Originally posted by JeffHamm
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Jack's Escape from Mitre Square
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Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
I don't think that's necessarily true Sam, anymore than the young couple seen outside the board school on Berner Street intended to go inside.
As for the police being charged to look out for couples, I believe they were charged in that manner Trevor at that time. I still don't know how that might translate into 3 plainclothed detectives looking in alleys though. There doesn't seem to be any compelling reason to have detectives searching alleys near Mitre after 1am.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
It isn't even reasonable to expect a prostitute or her client to come forward and admit to what they were doing.
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Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
If the killer was disturbed by the watchman as you suggest, then that reduces even more the time the killer had with Eddowes in the square
www.trevormarriott.co.uk
Regardless, the doctors estimated 5 minutes for the murder, so as long as he starts shortly after PC Watkins makes his first 1:30 patrol, then he's got lots of spare time. With a 5 minute requirement, basically, that places the upper limit at 1:39, although that means he's leaving as Watkins finds the body, so near the limit times are senseless, so let's say upper limit of 1:38, and that means he leaves at least a minute before the body is found. So, couples spotted who could have entered Mitre Square between 1:30 and 1:38 are of most interest.
There's the church passage couple. But there's less specific mentions of activity in St. James's Place, which seems to have generated less interest from the police.
- Jeff
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Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
Hi Jeff.
The detail you referred to in the above quote, about the corner where Eddowes was found. There are press sketches which show a fence & a gate.
Coincidentally, I just came across a newspaper sketch that shows Jack escaping through that same gate..
IPN 13 Oct 1888.
I thought, why even make this sketch when they know about the GSG and the expected escape route?
The details from the inquest were published the day before (12th), perhaps news travels slow on a weekend.
- Jeff
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Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post
Much appreciated. I figured it was a fence, but wanted to verify.
- Jeff
Where would it lead to if someone jumped over it. Looks like a dead end the other side !
www.trevormarriott.co.uk
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Yes, and the plans look a dead end as well. Given there's a fence, it's a no-go area I think. If the plans were just marking a boundary line, and it was open, it might have afforded a place to back into while Harvey came up Church Passage, but the fence negates such notions. JtR was, I believe, on Eddowes' right side, probably facing towards the fence, if he was alerted to PC Harvey coming up Church passage (off and out of shot to the left of the photo), then fleeing out to Mitre Street (off and following the sidewalk/pavement towards the right of the shot) makes the most sense as the passage to St. James's Place would require heading diagonally through Mitre Square, which is more towards PC Harvey.
Given there was, according to other maps I've seen, a gas light at the Mitre Square end of Church Passage, that escape is viable as PC Harvey's ability to see into the dark Square beyond the light source would be impaired. Though that wouldn't mask sounds of footsteps, of course.
- Jeff
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Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
Here is another picture more modern.
Where would it lead to if someone jumped over it. Looks like a dead end the other side !
www.trevormarriott.co.ukLast edited by jerryd; 05-11-2019, 01:55 PM.
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Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
Here is another picture more modern.
Where would it lead to if someone jumped over it. Looks like a dead end the other side !
www.trevormarriott.co.uk
That gate, or a later version of it, carried a plaque identifying this as Rippers Corner, at some point. I remember a picture of that gate with the plaque was in one of the earliest Ripper books.Regards, Jon S.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
Thankyou Trevor.
That gate, or a later version of it, carried a plaque identifying this as Rippers Corner, at some point. I remember a picture of that gate with the plaque was in one of the earliest Ripper books.
www.trevormarriott.co.uk
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Originally posted by Simon Wood View PostIf the man and woman seen by Lawende were not Eddowes and her nemesis, who were they and what were they doing at the end of Church Passage?
Here's a possible clue.
Simon
People in general choose to have nothing to do with it. As to the question of what they were doing, that is irrelevant, Britain was not a police state. No-one needs to justify why they are out at night.Regards, Jon S.
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The Derby Daily Telegraph (Oct. 1st): "…indeed one of the policemen who saw the body (Eddowes) in the mortuary expressed his confident opinion that he had seen the woman walking several times in the neighborhood of Aldgate-High Street."[and,] "The police theory is that the man and woman, who had met in Aldgate, watched the policeman (Watkins) pass round the square, and they then entered it for an immoral purpose."
A similar story written on October 2, 1888 by a London correspondent for The New York Times: "The only trace considered of any value is the story of a watchboy who saw a man and a woman leave Aldgate station, going towards Mitre-square. The man returned shortly afterward alone. The police have a good description of him [….]
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