money
Hello Neil. But what causes my eyebrows to rise is the notion that she might have money there. She was supposed to be destitute and completely without money. That is why there is the story about contacting the daughter.
Now one might think that John was counting on her having reached the daughter and scrounging money from her. But John also claims he knew she had been in gaol. Did he seriously imagine that she had been liberated at 1.00 AM, walked all the way to her daughter's, and then was given money?
Cheers.
LC
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Hats Off To Eddowes
Collapse
X
-
Hi Simon
Just out of interest, pawn tickets and bonnets were connected in the Diary
To save me looking it up again I'll just copy and paste the relevant post I made here if you don't mind
As follows...
I thought the diary mentioned that the clue was in the bonnet - which was what was left behind
The case (cigarette case) is mentioned, as is the knife, but "redeem it " seems to refer to a pawn shop - and if the writer redeemed it, then that would be a good clue
Perhaps the writer has a pawn ticket in relation to some type of case(?)
Here's the part in full...
bastard
Abberline
bonnet
hides all
clue
clever
will tell you more
Mr Abberline is a funny little man (line deleted)
Oh Mr Abberline, he is a clever little man
he keeps back all that he can
For do I not know better, Indeed I do
did I not leave him a very good clue
Nothing is mentioned, of this I am sure
ask clever Abberline, could tell you more
Sir Jim trip over
fear
have it near
redeem it near
case
post haste
He believes I will trip over
but have no fear
I cannot redeem it here (line deleted)
For I could not possibly redeem it here
Of this certain fact I could send him poste haste
if he requests that be the case
If the clue was the case itself, how does "redeem it near" refer to it?
One line says ...
"Of this certain fact I could send him poste haste"
As if the writer has something that he can send by post, which connects him with the crime, possibly with the case, and there is a clue in the bonnet
I would speculate that a pawn ticket relating to either the bonnet or the case was found and taken away - from the spilled tin of tickets
However, if you redeem a ticket, you receive the item back - is the ticket a left-over reference? ie Eddowes retained the ticket (?)
Was half of a ticket left in the bonnet lining and Maybrick has the other, matching half?
Leave a comment:
-
Mighty Adam,Originally posted by Adam Went View PostIt's a bit of an obscure "fact" which is made in a press cutting, therefore it should be taken with a large handful of salt IMO......people could be quite cold hearted in the face of death in those tough old days, maybe he simply wanted to re-claim whatever he could, especially after what happened to his boots. It's hard to say what he was thinking.
Cheers,
Adam.
First bit of sense youve made today.
Absolutely, when you actually read whats being said, the report in itself is not as sinister as Simon suggests.
Kelly was merely looking at known places of concealment which made hold a clue, vital clue possibly.
Monty
Leave a comment:
-
It's a bit of an obscure "fact" which is made in a press cutting, therefore it should be taken with a large handful of salt IMO......people could be quite cold hearted in the face of death in those tough old days, maybe he simply wanted to re-claim whatever he could, especially after what happened to his boots. It's hard to say what he was thinking.
Cheers,
Adam.
Leave a comment:
-
He was looking for the note from his Fenian leader about where he should kill next. She was always the messenger, and the orders has always been in her hat before.Originally posted by Simon Wood View PostHi Curious,
HO144/221/A49301C [sorry for the quality; it's from microfilm] -
[ATTACH]13247[/ATTACH]
By the time John Kelly got a grip and turned up at the mortuary it was widely known that two pawn tickets had been found in a mustard tin beside Eddowes' body.
So why would he rummage through her hat, "a place of concealment"? He knew she hadn't any money. If she had, she'd still be alive.
Mike
Leave a comment:
-
If he thought that she had borrowed money from her daughter, or if he knew in his heart that she prostituted herself, he may have looked on the off chance that her killer had overlooked money in this hiding place.So why would he rummage through her hat, "a place of concealment"? He knew she hadn't any money. If she had, she'd still be alive.
Leave a comment:
-
Hi Curious,
HO144/221/A49301C [sorry for the quality; it's from microfilm] -
By the time John Kelly got a grip and turned up at the mortuary it was widely known that two pawn tickets had been found in a mustard tin beside Eddowes' body.
So why would he rummage through her hat, "a place of concealment"? He knew she hadn't any money. If she had, she'd still be alive.
Regards,
SimonLast edited by Simon Wood; 02-01-2012, 06:45 AM.
Leave a comment:
-
Hi, Simon,Originally posted by Simon Wood View PostHi All,
At Golden Lane mortuary, why did John Kelly search inside Eddowes' hat for money and pawn tickets?
Regards,
Simon
Well, I feel dumber than dirt, but I can't find the article to read.
I'm not sure why you are asking this question, what you are looking for -- perhaps just to get some different opinions?
Off the top of my head, and knowing nothing more than what you have written here: because he knew that was her hiding place.
Leave a comment:
-
rifling
Hello Simon. Thanks for posting this. I have often wondered whether there were something on Kate's body that was sought, hence the rifling her effects.
This may lend a bit of force to the argument.
Cheers.
LC
Leave a comment:
-
Hi Curious,
Daily Telegraph cutting, HO144/221/A49301C
Regards,
Simon
Leave a comment:
-
Hats Off To Eddowes
Hi All,
At Golden Lane mortuary, why did John Kelly search inside Eddowes' hat for money and pawn tickets?
Regards,
SimonTags: None

Leave a comment: