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Was it mary kelly?

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  • #16
    Anna,

    It may be that the Marie Jeanette comes from her days in France or from her days as a higher class prostitute. Marie Jeanette is exactly the same as Mary Jane much as Guillermo and William. We don't know what her real name is because there is no confirmed marriage statement of birth certificate. It doesn't mean she didn't die, however. These little mysteries are completely separate from the murder in the court, though interesting.

    Cheers,

    Mike
    huh?

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    • #17
      Hi all,
      Another thought...

      I can't remember at this time of the morning if she was covered up when he saw her?
      Wouldn't he recognise the chemise?....

      Surely,having lived with Kelly on a daily basis for some time,something other than her hair would have been familiar.....there was still a fair bit of her left...he knew her face shape,and her body in general.I think she had quite distinct hands.He's very vague if he's the partner who cares more for the other,in this relationship.

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      • #18
        hair

        Disagree Dan, anyone who knows cockney, knows Joe would have said air for hair, which was her most distinctive and recognisable feature. Also her ears were cut and nicked and bloody, so I doubt Joe could have recognised anythings about her ears, in the time he had to look. Miss Marple

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        • #19
          Whether it was her ear or her hair, the salient fact is that Barnett was able to identify her, and did so. In terms of the question posed by this thread, the answer is simply, "Yes".
          Kind regards, Sam Flynn

          "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

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          • #20
            I think one of the biggest pieces of evidence the victim was Mary Kelly is the fact that she was never seen again. She was a fairly well known person in her community, whether by this name, or one of her other aliases, such as Fair Emma. Had someone else been killed in her place she would have been seen by a number of people, if only during her flight from London. The only true evidence we have of her being alive after JtR's attack is from Caroline Maxwell and Maurice Lewis, both who claim to have talked to, or seen her well after the murder took place. It's more likely two people made a mistake in the time they saw her than another person being killed in her place.
            "Now this is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning." Winston Churchill

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            • #21
              Originally posted by miss marple View Post
              Disagree Dan, anyone who knows cockney, knows Joe would have said air for hair, which was her most distinctive and recognisable feature.
              The people writing his testimony down would have been more familiar with Cockney as spoken in that period than we are now, and they said it was "ear" not "hair." And what makes you think that her hair was the most recognizable feature? Frankly I'd think hair would be one of the least distinctive parts. It's just color and length, and there wouldn't be a lot of variation in those during the Victorian era. It's not like she had a purple mohawk cut or anything.

              Dan Norder
              Ripper Notes: The International Journal for Ripper Studies
              Web site: www.RipperNotes.com - Email: dannorder@gmail.com

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              • #22
                I'm not taking sides one way or the other on the debate. But I doubt I'd recognize my husband just by his ear. And we've been married for years and years and years. Unless she had some kind of obvious malformation or birthmark, which hasn't been mentioned, I doubt even the closest partner would recognize Kelly by that particular body part...

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                • #23
                  Originally posted by miss marple View Post
                  Disagree Dan, anyone who knows cockney, knows Joe would have said air for hair, which was her most distinctive and recognisable feature. Also her ears were cut and nicked and bloody, so I doubt Joe could have recognised anythings about her ears, in the time he had to look. Miss Marple

                  Quite agree, Miss Marple.

                  Dan's obviously never heard an English accent, let alone Cockney...

                  Cheers,

                  Graham
                  We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze

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                  • #24
                    Originally posted by Dan Norder View Post
                    The people writing his testimony down would have been more familiar with Cockney as spoken in that period than we are now, and they said it was "ear" not "hair." And what makes you think that her hair was the most recognizable feature? Frankly I'd think hair would be one of the least distinctive parts. It's just color and length, and there wouldn't be a lot of variation in those during the Victorian era. It's not like she had a purple mohawk cut or anything.
                    Dan,

                    I hate to say this, but sometimes you talk like a real ****, you know that?

                    Graham
                    We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze

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                    • #25
                      Hello all,

                      I think that Mary's hair was, and was considered to be, a predominant feature of her overall appearance, as it was red, and waist length, and was worn out quite often. However as seen in the room photos, her hair is presumably down her back, probably soaked in blood, and only the top was visible.

                      The choice between a translation that is "hair and eyes, or "ear and eyes" is fairly clear though. Why would he cite her ear and not, for example,....her hands, or arms, or lower legs or feet? Unless only her head and face were shown to him.. I suppose thats a possible reason. But her hair was a "feature" that was known about her.

                      The ONLY reason to suggest that Mary isnt on the bed is Carrie Maxwell....and she didnt mention Marys hair. Nor was she considered to be presenting evidence that "fit" with any of the known data already collected.

                      Barnett, McCarthy, Bowyer...3 of the people closest to her on a day to day, week to week basis, said it was Mary Kelly that was found.

                      Best regards all.

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                      • #26
                        Danl

                        Frankly I'd think hair would be one of the least distinctive parts.

                        To each his own, I suppose, but there is many a man for whom his woman's hair is his pride and joy and Barnett was, after all, her lover for some time. Indeed, there has been more than a few sonnets written about a beloved's tresses and among Mary Jane's many charms her mane might just have been the most fetching. For all we know, Joe Barnett may have gloried nightly running his hands through her lovely locks.

                        Granted, he may just as well have enjoyed whispering sweet Billingsgate into her shell-like ears and ir was by that bit of love play that he recognized her. Do, though,allow that that for Joe and other men Mary Jane's hair may well have been her crowning glory.

                        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."

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                        • #27
                          By the way, do we know for sure that Barnett came from London? We don't know that he spoke Cockney, and there are several local dialects where 'hair' and 'ear' sound similar. I wasn't going to take sides, but now I will. I can't believe he said 'ear'. Just doesn't make sense. Especially as people commented on Kelly's hair, didn't they? She always wore it down etc etc.

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                          • #28
                            Originally posted by Dan Norder View Post
                            The people writing his testimony down would have been more familiar with Cockney as spoken in that period than we are now, and they said it was "ear" not "hair."
                            And Cockney 'as spoken in that period' differs how to pronunciation now? And 'the people writing his testimony down' would give a monkey's why? I wouldn't even assume that they'd hear the difference between the two words, particularly in the middle of a sentence (this isn't Elstree Cockney, for pity's sake). As for the implication that an ear is more distinctive than hair...
                            best,

                            claire

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                            • #29
                              Originally posted by Dan Norder View Post
                              It's not like she had a purple mohawk cut or anything.
                              Of course you know this means that before I die, I simply must write a work of fiction that casts Mary Kelly as a woman wearing a purple mohawk, LOL...
                              All my blogs:
                              MessianicMusings.com, ScriptSuperhero.com, WonderfulPessimist.com

                              Currently, I favor ... no one. I'm not currently interested in who Jack was in name. My research focus is more comparative than identification-oriented.

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                              • #30
                                If Kelly did have remarkable hair, as some accounts attest to, why wouldn't the transcriber of the inquest testimony have written 'hair' instead of 'ear'. If the logical conclusion by many is that 'ear' was a mishearing of the cockney 'hair', why wouldn't, at minimum, the editor of the article have caught such a mistake and have it corrected before it goes to press? After all, the concept of long, red tresses is so much more romantic than one ear, isn't it? The answer must be that they did question that Barnett said, "Ear.", and they had to agree that that is exactly what was said, regardless of editorial license. This was an important story; the most important in London of the day. A glaring mistake such as 'ear' for 'hair' would be absolutely inexecusible.

                                Cheers,

                                Mike
                                huh?

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