Margaret Hames' entry in the latest edition of the A to Z:
"Fellow-lodger of Emma smith.Attacked in Osborne Treet/Brick Lane vicinity on 8 Dec 1887, receiving face and chest injuries that kept her in Whitechapel Infirmary until 28 December. It is possible that a misrecollection of her assault as fatal may have lain behind references to a murder at Christmas 1887."
I don't think this has been mentioned before, apologies if it has, but while looking through the Whitechapel Infirmary records for earlier in 1887, I came across Margaret being admitted some 8 months earlier too.
Here's the March entry from the Whitechapel Union Infirmary Admission and Discharge Register 1887-88. Margaret's entry is the top line in all the pictures:
My transcript:
1303 Admitted Monday March 7th, Hames Margaret,age 54, address 18 George Street, widow of John a ship cook, reason for admission - contused hips, religion C of E
Margaret was in the Infirmary for over 2 weeks and was discharged on 23 March 1887.
The March 1887 and December 1887 entries both record margaret being admitted in the morning, 11 am and 11.15am respectively.
I wonder what caused the contused hips?
"Fellow-lodger of Emma smith.Attacked in Osborne Treet/Brick Lane vicinity on 8 Dec 1887, receiving face and chest injuries that kept her in Whitechapel Infirmary until 28 December. It is possible that a misrecollection of her assault as fatal may have lain behind references to a murder at Christmas 1887."
I don't think this has been mentioned before, apologies if it has, but while looking through the Whitechapel Infirmary records for earlier in 1887, I came across Margaret being admitted some 8 months earlier too.
Here's the March entry from the Whitechapel Union Infirmary Admission and Discharge Register 1887-88. Margaret's entry is the top line in all the pictures:
My transcript:
1303 Admitted Monday March 7th, Hames Margaret,age 54, address 18 George Street, widow of John a ship cook, reason for admission - contused hips, religion C of E
Margaret was in the Infirmary for over 2 weeks and was discharged on 23 March 1887.
The March 1887 and December 1887 entries both record margaret being admitted in the morning, 11 am and 11.15am respectively.
I wonder what caused the contused hips?
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