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was Nichols murdered where found?

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  • #91
    What is the purpose of re-opening this discussion?
    An attempt to dismiss all the nonsense and discover the real circumstances behind the murder of Polly Nichols.


    But the nonsense may well be in the reporting of events in 1888!!

    We know that things did not go as planned at the mortuary - were not the stays removed without authority? How closely were things examined?

    But all this was known and gone over years ago - I ask again, what is the point of resurrecting all this again now? Are you presenting new evidence, or just wanting to question old assumptions? If so - on what basis?

    Phil H

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    • #92
      the terrible double entendre

      Hello Phil.

      "were not the stays removed without authority? How closely were things examined?"

      Umm?

      Cheers.
      LC

      Comment


      • #93
        Hi Phil H,

        What is the point of resurrecting all this again now?

        Simple. To try to get at the truth.

        Regards,

        Simon
        Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

        Comment


        • #94
          To try to get at the truth.

          I thought we'd got there! What is new, what is considered? Where is the previous balance apparently wrong? Is there new evidence?

          To me this raising this already satisfactorily "resolved" issue without an appropriate hook is like going round and round on a roundabout for no other reason than its fun!

          Where do you think the truth lies then?

          Phil H

          Comment


          • #95
            Hi Phil H,

            Four years ago I wrote a long article in Rip 90 which discussed in detail the circumstances and immediate aftermath of Polly Nichols' murder. I identified contradictions, conflicts of timing and testimony, policemen and other witnesses being economical with the truth . . . in fact I found more about the Bucks Row scenario which was unresolved and decidedly suspect. Since writing the article nothing has surfaced to change my mind, and I therefore continue to probe and question. I think it's safe to say that events in Bucks Row did not unfold in the historically-accepted manner, but as I am not working to a strict agenda or pet theory the matter of where I think the truth lies is one of those black-or-white questions which as yet remains maddeningly impossible to answer.

            Have a safe, warm Christmas and a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

            Regards,

            Simon
            Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

            Comment


            • #96
              I think you are on to a lifelong and ultimately frustrating search, Simon.

              My instinct is that the Nichols' murder is perhaps the most straighforward of the lot. And i don't think i am being complacent when i say that - that is just my response to the evidence as i see it.

              I identified contradictions

              There are surely contradictions in all the Ripper murders - probably in every case. People (even officials such as policemen) genuinely perceive things differently, it neither implies conspiracy or IMHO should necessarily excite suspicion.

              conflicts of timing and testimony

              All the timings in 1888 are on shakey ground, are they not. Without radio clocks and accurate universal timepieces, it all depended on whether a man's watch ran fast or slow (assuming he had one) or whether he heard a clock chime - and how accurate that was.

              On testimony - as I said above - people perceive the same thing differently and with no ulterior motive. What we see depends on our experience, state of mind, observational skills and tiredness - even the quality of light or lack of it. The brain strives to make sense of what it sees and adds details that were not, in fact, present.

              The whole of the ancient world, and I believe much of the Victorian world, went by the most (to our way of thinking) crude timekeeping. "I'll meet you before the sun is at it's height." Ancient Rome went for years with a centrally placed sundial calibrated for Alexandria!! A Mrs Long/Mrs Darrell depended on church or brewery clocks - and what if she misheard a quarter for the half?

              I grew up in an English cathedral city and my life was punctuated by the striking of the cathedral bells for the hour and the quarters, from 7.00am to around 10.45 at night (it used to be all night but it disturbed visiting justices of assize!! I didn't have to look for a clock because you heard the time - but if distracted, or the wind was contrary, you might be unsure which quarter you had heard. Time was vague in 1888 for everyone.

              , policemen and other witnesses being economical with the truth .

              I'd need to know the instances before being able to comment.

              . . in fact I found more about the Bucks Row scenario which was unresolved and decidedly suspect.

              But suspect for what? An unfortunate was murdered in a sordid back alley - the police investigated, but hardly expected it would be one of the most famous (and minuitely studied) murders in history.

              I look at the same evidence as you and see banality, men in the early hours being slipshod and embarrassed when later called to account; a less than effective doctor. I see little unresolved, little that is inconsistent - except that we never caught the culprit so cannot know every detail.

              Since writing the article nothing has surfaced to change my mind, and I therefore continue to probe and question.

              I respect your right to do so wholly, but would not take the same view peersonally.

              I think it's safe to say that events in Bucks Row did not unfold in the historically-accepted manner,

              And I'd put quite a lot of money on the accepted version being 90%-95% accurate.

              Can you point me to a copy of your article, I'd be interested to read it. From my first days reading about the Ripper in the 60s and 70s, Bucks Row has always interested me the most. I found it the most atmospheric (with Mitre Square) when I visited it long before the modern developments, and Leonard Matters - one of the first authors I read - saw the street as it was in 1888 almost exactly.

              Phil H

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              • #97
                Hi Phil H,

                Send me a PM with your email address.

                Regards,

                Simon
                Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

                Comment


                • #98
                  Much appreciated Simon. Will do.

                  Phil H

                  Comment


                  • #99
                    Simon
                    It is interesting that you picked up on the things that don't add up with regard to Bucks Row.
                    To my mind they are explained by the police covering up individual low level errors, skiving etc and higher level incompetence.
                    Then we have the dissembling testimony (and his influence on Paul) of Charles lechmere - of course I think he did it which explains his motive.
                    Then we have hysterical and so unhelpful witnesses claiming to have heard cries and murmours.
                    Then we have llewellyn missing the abdominal wounds ( as they were hidden by the culprit).
                    Then we have layers of inaccuracy over this murder shovelled on by 'ripperologists' - which continues to this day.

                    Comment


                    • Hi Lechmere

                      Originally posted by Lechmere View Post
                      Then we have llewellyn missing the abdominal wounds ( as they were hidden by the culprit).
                      Dr Llewellyn didn`t miss any abdominal wounds.

                      He was called to a woman who had her throat cut, he pronounced her dead and then gave the go ahead for her to be removed to the mortuary for the post mortem later that day.

                      Comment


                      • Lechmere - as you know, I don't wholly agree with your Cross/Lechmere theory (though I can see why it is attractive) but in this case I must concur with the majority of your remarks.

                        Phil H

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Phil H View Post
                          Lechmere - as you know, I don't wholly agree with your Cross/Lechmere theory (though I can see why it is attractive) but in this case I must concur with the majority of your remarks.

                          Phil H
                          Really Phil?

                          Im very surprised.

                          Monty
                          Monty

                          https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...t/evilgrin.gif

                          Author of Capturing Jack the Ripper.

                          http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/1445621622

                          Comment


                          • Thanks for that phil - but I'm not surprised

                            Comment


                            • As has been already stated, JtR was an "opportunity killer". This means he took victims not by previous choice but by the person being in an area where he felt he could kill and escape. If we accept the Nichols murder as being committed by the Chapman, Eddows murderer, then she wouldn't have been moved.

                              Today, analysis of blood spatter would tell the tale. But I think they had enough evidence to conclude that she died on the spot.

                              God Bless

                              Darkendale
                              And the questions always linger, no real answer in sight

                              Comment


                              • Monty - I don't think Lechmere says much more than I said in a previous post of my own (the long response to Simon) - his own pet notions apart.

                                Phil H

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