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  • Originally posted by Doctored Whatsit View Post
    As I have said several times, Collard clearly stated, "I produce a portion of the apron which deceased was apparently wearing which had been cut through and was found outside her dress". Trevor reckons that "apparently" makes the statement "ambiguous". No it doesn't, the point of this statement is that he clearly believed that she was wearing that apron. If he didn't, he would have said "may have", "could have" or "was possibly wearing". So Trevor requires us to believe that although in Collard's opinion, she was wearing the apron, he personally compiled a list which somehow proved she wasn't wearing it!

    As far as I am concerned "apparently" seemed to Collard to be the correct word to use as the apron had been cut and was hanging off, despite still being "outside her dress". It wasn't a complete apron and wasn't fully attached to her, so it required the necessary accurate and logical statement that she "was apparently wearing" it.

    I think almost everyone agrees that as the apron portion was going to be referred to the doctors at the post mortem, it was kept separate from everything else, so they didn't have to go looking for it. They were organized. This resulted in it being out of order, separate from everything else, on the list.

    Now Trevor raises the issue (#935) that "she was in possession of a knife". So she allegedly cut her apron with her table knife! This knife might have been OK for putting butter on her toast maybe, but making clean cuts on an apron? I think not! And as Herlock points out, the apron was her only apron, so important that she had previously repaired it, and she already had twelve pieces of white rag among her possessions anyway, so she knew she didn't need to cut it.

    One more point, again previously raised. On 11th October 1888, The Times published a "press release" from Shelton, the coroner's officer. This said that the police had identified two more witnesses who believed they had seen Eddowes alone, near Mitre Square at about 1. 30 am. They recognized her by the white apron. Of course, the witnesses could have been mistaken, but that is not my point. The police considered them valid witnesses because they saw a woman in a white apron who resembled Eddowes close to Mitre Square at about 1. 30 am. So the police were officially of the opinion that Eddowes was still wearing her white apron at 1. 30 am, perhaps 5 or 10 minutes before she was murdered.
    Almost every victorian woman wore a white apron,

    Does it say it was a butter knife? no its says it was a table knife

    Any knife can be sharpened to give it a bladed edge


    your clutching at straws like the rest.

    www.trevormarriott.co.uk

    Comment


    • Irrelevant points, Trevor. The police were looking for witnesses who saw a woman resembling Eddowes in a white apron, because they believed she was still wearing that apron at 1.30 am. The fact that women commonly wore white aprons is quite irrelevant. They clearly believed that Eddowes was.

      I never said it was a butter knife, I said it was a table knife. Table knives are not sharp enough to cut material. I think that if it had been very sharp, unlike other table knives, this would have been mentioned in Collards list, which was fairly specific about details. In any event, she didn't cut the apron, because the police were looking for people who had seen a woman in a white apron near Mitre Square at about 1.30 am.

      I am quoting known facts, it is you who is desperately suggesting unproven possibilities, and clutching at straws.
      Last edited by Doctored Whatsit; 08-04-2021, 05:12 PM.

      Comment


      • Originally posted by Doctored Whatsit View Post
        ...

        One more point, again previously raised. On 11th October 1888, The Times published a "press release" from Shelton, the coroner's officer. This said that the police had identified two more witnesses who believed they had seen Eddowes alone, near Mitre Square at about 1. 30 am. They recognized her by the white apron. Of course, the witnesses could have been mistaken, but that is not my point. The police considered them valid witnesses because they saw a woman in a white apron who resembled Eddowes close to Mitre Square at about 1. 30 am. So the police were officially of the opinion that Eddowes was still wearing her white apron at 1. 30 am, perhaps 5 or 10 minutes before she was murdered.
        Hi Doctor.

        You've mentioned these two witnesses in a previous post, I intended to ask you about them earlier.

        I wanted to ask how sure you were that those two are not Lawende & Levy?

        We do know both Lawende & Levy did not come forward, they had to be found, but we don't know by who. I think I assumed it was the City police. However, the article you refer to in the Times of 11 Oct. indicates new evidence will be brought forward at the second sitting today (11th) presumably by the three new witnesses found by Shelton & the police, the third being Eddowes daughter Annie Phillips.
        This is also the day both Lawende & Levy appeared, so aren't they your two new witnesses?
        Regards, Jon S.

        Comment


        • Hi Wick,

          I assumed that the witnesses couldn't be Lawende and Levy, because the new witnesses apparently specified that they recognized Eddowes by the white apron. Also they said she was alone. Lawende said he only saw her back. Levy could not give any detailed description of either of them. Both Lawende and Levy said she was with a man.

          The new witnesses would perhaps have been of little value in the inquest, because they only put her near Mitre Square just before she was murdered, and obviously, she must have been there, and they saw her alone. So, assuming that Lawende and Levy did actually correctly identify Eddowes, the new witnesses probably saw her a couple of minutes earlier.

          Comment


          • Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post

            Almost every victorian woman wore a white apron,



            Which is why Tabram wasn't, Nichols wasn't, Chapman wasn't, Stride wasn't, and Kelly wasn't.


            Does it say it was a butter knife? no its says it was a table knife

            Any knife can be sharpened to give it a bladed edge
            Sure, any knife can be ground down and sharpened, but you're making that up. Nowhere does it say the knife had been artificially sharpened beyond it's norm, which it would have to be by your suggestion.


            your clutching at straws like the rest.

            www.trevormarriott.co.uk
            You're carting a whole wagon of straw.

            - Jeff

            Comment


            • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post

              Indeed, Smith was at the mortuary, Smith & Halse gave an observation of the apron.

              Halse is quoted to have said:
              '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.'
              - (Jones & Lloyd, The Ripper File - pg 126)

              Also, Sir Henry Smith, though heavily critisized for being inaccurate in some statements, was at least known to be present for this report:
              'By this time the stretcher had arrived, and when we got the body to the mortuary, the first discovery we made was that about one-half of the apron was missing. It had been severed by a clean cut'.
              - (Sir Henry Smith, From Constable to Commissioner - pg 152)

              https://www.casebook.org/dissertatio...-graffito.html
              Hi Wickerman,

              Sadly, Smith's memoir's were written many years later, and as you say, are known to be inaccurate. I try and avoid those as sources to work with. In part because it is prone to selective reasoning. If what they say fits the evidence from the time period, we include it, but if what they say doesn't, we discard it. But we can't then say we have one more piece of evidence because we only have it because it already agrees! We wouldn't count it as a "strike against", so it biases the amount of evidence in favour of what one already has used to include it.

              Same with newspapers. We have to make sure we don't count as "2 pieces of evidence" two newspapers simply printing the exact same text (meaning, the same story was reprinted). I can copy out a story 30 times, that doesn't mean I now have 30 pieces of evidence.

              I don't know "The Ripper File", but the quote above looks like the inquest statement, but slightly modified. I don't recall seeing a quote to Halse where he says, for example, "About half of it."? But it also leaves out the bit where he says he went to the police station. Is that quote from a contemporary newspaper, or does it just appear in The Ripper File book, unsourced?

              - Jeff

              Comment


              • Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
                Does it no even occur to you that she was in possession of old pieces of white apron which had come from an old apron which at some time had been the subject of a repair. It would make sense because as you say would she want to walk around with an old tatty repaired apron

                The more you keep posting the bigger hole you dig for yourself

                www.trevormarriott.co.ik
                Hi Trevor,

                I think the penny has dropped!

                I think I actually get what you're saying now.

                The 12 pieces of rag are the apron! The apron she was in possession of was cut into 12 (well 13 since one is in G.S.) pieces.

                That's why you are now saying the piece is small, because it is just one of at least 13 pieces, maybe even more if she used some of the other pieces already.

                - Jeff

                Comment


                • Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post

                  Hi Trevor,

                  I think the penny has dropped!

                  I think I actually get what you're saying now.

                  The 12 pieces of rag are the apron! The apron she was in possession of was cut into 12 (well 13 since one is in G.S.) pieces.

                  That's why you are now saying the piece is small, because it is just one of at least 13 pieces, maybe even more if she used some of the other pieces already.

                  - Jeff
                  Sorry, I got excited, that 2nd to last line should read:

                  The 12 pieces of rag are the apron! The apron she was in possession of was cut into 12 (well 13 since one is in G.S.) pieces. Or, if not the actual pieces of rag mentioned, are another collection of pieces of material and not one large piece (at the crime scene) and another piece of indeterminant size at G.S.

                  I forgot to say that what you're suggesting could mean the "or" part as well as the first possibility (presumably you would only mean one of those options).

                  - Jeff

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post

                    Hi Wickerman,

                    Sadly, Smith's memoir's were written many years later, and as you say, are known to be inaccurate. I try and avoid those as sources to work with. In part because it is prone to selective reasoning. If what they say fits the evidence from the time period, we include it, but if what they say doesn't, we discard it. But we can't then say we have one more piece of evidence because we only have it because it already agrees! We wouldn't count it as a "strike against", so it biases the amount of evidence in favour of what one already has used to include it.

                    Same with newspapers. We have to make sure we don't count as "2 pieces of evidence" two newspapers simply printing the exact same text (meaning, the same story was reprinted). I can copy out a story 30 times, that doesn't mean I now have 30 pieces of evidence.

                    I don't know "The Ripper File", but the quote above looks like the inquest statement, but slightly modified. I don't recall seeing a quote to Halse where he says, for example, "About half of it."? But it also leaves out the bit where he says he went to the police station. Is that quote from a contemporary newspaper, or does it just appear in The Ripper File book, unsourced?

                    - Jeff
                    Hi Jeff.

                    The Ripper File tends to provide sources for the quotes used, it's unfortunate they didn't for that quote by Halse. I can see quotes being embellished by an author to provide a detail that supports his/her theory, I just didn't see why the authors would add "about half of it" to Halse's testimony, when referring to the apron, if it isn't what their source included. That detail has no bearing on the theory behind the book.

                    The newspapers do include details not captured by the court recorder, so I'm not worried on that score.
                    As I've pointed out scores of times, the press used shorthand & the court recorder did not. Which enables the press to record more of what is said.
                    I'm constantly monitoring the B.N.A. for a newspaper that could be the source used by the authors of that quote.

                    As for Smith, yes I've repeatedly warned against anyone using Memoirs to support a theory, but in this case Smith was present and the size of the piece of missing apron was never an issue before I pointed it out.
                    Aside from the quote above by Halse, Major Smith would be the only source who estimated a size for the G.S. piece, no-one else thought to do so. Which in itself does not automatically mean we should doubt the statement.

                    I am cautious when using Memoirs when I know what they say is not accurate, when what is written conflicts with other sources. In this case there is no conflict, except with Trevor, but not with any contemporary sources, which is the reason I used the quote.

                    Regards, Jon S.

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by Doctored Whatsit View Post
                      Hi Wick,

                      I assumed that the witnesses couldn't be Lawende and Levy, because the new witnesses apparently specified that they recognized Eddowes by the white apron. Also they said she was alone. Lawende said he only saw her back. Levy could not give any detailed description of either of them. Both Lawende and Levy said she was with a man.

                      The new witnesses would perhaps have been of little value in the inquest, because they only put her near Mitre Square just before she was murdered, and obviously, she must have been there, and they saw her alone. So, assuming that Lawende and Levy did actually correctly identify Eddowes, the new witnesses probably saw her a couple of minutes earlier.
                      Hi, for some reason I keep thinking to call you Doctor Ed.


                      Anyhow, we know who appeared at the inquest, and more especially on 11th October, so if your two witnesses did appear, who else could they be?
                      I was initially interested because neither Lawende nor Levy made any special point about seeing an apron, but like many other details that could be simply that the court recorder didn't think to write it down.

                      We also have details like the size of the grafitti - the capitals being about 3/4 inch tall (or words to that effect), which we have debated over the years, yet none of that was captured by the court recorder either. We only read it in the press.
                      So, I'm not concerned that this specific detail (re: the apron) is missing, because both Lawende & Levy say they only recognised the victim by her clothes, which includes an apron.
                      They didn't see her face, which means they were not permitted to view the body at the mortuary.
                      Regards, Jon S.

                      Comment


                      • Hi Wick,

                        I cannot believe that the new witnesses were Lawende and Levy because of the totally different stories - the white apron, and her being alone were specified. I don't have any actual firm information, but I assumed that once L and L appeared, the other two witnesses became of little value. They were only ever going to be able to say that a woman in a white apron, whom they believed was Eddowes, was seen very near where she died, minutes before she died - well of course she was there, she didn't drop in by parachute - and she was alone. Once Lawende and Levy appeared, they had a later sighting of her, and saw a potential killer.

                        Lawende said that he only saw her back, so I assume the clothes he identified were perhaps the bonnet and jacket which he specified. Presumably Levy saw only the same rear view from the same angle, but he was much more vague, saying he couldn't give a description.

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Doctored Whatsit View Post
                          Hi Wick,

                          I cannot believe that the new witnesses were Lawende and Levy because of the totally different stories - the white apron, and her being alone were specified. I don't have any actual firm information, but I assumed that once L and L appeared, the other two witnesses became of little value.
                          Let me just say this, all the witnesses gave their statements to the police. The Coroner receives all the statements from police, he reads them, and chooses who to call to his inquest.
                          Therefore, the Coroner already knew what Lawende, Levy & your two new witnesses had to say. This is why I very much doubt the reasoning you give above.
                          The Coroner already knew what they saw, so he couldn't be surprised by what they say. He is reading from their police statements to form the questions he puts to them.
                          Either your two witnesses were never called, or they had to be Lawende & Levy, in my opinion.

                          Regards, Jon S.

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post

                            Hi Jeff.

                            The Ripper File tends to provide sources for the quotes used, it's unfortunate they didn't for that quote by Halse. I can see quotes being embellished by an author to provide a detail that supports his/her theory, I just didn't see why the authors would add "about half of it" to Halse's testimony, when referring to the apron, if it isn't what their source included. That detail has no bearing on the theory behind the book.

                            The newspapers do include details not captured by the court recorder, so I'm not worried on that score.
                            As I've pointed out scores of times, the press used shorthand & the court recorder did not. Which enables the press to record more of what is said.
                            I'm constantly monitoring the B.N.A. for a newspaper that could be the source used by the authors of that quote.

                            As for Smith, yes I've repeatedly warned against anyone using Memoirs to support a theory, but in this case Smith was present and the size of the piece of missing apron was never an issue before I pointed it out.
                            Aside from the quote above by Halse, Major Smith would be the only source who estimated a size for the G.S. piece, no-one else thought to do so. Which in itself does not automatically mean we should doubt the statement.

                            I am cautious when using Memoirs when I know what they say is not accurate, when what is written conflicts with other sources. In this case there is no conflict, except with Trevor, but not with any contemporary sources, which is the reason I used the quote.
                            Hi Wickerman,

                            Yah, I see what you're saying. I too think the newspaper transcriptions are things we're very fortunate to have, for the same reasons you mention. The newspaper summary presentations are less useful than the more verbatim reports of course, as by definition the reporters opinions of what was said will creep in, but the transcript versions, with questions included, are a luxury for us.

                            And indeed, if that quote can be tracked down to a contemporary source, that would be a great find. I could see that detail slipping in by the authors simply because it was a bit of information they had and it got included in his testimony during the preparation of the manuscript as an error of transcription. Those sorts of things happen, and creating a reliable transcription is a difficult task, with word choice, punctuation choice, and so forth, all creeping in as possible errors.

                            As for Smith's memoirs, I agree, they have to be checked against contemporary sources of information, but if they survive that check then to an extent they become redundant. Where they provide new statements of fact, like the size of the piece being 1/2, even when embedded in a section that appears otherwise corroborated, I still view them as "suspect". The "new" information may only be there because that's reflective of the types of errors memoirs have. But, we work with what we have, and from the sounds of all the other testimonies and events, it does tend to point towards the GS piece being a fairly substantial portion of the apron. I would just prefer to have something recorded at the time indicating it's dimensions. If we had that, it would have saved a lot of bandwidth - or maybe not.

                            - Jeff

                            Comment


                            • Why would Brown be tasked with disrobing and checking.As I see it Brown was called to examine the body in the square.He next attended at the mortuary at 2pm that day to perform the autopsy.By that time the body had been disrobed and a list completed.How could he have taken anything from the body.Where is the evidence he (Brown) was at the mortuary anytime after leaving the square untill 2pm.It is stated that a Mortuary attendant removed,the clothing.Are you saying that is incorrect Jon,and it was Brown who removed the clothing?
                              Like you imply Jeff,these quotes from Wickerman do need investigation as to their origin.Such as his claim the court reporters didn't use shorthand.Some of them did.Of course it appears a better arguement to prove paper reporters the more talented,when the information discussed is from newspapers.

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
                                Either your two witnesses were never called, or they had to be Lawende & Levy, in my opinion.
                                In Collard's evidence, given on the 4th Oct, he says that these two had already been found by house to house search and would be giving evidence later. So the report on 11th can't really refer to them, unless there's a major communication failure somewhere.

                                Comment

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