and didn't want to answer any awkward questions from Mrs Ripper or Mother Ripper who might be up and waiting for him. The other murders seem to take place much later on in the night, so perhaps Jack was heading out for work and stopped to kill the occasional tart on his way. Because it seems to me that Jack the Toff or Jack the Sickert wouldn't need to wash or wipe unless he really didn't like the feel of his hands. In which case I would expect to see bloody rags all over the place. A small thing, but to me it suggests Jack the Spitalfields Market porter or fishmonger or (more likely I think) butcher. No one would remark on a butcher with bloodstains on his person heading to work.
Just a thought...
GRISTLE
18th December 2007, 05:58 AM
I've always been under the impression it was to wipe the feculent (sp?) matter off his hands. He may have liked the feel of blood between his fingers but perhaps the feel and smell of faeces on those same fingers was not as exciting. I'm not entirely sure if the Chapman or Nichols mutilations resulted with the colon being severed and faeces being smeared about. Perhaps that's the difference.
ChavaG
18th December 2007, 06:29 AM
The Ripper was using his knife pretty freely in the abdominal area of all his victims so there would always be a chance that he'd get fecal matter smeared on it or him. The inquest evidence is annoyingly vague about post-mortem mutilation so it's hard to tell. I did wonder if that piece of apron was cut off to clean his knife rather than his hands. But either way there is no evidence of his doing this at the scene or near the scene of any other killing. You may well be right that he got feces on him and wanted to get it off. But I do think the fact that this happens only on one murder--given he used his knife in a similar area on all the victims--is noteworthy.
Leather_Apron
18th December 2007, 07:27 AM
I dont really know where the water tap was behind 29 Hanbury or if JTR even saw it. I do know JTR did not use the same technique He used on Chapman and MJK. He may not have needed to wipe his hands on anything after leaving 29 Hanbury. It all leads me to suspect that Chapman died earlier and that JTR had more time. I also suspect JTR was prepared to mutilate Stride in much the same manner as He did with Chapman and MJK but was interrupted so chose Eddowes and tried the same thing He did with Nichols.
Its the only thing that makes sense as to why Nichols/Eddowes were mutilated in a different manner than Chapman/MJK.
monty
18th December 2007, 10:58 AM
ChavaG,
But I do think the fact that this happens only on one murder--given he used his knife in a similar area on all the victims--is noteworthy.
Why not?
Monty
Ben
18th December 2007, 05:46 PM
Hi Chava,
It is quite possible that the killer did take one of Chapman's rags for hand-wiping and/or organ transporting, but rather than disposing of it en-route home, he took it with him. Why didn't he do that with Eddowes' apron? Possibly because an excrement-smeared rag will emit tell-tale smells in the way that a merely bloodstained one wouldn't, or because he sought to implicate the Jews and took advantage of a noted Jewish hotspot en route between the crime scene and home.
Hi Monty - That song always reminds me of y'know who whenever I hear it, especially when it is combined, as it often is, with Oasis' Wonderwall.
Best regards,
Ben
Sam Flynn
19th December 2007, 12:23 AM
Hello Chava,
The Ripper was using his knife pretty freely in the abdominal area of all his victims so there would always be a chance that he'd get fecal matter smeared on it or him. The inquest evidence is annoyingly vague about post-mortem mutilation so it's hard to tell.
It's pretty easy to tell, actually:
We know that the Ripper severed Catherine Eddowes' colon near the rectum and detached a piece of it, which he laid next to her body. We also know that Catherine Eddowes' small intestines had been drawn out of her body, laid over her right breast, and were "smeared over with some feculent matter". Unless Jack used a paint-brush (Sickert!!!? ) to do this smearing, it is almost certain that he got whoopsy on at least one of his hands in the process of severing her large intestine.
This is the only case in which this is known to have happened, as the medical evidence following Annie Chapman's death highlights the fact that Jack left her lower intestine undamaged. Furthermore it was specifically remarked upon that the killer had avoided severing her rectum whilst the killer "cleanly" removed her uterus.
Annie Chapman's abdomen only sustained sufficient damage to expose the small intestines, some of which bulged through her wounds. It's pretty certain that these wounds, although horrific, did not penetrate all the way through to her colon, where the faeces "live". Indeed, no damage is reported even to her small intestines.
Adding all that up, it's quite clear that Mitre Square was the first occasion on which Jack the Ripper got faecal matter on his hands. The fact that some of this matter was spread over her small intestines, and got transferred to the apron fragment, is compelling evidence that this was the case. Extending that further, it's pretty clear in my mind that the cutting of a swatch of apron fabric had something to do with this contingency.
Sam Flynn
19th December 2007, 02:07 AM
Mitre Square was the first occasion on which Jack the Ripper got faecal matter on his hands...
...during the course of his "canonical" murders, I should have added. He wouldn't have been human if my original sentence were taken literally
Trevor Marriott
19th December 2007, 02:57 AM
Correct me if i am wrong and i sure you will but wasnt the apron piece torn not cut. and wasnt it torn from a repair which had been made to the apron previous.
In any event the ripper did not tear or cut the apron nor did he take away the organs of Eddowes or any of the other victims.
tom_wescott
19th December 2007, 03:03 AM
Correct me if i am wrong and i sure you will but wasnt the apron piece torn not cut. and wasnt it torn from a repair which had been made to the apron previous.
There was definitely a patch that was torn/cut through but I don't believe it's known if that was the point of origin of the tear/cut. Your question is a good one though and I can't recall off the top of my head if the records are crystal clear on this point. Hopefully Sam will recall.
In any event the ripper did not tear or cut the apron nor did he take away the organs of Eddowes or any of the other victims.
Oh come on now of course he did. No more super rats or lost organs. The Ripper took them. Unless of course you're suggesting a super rat went in to Kelly's apartment and took her heart out with him!
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
Trevor Marriott
19th December 2007, 03:10 AM
i am sure Sam will this is his "Specialised Topic "
Trevor Marriott
19th December 2007, 03:21 AM
I did forget one important issue with regards to Sams and other postings on the topic.
If the killer had wanted to clean his knife or clean his hands why tera/remove and apron piece. One swift swipe across the apron would clean the knife and would have been much easier to wipe hands on apron without the need to cut/tear.
Its time for some of the old posters on here to take their heads from out of the sand and look at the overall picture in a logical manner
Ben
19th December 2007, 03:26 AM
If the killer had wanted to clean his knife or clean his hands why tera/remove and apron piece
Indeed, Trevor, which is why I don't believe the apron was removed for hand/knife wiping purposes, but rather to transport the organs.
Regards,
Ben
sreid
19th December 2007, 03:55 AM
Yes if he was wiping his hands, I think he could have accomplished that in the first 20 feet of his escape.
I've always wondered if he didn't intentionally place the apron there to lay a false trail.
It has also been posited that something like a dog carried it there.
Stan
Pilgrim
19th December 2007, 04:02 AM
The Times, Friday, 5 October 1888 (http://www.casebook.org/press_report.../18881005.html)
Mr. Crawford. - Is it impossible to assert that it is human blood ? Witness*. - Yes; it is blood. On the piece of apron brought on there were smears of blood on one side as if a hand or a knife had been wiped on it. It fitted the piece of apron in evidence.
*Dr. Frederick Gordon Brown
~~~
baron
19th December 2007, 04:08 AM
The records state that the apron piece was cut. We had a debate about this about a year ago contending that officials wouldn't be able to figure out if something was cut or torn as tearing and cutting may produce the same damage.
For my part, I thought JTR may have just been holding onto the piece of apron, not actually knowing that he was. Perhaps caught up in the moment, that sort of thing. A very difficult subject to argue for in any direction one wants to take it.
Mike
Ben
19th December 2007, 04:18 AM
Hi Pilgrim,
I believe it was PC Long who stated that the apron looked as though it was saturated in one corner. This would be consistent with the organs having been transported in the apron.
Cheers,
Ben
Sam Flynn
19th December 2007, 05:18 AM
Hi Pilgrim,
I believe it was PC Long who stated that the apron looked as though it was saturated in one corner. This would be consistent with the organs having been transported in the apron.
Hi Ben,
Quite the reverse. If the organs had been transported in the apron, one would expect a patch of blood in the centre, if anything.
Its time for some of the old posters on here to take their heads from out of the sand and look at the overall picture in a logical mannerIndeed, Trevor. If Eddowes' small intestines were smeared with feculent matter, then it's 99.9999999999% certain that Jack's hand(s) did the smearing, and that his hand(s) were therefore still carrying residual cack as he left Mitre Square. That stuff's lethally sticky, as I'm sure I don't need to remind anyone.
Sam Flynn
19th December 2007, 05:21 AM
i am sure Sam will this is his "Specialised Topic "
Yup, I know a fair bit about anatomy, and I'm doubly incontinent.
"Talk to the hand"
...just don't inhale, that's all
ChavaG
19th December 2007, 06:06 AM
If the organs were transported in the cloth, and the cloth was found, where were the organs?
Also I don't see any mention of fecal matter on the cloth. This being a murder inquiry I would expect that a polite avoidance of mentioning fecal waste would not apply. He wipes his hand or his knife or both after the Eddowes killing, but doesn't appear to have done so after any of the others. Which suggests to me that there was a reason for his wiping off then and that reason didn't apply at any other time. I suspect he was returning to a situation where someone might notice his bloody hands and ask about them. This could be as simple as not wanting to be caught running through the East End with blood on his hands. Which in turn suggests to me that the cop who found Eddowes must have missed the Ripper by seconds. He hears the guy coming, rips/tears a piece of apron to wipe his hands, and takes off sharpish dropping the cloth on his way because he doesn't want to be found with that on his person either.
GRISTLE
19th December 2007, 06:38 AM
Also I don't see any mention of fecal matter on the cloth.
Dr. Brown, the City Police Surgeon stated during the Inquest:
"......My attention was called to the apron - it was the corner of the apron with a string attached. The blood spots were of recent origin - I have seen a portion of an apron produced by Doctor Phillips and stated to have been found in Goulston Street. It's impossible to say it is human blood, I fitted the piece of apron, which had a new piece of material on it, which had been evidently sewn on to the piece I have - the seams of the borders of the two actually corresponding - some blood and apparently faecal matter was found on the portion found in Goulston Street"
(emphasis added)
baron
19th December 2007, 07:24 AM
A thought: If the killer needed to take some of the apron just to wipe his hands, and at such a late hour, perhaps he had some work to attend to that brought him into contact with others. He may have even been on break from such work. If he took the cloth for the purpose of transporting organs, why just a piece? If he had the mental acuity to realize he had a soggy mess of bits to carry, surely he would have realized that a double or treble wrapped mess would take longer to soak through.
It all seems like such an afterthought to me. That's why the piece of cloth may have been a bit of absent mindedness rather than a planned action. Why not just cut the apron strings? It would have been quicker than sawing and tearing through an entire width of cloth. The idea of a frenzied tearing of the apron seems much more likely than something more calculated, as calculation should show a result that is a bot more thoughtful.
Then again, who can understand the workings of a madman? Rhetorical of course. Gareth surely could understand
Mike
monty
19th December 2007, 11:49 AM
Correct me if i am wrong and i sure you will but wasnt the apron piece torn not cut. and wasnt it torn from a repair which had been made to the apron previous.
In any event the ripper did not tear or cut the apron nor did he take away the organs of Eddowes or any of the other victims.
and they I get told that....
Its time for some of the old posters on here to take their heads from out of the sand and look at the overall picture in a logical manner
Am I the only one that sees the irony?
DC Halse testimony.
'When I saw the dead woman at the mortuary I noticed that a piece of her apron was missing. About half of it. It had been cut with a clean cut. When I got back to Mitre Square I heard that a piece of apron had been found in Goulston Street. I went there with Detective Hunt to the spot where the apron had been discovered. There I saw some chalk writing on the wall. I stayed there and I sent Hunt to find Mr McWilliam
From Jon Smyths "A piece of apron, some chalk graffiti and a lost hour.
Monty
Fisherman
19th December 2007, 12:44 PM
ChavaG asks:
"If the organs were transported in the cloth, and the cloth was found, where were the organs?"
...and I feel that this is the pertinent question here. If the Ripper found it necessary to transport the organs he had taken away in the apron, he would not have reconsidered halfways to home, would he? It would have meant taking a huge risk.
This leaves us with two possibilities:
1. He was actually living in Goulston Street.
2. He did not use the apron for carrying the organs.
I myself would opt for the second alternative. I think that he used it as a rag to wipe off the feculent matter from his hands.
But why, might one ask, did he not rid himself of it until he reached Goulston Street?
And believe it or not, I have an answer for that one too...!
My guess is that he was in a hurry to leave Mitre Square - no need to loiter there and wait for the PC:s. So when he cut the apron, he immediately started out on his journey from the square. Regardless of which of the three exits he used, he would turn into a street, wiping his hands, and risking to meet somebody. And soon as he saw that somebody, what would he do? He would stop wiping his hands, and shove the apron into his pocket. He would not throw it away, risking that the other person/persons on the street took a look at it.
After that, he would await a possibility to rid himself of the piece of apron some place when nobody could see it, and that some place was Goulston Street. My suggestion is that he delved further into the east afterwards, on his way home.
All the best,
Fisherman
Sam Flynn
19th December 2007, 12:53 PM
Hi Chava,
If the organs were transported in the cloth, and the cloth was found, where were the organs?
In his pockets, perhaps, where I strongly suspect they were ever since he left Mitre Square. And Hanbury Street, or Miller's Court...
The uterus and kidney are comparatively small, and the heart is no bigger than a large orange.
Jez
19th December 2007, 02:01 PM
I think Ben's earlier suggestion makes sense. It is quite possible that Jack also took one of many of Eddowes' loose rags home as well as the portion of apron with him. If the objects found near her body [buttons, thimble, mustard tin] indicate that he had gone through her pockets, he would likely have also found a spare rag. We know that the inventory of her possessions still included two handkerchiefs, a piece of silk, a shirt remnant, a piece of linen etc etc. This would support the theory that the matching apron piece was deliberately cut off to be left as a clue in Goulston Street. But, as always, this can be argued from many angles as Catharine had spare rags.
Leather_Apron
19th December 2007, 02:30 PM
Im still scratching my head as to what "One Red Mitten" means?
ChavaG
19th December 2007, 02:51 PM
Do we know how women of that class dealt with menstruation? In those days people used rewashable cloths, so I wonder if an itinerant prostitute always kept pieces of old material around for 'that time of the month'. If that's the case, no need to cut any apron. Although I agree, he wasn't thinking clearly at that point. I still think that he wiped his hands because he expected to see people who might ask awkward questions. Heading home rather than heading out.
By the way, do we know if any or all of the victims were having their periods at the time of the attack? I've come across an article that suggests the mean age for last birth in the lower English socio-economic groups during the 19th Century was 41.7 years. Which means the average woman probably hit menopause in the mid-40s. Our victims were in the mid to late 40s range but it's statistically possible that some or all of them still were capable of menstruation. I always wondered if that was what set him off.
Fisherman
19th December 2007, 02:58 PM
Let´s not forget the importance of the timeline here! If the chronology shows contacting - accompanying - attacking/subduing - cutting throat - mutilating - rifling through the pockets - leaving, then the Ripper was not aware of the belongings in her pockets as he got smeared with faeces. And if such was the case, the apron was the handiest bid around at the time. It also was sufficient to meet his needs, since it was a large piece of cloth he cut of.
The other rags and bits of cloth, he would not have seen until later.
The best!
Fisherman
monty
19th December 2007, 03:10 PM
Fisherman,
Let´s not forget the importance of the timeline here! If the chronology shows contacting - accompanying - attacking/subduing - cutting throat - mutilating - rifling through the pockets - leaving, then the Ripper was not aware of the belongings in her pockets as he got smeared with faeces.
Think you may have the order of events slightly out, but thats only my opinion.
Monty
Pilgrim
19th December 2007, 03:17 PM
The Times, Friday, 5 October 1888 (http://www.casebook.org/press_report.../18881005.html)
Mr. Crawford. - Is it impossible to assert that it is human blood ? Witness*. - Yes; it is blood. On the piece of apron brought on there were smears of blood on one side as if a hand or a knife had been wiped on it. It fitted the piece of apron in evidence.
*Dr. Frederick Gordon Brown
~~~
Hi Pilgrim,
I believe it was PC Long who stated that the apron looked as though it was saturated in one corner. This would be consistent with the organs having been transported in the apron.
Cheers,
Ben The Times, Friday, 12 October 1888 : (http://www.casebook.org/press_report.../18881012.html)
By Mr. Crawford. - He had not noticed the wall before. He noticed the piece of apron first, and then the words on the wall. One corner of the apron was wet with blood.
(...)
The juryman. - You did not search the rooms, but left a man to watch the building, and the whole clue seems to have passed away. I do not wish to say anything harsh, as I consider that the evidence of yourself and of the other members of the police redounds to the credit of all of you; but this does seem a point that requires a little investigation. You find a piece of apron wet with blood; you search all the passages, and then you leave the building in the care of a man to watch the front. Witness. - I thought the best thing I could do was to go to the station and report the matter to the inspector on duty.
~~~
Stewart P. Evans & Keith Skinner, The Ultimate JACK THE RIPPER SOURCEBOOK; p.222, p.238 :
For greater detail on the Eddowes murder reference may be made to the Inquest reports filed in the Corporation of London Records Office. These records include the written statements of witnesses at the Eddowes Inquest:
(...)
Alfred Long 254 A, Metropolitan Police Force, being sworn saith - "I was on duty in Goulston street, Whitechapel on the 30th September, about 2.55 AM. I found a portion of a woman's apron which I produce. There appeared blood stains on it, one portion was wet, lying in a passage leading to the staircases of 108 to 119 Model Dwelling House."
~~~
Wondering. (http://forum.casebook.org/showthread...ring#post92352)
Ben
19th December 2007, 03:23 PM
Hi Gareth,
If the organs had been transported in the apron, one would expect a patch of blood in the centre, if anything.
Unless he simply bunged them in the corner and "wrapped around", bandage style.
Hi Fisheman - As for the issue of his "reconsidering" at Goulston Street, I don't believe he did. He simply surrendered the rag closer to home, after they'd "dried off" somewhat, so as to prevent his garments being sullied by feshly extracted innards. The fact that a Jewish hotspot lay en route may also have been a consideration in the disposal location. I don't believe for a minute that he wiped "en route". It would take as much time to get the worst of the gunk off, there and then at Mitre Square, as it would to remove a segment of the apron in the first place. Nor can I picture him stuffing organs into his overcoat when there was a handy rag to prevent his garments from getting yuckier than they needed to.
Best regards,
Ben
P.S. Thanks for that, Pilgrim
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ChavaG
18th December 2007, 05:08 AM
When he left Catherine Eddowes, our boy cut a piece off her apron to wipe his hands with, and left it below (or wrote, which I doubt) a piece of vague and possibly anti-semitic graffiti. If memory serves, he is also suspected of having washed more blood off his hands at a handy pump on his way through the East End.
Something that strikes me is that he didn't seem to feel the need to wipe himself off after any of the other murders, even though his hands were probably just as sticky and red from shoving portions of organs in his pockets, fiddling around with intestines etc. We don't hear about him cutting off bits of handy aprons from Chapman or Nichols. I'll give him the benefit of the doubt on Stride because he was short of time. And I'm not entirely convinced Kelly was a Ripper victim at all. But he had time and opportunity to clean his hands with Chapman, there was even a handy bowl of water a couple of feet away. But he didn't use it.
So I'm wondering why he bothered to wipe his hands after leaving Eddowes. Was he perhaps heading home and didn't want to answer any awkward questions from Mrs Ripper or Mother Ripper who might be up and waiting for him. The other murders seem to take place much later on in the night, so perhaps Jack was heading out for work and stopped to kill the occasional tart on his way. Because it seems to me that Jack the Toff or Jack the Sickert wouldn't need to wash or wipe unless he really didn't like the feel of his hands. In which case I would expect to see bloody rags all over the place. A small thing, but to me it suggests Jack the Spitalfields Market porter or fishmonger or (more likely I think) butcher. No one would remark on a butcher with bloodstains on his person heading to work.
Just a thought...
GRISTLE
18th December 2007, 05:58 AM
I've always been under the impression it was to wipe the feculent (sp?) matter off his hands. He may have liked the feel of blood between his fingers but perhaps the feel and smell of faeces on those same fingers was not as exciting. I'm not entirely sure if the Chapman or Nichols mutilations resulted with the colon being severed and faeces being smeared about. Perhaps that's the difference.
ChavaG
18th December 2007, 06:29 AM
The Ripper was using his knife pretty freely in the abdominal area of all his victims so there would always be a chance that he'd get fecal matter smeared on it or him. The inquest evidence is annoyingly vague about post-mortem mutilation so it's hard to tell. I did wonder if that piece of apron was cut off to clean his knife rather than his hands. But either way there is no evidence of his doing this at the scene or near the scene of any other killing. You may well be right that he got feces on him and wanted to get it off. But I do think the fact that this happens only on one murder--given he used his knife in a similar area on all the victims--is noteworthy.
Leather_Apron
18th December 2007, 07:27 AM
I dont really know where the water tap was behind 29 Hanbury or if JTR even saw it. I do know JTR did not use the same technique He used on Chapman and MJK. He may not have needed to wipe his hands on anything after leaving 29 Hanbury. It all leads me to suspect that Chapman died earlier and that JTR had more time. I also suspect JTR was prepared to mutilate Stride in much the same manner as He did with Chapman and MJK but was interrupted so chose Eddowes and tried the same thing He did with Nichols.
Its the only thing that makes sense as to why Nichols/Eddowes were mutilated in a different manner than Chapman/MJK.
monty
18th December 2007, 10:58 AM
ChavaG,
But I do think the fact that this happens only on one murder--given he used his knife in a similar area on all the victims--is noteworthy.
Why not?
Monty
Ben
18th December 2007, 05:46 PM
Hi Chava,
It is quite possible that the killer did take one of Chapman's rags for hand-wiping and/or organ transporting, but rather than disposing of it en-route home, he took it with him. Why didn't he do that with Eddowes' apron? Possibly because an excrement-smeared rag will emit tell-tale smells in the way that a merely bloodstained one wouldn't, or because he sought to implicate the Jews and took advantage of a noted Jewish hotspot en route between the crime scene and home.
Hi Monty - That song always reminds me of y'know who whenever I hear it, especially when it is combined, as it often is, with Oasis' Wonderwall.
Best regards,
Ben
Sam Flynn
19th December 2007, 12:23 AM
Hello Chava,
The Ripper was using his knife pretty freely in the abdominal area of all his victims so there would always be a chance that he'd get fecal matter smeared on it or him. The inquest evidence is annoyingly vague about post-mortem mutilation so it's hard to tell.
It's pretty easy to tell, actually:
We know that the Ripper severed Catherine Eddowes' colon near the rectum and detached a piece of it, which he laid next to her body. We also know that Catherine Eddowes' small intestines had been drawn out of her body, laid over her right breast, and were "smeared over with some feculent matter". Unless Jack used a paint-brush (Sickert!!!? ) to do this smearing, it is almost certain that he got whoopsy on at least one of his hands in the process of severing her large intestine.
This is the only case in which this is known to have happened, as the medical evidence following Annie Chapman's death highlights the fact that Jack left her lower intestine undamaged. Furthermore it was specifically remarked upon that the killer had avoided severing her rectum whilst the killer "cleanly" removed her uterus.
Annie Chapman's abdomen only sustained sufficient damage to expose the small intestines, some of which bulged through her wounds. It's pretty certain that these wounds, although horrific, did not penetrate all the way through to her colon, where the faeces "live". Indeed, no damage is reported even to her small intestines.
Adding all that up, it's quite clear that Mitre Square was the first occasion on which Jack the Ripper got faecal matter on his hands. The fact that some of this matter was spread over her small intestines, and got transferred to the apron fragment, is compelling evidence that this was the case. Extending that further, it's pretty clear in my mind that the cutting of a swatch of apron fabric had something to do with this contingency.
Sam Flynn
19th December 2007, 02:07 AM
Mitre Square was the first occasion on which Jack the Ripper got faecal matter on his hands...
...during the course of his "canonical" murders, I should have added. He wouldn't have been human if my original sentence were taken literally
Trevor Marriott
19th December 2007, 02:57 AM
Correct me if i am wrong and i sure you will but wasnt the apron piece torn not cut. and wasnt it torn from a repair which had been made to the apron previous.
In any event the ripper did not tear or cut the apron nor did he take away the organs of Eddowes or any of the other victims.
tom_wescott
19th December 2007, 03:03 AM
Correct me if i am wrong and i sure you will but wasnt the apron piece torn not cut. and wasnt it torn from a repair which had been made to the apron previous.
There was definitely a patch that was torn/cut through but I don't believe it's known if that was the point of origin of the tear/cut. Your question is a good one though and I can't recall off the top of my head if the records are crystal clear on this point. Hopefully Sam will recall.
In any event the ripper did not tear or cut the apron nor did he take away the organs of Eddowes or any of the other victims.
Oh come on now of course he did. No more super rats or lost organs. The Ripper took them. Unless of course you're suggesting a super rat went in to Kelly's apartment and took her heart out with him!
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
Trevor Marriott
19th December 2007, 03:10 AM
i am sure Sam will this is his "Specialised Topic "
Trevor Marriott
19th December 2007, 03:21 AM
I did forget one important issue with regards to Sams and other postings on the topic.
If the killer had wanted to clean his knife or clean his hands why tera/remove and apron piece. One swift swipe across the apron would clean the knife and would have been much easier to wipe hands on apron without the need to cut/tear.
Its time for some of the old posters on here to take their heads from out of the sand and look at the overall picture in a logical manner
Ben
19th December 2007, 03:26 AM
If the killer had wanted to clean his knife or clean his hands why tera/remove and apron piece
Indeed, Trevor, which is why I don't believe the apron was removed for hand/knife wiping purposes, but rather to transport the organs.
Regards,
Ben
sreid
19th December 2007, 03:55 AM
Yes if he was wiping his hands, I think he could have accomplished that in the first 20 feet of his escape.
I've always wondered if he didn't intentionally place the apron there to lay a false trail.
It has also been posited that something like a dog carried it there.
Stan
Pilgrim
19th December 2007, 04:02 AM
The Times, Friday, 5 October 1888 (http://www.casebook.org/press_report.../18881005.html)
Mr. Crawford. - Is it impossible to assert that it is human blood ? Witness*. - Yes; it is blood. On the piece of apron brought on there were smears of blood on one side as if a hand or a knife had been wiped on it. It fitted the piece of apron in evidence.
*Dr. Frederick Gordon Brown
~~~
baron
19th December 2007, 04:08 AM
The records state that the apron piece was cut. We had a debate about this about a year ago contending that officials wouldn't be able to figure out if something was cut or torn as tearing and cutting may produce the same damage.
For my part, I thought JTR may have just been holding onto the piece of apron, not actually knowing that he was. Perhaps caught up in the moment, that sort of thing. A very difficult subject to argue for in any direction one wants to take it.
Mike
Ben
19th December 2007, 04:18 AM
Hi Pilgrim,
I believe it was PC Long who stated that the apron looked as though it was saturated in one corner. This would be consistent with the organs having been transported in the apron.
Cheers,
Ben
Sam Flynn
19th December 2007, 05:18 AM
Hi Pilgrim,
I believe it was PC Long who stated that the apron looked as though it was saturated in one corner. This would be consistent with the organs having been transported in the apron.
Hi Ben,
Quite the reverse. If the organs had been transported in the apron, one would expect a patch of blood in the centre, if anything.
Its time for some of the old posters on here to take their heads from out of the sand and look at the overall picture in a logical mannerIndeed, Trevor. If Eddowes' small intestines were smeared with feculent matter, then it's 99.9999999999% certain that Jack's hand(s) did the smearing, and that his hand(s) were therefore still carrying residual cack as he left Mitre Square. That stuff's lethally sticky, as I'm sure I don't need to remind anyone.
Sam Flynn
19th December 2007, 05:21 AM
i am sure Sam will this is his "Specialised Topic "
Yup, I know a fair bit about anatomy, and I'm doubly incontinent.
"Talk to the hand"
...just don't inhale, that's all
ChavaG
19th December 2007, 06:06 AM
If the organs were transported in the cloth, and the cloth was found, where were the organs?
Also I don't see any mention of fecal matter on the cloth. This being a murder inquiry I would expect that a polite avoidance of mentioning fecal waste would not apply. He wipes his hand or his knife or both after the Eddowes killing, but doesn't appear to have done so after any of the others. Which suggests to me that there was a reason for his wiping off then and that reason didn't apply at any other time. I suspect he was returning to a situation where someone might notice his bloody hands and ask about them. This could be as simple as not wanting to be caught running through the East End with blood on his hands. Which in turn suggests to me that the cop who found Eddowes must have missed the Ripper by seconds. He hears the guy coming, rips/tears a piece of apron to wipe his hands, and takes off sharpish dropping the cloth on his way because he doesn't want to be found with that on his person either.
GRISTLE
19th December 2007, 06:38 AM
Also I don't see any mention of fecal matter on the cloth.
Dr. Brown, the City Police Surgeon stated during the Inquest:
"......My attention was called to the apron - it was the corner of the apron with a string attached. The blood spots were of recent origin - I have seen a portion of an apron produced by Doctor Phillips and stated to have been found in Goulston Street. It's impossible to say it is human blood, I fitted the piece of apron, which had a new piece of material on it, which had been evidently sewn on to the piece I have - the seams of the borders of the two actually corresponding - some blood and apparently faecal matter was found on the portion found in Goulston Street"
(emphasis added)
baron
19th December 2007, 07:24 AM
A thought: If the killer needed to take some of the apron just to wipe his hands, and at such a late hour, perhaps he had some work to attend to that brought him into contact with others. He may have even been on break from such work. If he took the cloth for the purpose of transporting organs, why just a piece? If he had the mental acuity to realize he had a soggy mess of bits to carry, surely he would have realized that a double or treble wrapped mess would take longer to soak through.
It all seems like such an afterthought to me. That's why the piece of cloth may have been a bit of absent mindedness rather than a planned action. Why not just cut the apron strings? It would have been quicker than sawing and tearing through an entire width of cloth. The idea of a frenzied tearing of the apron seems much more likely than something more calculated, as calculation should show a result that is a bot more thoughtful.
Then again, who can understand the workings of a madman? Rhetorical of course. Gareth surely could understand
Mike
monty
19th December 2007, 11:49 AM
Correct me if i am wrong and i sure you will but wasnt the apron piece torn not cut. and wasnt it torn from a repair which had been made to the apron previous.
In any event the ripper did not tear or cut the apron nor did he take away the organs of Eddowes or any of the other victims.
and they I get told that....
Its time for some of the old posters on here to take their heads from out of the sand and look at the overall picture in a logical manner
Am I the only one that sees the irony?
DC Halse testimony.
'When I saw the dead woman at the mortuary I noticed that a piece of her apron was missing. About half of it. It had been cut with a clean cut. When I got back to Mitre Square I heard that a piece of apron had been found in Goulston Street. I went there with Detective Hunt to the spot where the apron had been discovered. There I saw some chalk writing on the wall. I stayed there and I sent Hunt to find Mr McWilliam
From Jon Smyths "A piece of apron, some chalk graffiti and a lost hour.
Monty
Fisherman
19th December 2007, 12:44 PM
ChavaG asks:
"If the organs were transported in the cloth, and the cloth was found, where were the organs?"
...and I feel that this is the pertinent question here. If the Ripper found it necessary to transport the organs he had taken away in the apron, he would not have reconsidered halfways to home, would he? It would have meant taking a huge risk.
This leaves us with two possibilities:
1. He was actually living in Goulston Street.
2. He did not use the apron for carrying the organs.
I myself would opt for the second alternative. I think that he used it as a rag to wipe off the feculent matter from his hands.
But why, might one ask, did he not rid himself of it until he reached Goulston Street?
And believe it or not, I have an answer for that one too...!
My guess is that he was in a hurry to leave Mitre Square - no need to loiter there and wait for the PC:s. So when he cut the apron, he immediately started out on his journey from the square. Regardless of which of the three exits he used, he would turn into a street, wiping his hands, and risking to meet somebody. And soon as he saw that somebody, what would he do? He would stop wiping his hands, and shove the apron into his pocket. He would not throw it away, risking that the other person/persons on the street took a look at it.
After that, he would await a possibility to rid himself of the piece of apron some place when nobody could see it, and that some place was Goulston Street. My suggestion is that he delved further into the east afterwards, on his way home.
All the best,
Fisherman
Sam Flynn
19th December 2007, 12:53 PM
Hi Chava,
If the organs were transported in the cloth, and the cloth was found, where were the organs?
In his pockets, perhaps, where I strongly suspect they were ever since he left Mitre Square. And Hanbury Street, or Miller's Court...
The uterus and kidney are comparatively small, and the heart is no bigger than a large orange.
Jez
19th December 2007, 02:01 PM
I think Ben's earlier suggestion makes sense. It is quite possible that Jack also took one of many of Eddowes' loose rags home as well as the portion of apron with him. If the objects found near her body [buttons, thimble, mustard tin] indicate that he had gone through her pockets, he would likely have also found a spare rag. We know that the inventory of her possessions still included two handkerchiefs, a piece of silk, a shirt remnant, a piece of linen etc etc. This would support the theory that the matching apron piece was deliberately cut off to be left as a clue in Goulston Street. But, as always, this can be argued from many angles as Catharine had spare rags.
Leather_Apron
19th December 2007, 02:30 PM
Im still scratching my head as to what "One Red Mitten" means?
ChavaG
19th December 2007, 02:51 PM
Do we know how women of that class dealt with menstruation? In those days people used rewashable cloths, so I wonder if an itinerant prostitute always kept pieces of old material around for 'that time of the month'. If that's the case, no need to cut any apron. Although I agree, he wasn't thinking clearly at that point. I still think that he wiped his hands because he expected to see people who might ask awkward questions. Heading home rather than heading out.
By the way, do we know if any or all of the victims were having their periods at the time of the attack? I've come across an article that suggests the mean age for last birth in the lower English socio-economic groups during the 19th Century was 41.7 years. Which means the average woman probably hit menopause in the mid-40s. Our victims were in the mid to late 40s range but it's statistically possible that some or all of them still were capable of menstruation. I always wondered if that was what set him off.
Fisherman
19th December 2007, 02:58 PM
Let´s not forget the importance of the timeline here! If the chronology shows contacting - accompanying - attacking/subduing - cutting throat - mutilating - rifling through the pockets - leaving, then the Ripper was not aware of the belongings in her pockets as he got smeared with faeces. And if such was the case, the apron was the handiest bid around at the time. It also was sufficient to meet his needs, since it was a large piece of cloth he cut of.
The other rags and bits of cloth, he would not have seen until later.
The best!
Fisherman
monty
19th December 2007, 03:10 PM
Fisherman,
Let´s not forget the importance of the timeline here! If the chronology shows contacting - accompanying - attacking/subduing - cutting throat - mutilating - rifling through the pockets - leaving, then the Ripper was not aware of the belongings in her pockets as he got smeared with faeces.
Think you may have the order of events slightly out, but thats only my opinion.
Monty
Pilgrim
19th December 2007, 03:17 PM
The Times, Friday, 5 October 1888 (http://www.casebook.org/press_report.../18881005.html)
Mr. Crawford. - Is it impossible to assert that it is human blood ? Witness*. - Yes; it is blood. On the piece of apron brought on there were smears of blood on one side as if a hand or a knife had been wiped on it. It fitted the piece of apron in evidence.
*Dr. Frederick Gordon Brown
~~~
Hi Pilgrim,
I believe it was PC Long who stated that the apron looked as though it was saturated in one corner. This would be consistent with the organs having been transported in the apron.
Cheers,
Ben The Times, Friday, 12 October 1888 : (http://www.casebook.org/press_report.../18881012.html)
By Mr. Crawford. - He had not noticed the wall before. He noticed the piece of apron first, and then the words on the wall. One corner of the apron was wet with blood.
(...)
The juryman. - You did not search the rooms, but left a man to watch the building, and the whole clue seems to have passed away. I do not wish to say anything harsh, as I consider that the evidence of yourself and of the other members of the police redounds to the credit of all of you; but this does seem a point that requires a little investigation. You find a piece of apron wet with blood; you search all the passages, and then you leave the building in the care of a man to watch the front. Witness. - I thought the best thing I could do was to go to the station and report the matter to the inspector on duty.
~~~
Stewart P. Evans & Keith Skinner, The Ultimate JACK THE RIPPER SOURCEBOOK; p.222, p.238 :
For greater detail on the Eddowes murder reference may be made to the Inquest reports filed in the Corporation of London Records Office. These records include the written statements of witnesses at the Eddowes Inquest:
(...)
Alfred Long 254 A, Metropolitan Police Force, being sworn saith - "I was on duty in Goulston street, Whitechapel on the 30th September, about 2.55 AM. I found a portion of a woman's apron which I produce. There appeared blood stains on it, one portion was wet, lying in a passage leading to the staircases of 108 to 119 Model Dwelling House."
~~~
Wondering. (http://forum.casebook.org/showthread...ring#post92352)
Ben
19th December 2007, 03:23 PM
Hi Gareth,
If the organs had been transported in the apron, one would expect a patch of blood in the centre, if anything.
Unless he simply bunged them in the corner and "wrapped around", bandage style.
Hi Fisheman - As for the issue of his "reconsidering" at Goulston Street, I don't believe he did. He simply surrendered the rag closer to home, after they'd "dried off" somewhat, so as to prevent his garments being sullied by feshly extracted innards. The fact that a Jewish hotspot lay en route may also have been a consideration in the disposal location. I don't believe for a minute that he wiped "en route". It would take as much time to get the worst of the gunk off, there and then at Mitre Square, as it would to remove a segment of the apron in the first place. Nor can I picture him stuffing organs into his overcoat when there was a handy rag to prevent his garments from getting yuckier than they needed to.
Best regards,
Ben
P.S. Thanks for that, Pilgrim
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