interpretation of 'evidence'
Hi Wickerman,
I don't think that anyone on this thread is pursuing any kind of argument, people have just been making different suggestions and thoughts on the topic, and most seem to be agreeing that it's very open to debate and just an interesting aside to the case that might give us a bit of an insight into police procedure at the time.
Every discussion on this board is based on meagre evidence, and if we only discussed things that had solid evidence to back it up, then we would be talking about knitting or model cars most of the time.
The fact is though, that the newspaper reports don't really contradict the official documents, they just give extra information, even if it is a bit confused in sequence and garbled sometimes. The report in the Pall Mall Gazette 10th November simply says:
Dr Phillips, the divisional surgeon of police, and Superintendent Arnold were also sent for. On the arrival of the latter he caused a telegram to be sent direct to Sit Charles Warren, informing him what had happened, and Inspector Abberline, who had already arrived, despatched a message to Sir Charles Warren to bring the bloodhounds. Mr Arnold, having satisfied himself that the woman was dead, ordered one of the windows to be removed.
There is a great chunk of information missing here, and that could simply have been because the text had to be edited to fit in the available column inches. Even looking at what it does say with regards to the window, it could have been talking about a single window pane . . . Witnesses were called to indentify the body through the window, and it would have been a lot easier for them to view it without the broken glass there. The same could be said for the removal of the lower half of the window frame, which would have made it even easier.
The suggestion that they wouldn't have taken the window out because they wanted to preserve the scent, is a good suggestion, but unless her killer exited through the window, then the trail the bloodhounds followed would be via the door. Crowds were held back to avoid trampling over the scent through the court. There would not really be any reason not to remove a part of a window.
The East London Advertiser of 17 November 1888 goes a step further:
The police were sent for, and Superintendent Arnold, having satisfied himself that the woman was dead, ordered one of the windows to be entirely removed.
Again, this could be interpreted in quite a few ways. Was it a whole window frame, a window panel? a window pane? It could be taken to mean that because the glass was broken in the pane, he ordered the rest of the bits to be taken out so that people didn't cut themselves on broken glass and could see through more easily.......the wording doesn't preclude that.
The Times 10th November says the same thing, and of all the newspapers the Times was certainly one of the most consistently reliable. We have to at least take the suggestion that some part of a window was removed seriously, even if we later dismiss it. Apart from which, we need to find something to talk about!
Bestest
Jane
xxxx
Hi Wickerman,
I don't think that anyone on this thread is pursuing any kind of argument, people have just been making different suggestions and thoughts on the topic, and most seem to be agreeing that it's very open to debate and just an interesting aside to the case that might give us a bit of an insight into police procedure at the time.
Every discussion on this board is based on meagre evidence, and if we only discussed things that had solid evidence to back it up, then we would be talking about knitting or model cars most of the time.
The fact is though, that the newspaper reports don't really contradict the official documents, they just give extra information, even if it is a bit confused in sequence and garbled sometimes. The report in the Pall Mall Gazette 10th November simply says:
Dr Phillips, the divisional surgeon of police, and Superintendent Arnold were also sent for. On the arrival of the latter he caused a telegram to be sent direct to Sit Charles Warren, informing him what had happened, and Inspector Abberline, who had already arrived, despatched a message to Sir Charles Warren to bring the bloodhounds. Mr Arnold, having satisfied himself that the woman was dead, ordered one of the windows to be removed.
There is a great chunk of information missing here, and that could simply have been because the text had to be edited to fit in the available column inches. Even looking at what it does say with regards to the window, it could have been talking about a single window pane . . . Witnesses were called to indentify the body through the window, and it would have been a lot easier for them to view it without the broken glass there. The same could be said for the removal of the lower half of the window frame, which would have made it even easier.
The suggestion that they wouldn't have taken the window out because they wanted to preserve the scent, is a good suggestion, but unless her killer exited through the window, then the trail the bloodhounds followed would be via the door. Crowds were held back to avoid trampling over the scent through the court. There would not really be any reason not to remove a part of a window.
The East London Advertiser of 17 November 1888 goes a step further:
The police were sent for, and Superintendent Arnold, having satisfied himself that the woman was dead, ordered one of the windows to be entirely removed.
Again, this could be interpreted in quite a few ways. Was it a whole window frame, a window panel? a window pane? It could be taken to mean that because the glass was broken in the pane, he ordered the rest of the bits to be taken out so that people didn't cut themselves on broken glass and could see through more easily.......the wording doesn't preclude that.
The Times 10th November says the same thing, and of all the newspapers the Times was certainly one of the most consistently reliable. We have to at least take the suggestion that some part of a window was removed seriously, even if we later dismiss it. Apart from which, we need to find something to talk about!
Bestest
Jane
xxxx
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