Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Alleged photo of one of the victims found at Clapham

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #31
    IF (and it is a big if) there is any truth in this report, the things that intrigue me are
    1) Which victim was the cabinet portait of? It could be any of the C5 except Kelly (the photos were handed to the police on 20 October) or possibly an earlier alleged victim
    2) Why would the writer have only one pic of the victim but four of her sister? The fact that the pic of the victim is specified as a "cabinet" suggests that the other four might have been smaller.
    Chris

    Comment


    • #32
      Originally posted by sdreid View Post
      I guess "eve" here is the diminutive of evening but when I first read it I took it to mean the day before, like Christmas Eve.
      They both mean the same, Stan. I suppose at one time back in the mists of the Anglo-Saxon past, the "day" was deemed to start in the evening, and I believe that the Jews and Moslems still adhere to this. Even in more recent Western culture, in the King James version of the Bible, Genesis ends each section referring to the Days of Creation with "And the evening and the morning were the [first/second/third...] day".
      Kind regards, Sam Flynn

      "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

      Comment


      • #33
        Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
        They both mean the same, Stan. I suppose at one time back in the mists of the Anglo-Saxon past, the "day" was deemed to start in the evening, and I believe that the Jews and Moslems still adhere to this. Even in more recent Western culture, in the King James version of the Bible, Genesis ends each section referring to the Days of Creation with "And the evening and the morning were the [first/second/third...] day".
        And sufficient unto the day are the evils thereof.
        allisvanityandvexationofspirit

        Comment


        • #34
          Yes, but Christmas Eve is regarded as the entire day of the 24th starting at 12:01 AM and running through 11:59 PM. Maybe that's an American thing I don't know. That was just my first take and I soon decided it probably just meant evening which, I believe legally, is 6:01 PM through 11:59 PM. It's just a minor point.
          This my opinion and to the best of my knowledge, that is, if I'm not joking.

          Stan Reid

          Comment


          • #35
            Greetings, mates! Here in the U.S., "brass" can also mean audacious, bold or daring, as in, "That guy has a lot of brass!" I don't think our letter writer had that meaning in mind, however. And it may be a mistake to take his words too literally. For instance, there's no indication he gave the victim the "20 kisses" on a single occasion. He may have known her for some time and gave her a kiss every time he saw her. Perhaps he was seeing the victim's sister, which could explain why he had more pictures of her. He may have seen the victim on the last day of her life, or within a few days of that event, and used the word "eve" in a figurative sense. The inference is clear, however, that the letter writer had tried to get something going with the victim and been turned down, apparently because he lacked either the money or the nerve. On the other hand, the whole thing could be a hoax! Still, I'm hoping someone will follow up and get to the bottom of it. I'd love to see the photos!
            "We reach. We grasp. And what is left at the end? A shadow."
            Sherlock Holmes, The Retired Colourman

            Comment


            • #36
              Originally posted by sdreid View Post
              Yes, but Christmas Eve is regarded as the entire day of the 24th starting at 12:01 AM and running through 11:59 PM. Maybe that's an American thing I don't know.
              Probably a comparatively modern distortion, Stan, in the UK as well as the USA. "Eve" is obviously cognate with "evening", as in "O Star of Eve" - the usual translation of Wagner's "O du mein holder Abendstern" (where "Abendstern" means literally the "evening star").

              In Welsh, we refer to Christmas Eve as "Noswyl Nadolig" (the "Feast of Christmas Night/Evening"), and New Year's Eve as "Nos Galan" (the "Evening of New Year"). Incidentally, the well-known Christmas carol "Deck the Halls with Boughs of Holly" was originally an 18th century Welsh song called "Nos Galan".
              Kind regards, Sam Flynn

              "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

              Comment


              • #37
                [QUOTE=Dr. John Watson;43280]Greetings, mates! Here in the U.S., "brass" can also mean audacious, bold or daring, as in, "That guy has a lot of brass!" QUOTE]

                It means the same here infact I heard it on 'Eastenders' recently.

                I would have agreed that the phrase means money. 'Brass' means a lot of things but in the conext of the quote I would go for money!
                In order to know virtue, we must first aquaint ourselves with vice!

                Comment


                • #38
                  Chris, I thought the meaning of 'cabinet' in this photographic sense was that it was a series of portraits of the same person?

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    AP,

                    No, indeed, a "cabinet" photograph refers only to size, not number. A cabinet photograph is 3-7/8 by 5-1/2 inches, intermediate in size between a carte de visite and a boudoir.

                    That is was simply a size is readily apparent from this exchage in Conan Doyle's "A Scandal in Bohemia:"

                    Holmes took a note of it. "One other question," said he, "was the photgraph a cabinet?"
                    "It was."

                    Singular usage all round.

                    Don/.
                    "To expose [the Senator] is rather like performing acts of charity among the deserving poor; it needs to be done and it makes one feel good, but it does nothing to end the problem."

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Hi all,

                      I've been seriously out of the JTR loop in recent times and I was just scanning the message boards and stumbled on the article of the Clapham photos.

                      The victim I kissed 20 times, and tried it on again, but I got no brass
                      My grandfather used to use the term 'got no brass' usually watching soccer. If someone didn't 'have the nerve' to fully commit to a tackle (or if someone lost their nerve taking a penalty shot and missed), my grandfather would have chuckled "He's got no brass".

                      I just called my father and he says the term is related to the saying 'its cold enough to freeze the balls of a brass monkey'. Got no brass = got no balls (testicles) = Got no nerve/courage. I found this definition that supports the idea that brass (balls) refers to nerve/courage.

                      Contrary to its recent misuse as a euphemism for audacity or courage, to have "brass balls" actually means to drive a hard bargain and to refuse to sell for less than what you ask for. The term dates back to the days when pawn shop brokers would traditionally hang three brass balls outside their shop doors to indicate their services.


                      Nicole
                      ---------------------------------------------------
                      "We serial killers are your sons, we are your husbands, we are everywhere. And there will be more of your children dead tomorrow."
                      - Ted Bundy

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Brass another term for money

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          I am wondering whether any unfortunate would be able to afford to go and have a cabinet photograph made of themselves...a cabinet photograph or any other for that matter. Then there is the question of how the person that left the photographs came to acquire them...

                          I wonder whether the person that left these photographs not only knew the victim, but possibly had known them for some time ("The victim I kissed 20 times" - is this literal or just hinting at "many" times?) I also wonder whether the person in question was the photographer to have both a photograph of the victim and of her sister too??? - Would explain how he had them in his care?

                          I also question the words "but I got no brass" - not "but I didn't have any brass" (as in the past - the remainder of the message is written in the past tense). This possibly suggests that the person is implying that, though they were attracted to each other, he was too poor for her rather than making reference to a particular "sexual deal".

                          He "tried it on again" - getting aroused or "trying his luck" in possibly asking her to be with him? But either way it didn't work out and, if you go with the latter suggestion for a moment, she came "to a dreadful end" on the eve of her death - before she died. Could the person be feeling guilty as, should he have convinced the victim to stay with him, her "end" wouldn't have happened - is the "eve" thing his regret and false blame?

                          I'm throwing ideas that haven't yet been suggested, this does not mean that I read "Mills and Boon" and believe the above!

                          C.
                          I read it all, every word, and I still don't understand a thing... - Travis

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            I think it means he had been her customer 20 times. But one night he had no money but solicited her again. She agreed and he thought she liked him and would say nothing when he had no money to pay. However when she found out he had no money she put up a fuss so he realized she was nothing but trash so he had to kill her.

                            Comment


                            • #44
                              My guess is that it was slang for money to pay for the sex. Unfortunately the message with the photos is garbled - it is subject to too many interpretations (hey, for a moment I thought that I was seeing a Ripper who played a trumpet or trombone or tuba when out on the prowl - you know, from the "brass section" of the orchestra). But since the message is garbled, and was found with the photos at Clapham Juncton (one day the site of another mysterious killing - that of Leon Beron in 1911), maybe these points should be considered too.

                              1) The killer is somehow able to dump material miles from the East End near Clapham. Did he live near there, or was he visiting someone near there.
                              2) The killer garbled his instrution message - suggesting he did not have real leisure time to give it to the public when he wrote it to put with the photographs.

                              As for the Victims and photographs - forgetting the morgue or death scene pictures, we know that Annie Chapman had photo taken (it is seen on this website). So did Carrie Brown in America. Why couldn't the others - and why could any of them not carry it and photos of a sister around with them (where else to put them, as they are too poor to store them anywhere).

                              Jeff

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                Hello Jeff!

                                As for the Victims and photographs - forgetting the morgue or death scene pictures, we know that Annie Chapman had photo taken (it is seen on this website). So did Carrie Brown in America. Why couldn't the others - and why could any of them not carry it and photos of a sister around with them (where else to put them, as they are too poor to store them anywhere).

                                The "others" could - but not likely given their state of living. Getting photographs back then was quite a cost (and I would bet my hat any photographs of Annie weren't paid for by her!) To my knowledge, most photographs taken of the poor as a portrait were those taken once a loved one had died (hence the image shows a "sleeping" (DEAD!!!) person). The family would "pool" their money to purchase it...Interestingly, they too are called "cabinet photographs"...They WOULD then go "prop-up the dead person's image" within a glass-door cabinet/or similar...

                                I don't buy any unfortunate having money to get/carry in their pocket photographs - either of themselves or otherwise...nope.

                                All the best,

                                C.
                                Last edited by Canopy; 05-06-2011, 07:42 PM.
                                I read it all, every word, and I still don't understand a thing... - Travis

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X