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Could MJK have survived Miller's Court

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  • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
    Ahh, the Unknown Witness, which I mentioned back on post 236..


    So why did she not come forward?

    1) Maybe, the woman was not supposed to be there, she did not want people knowing where she was at this hour. She saw the same scene as Bowyer because the killer had already gone?

    2) She saw the killer, he was caught in the act?
    She did not come forward because, although she saw him, he also saw her!
    As a consequence there were no more killings, both this witness and the killer went "to ground", neither surfacing for fear of the other.

    Needless to say this is only conjecture.

    I'm not sure if the time given by Prater is reliable, she only judged the time by the fact the lodging-house light was out. We do read that the shop closed by 3:00 am, I would assume this is when the light would also be put out.
    Because the light was out (Prater), there's a chance the light was put out at 3:00 am. just after Bowyer went for that pail of water. Therefore the cry of "oh murder" was sometime after 3:00 am. Perhaps the times given by Lewis & Kennedy are to be preferred?

    Regards, Jon S.
    We can only judge by what the witnesses said Jon, and combined they favour a time around 3:45am.

    E.Prater: "A kitten disturbed me about half-past three o'clock or a quarter to four. As I was turning round I heard a suppressed cry of "Oh - murder!" in a faint voice. It seemed to proceed from the court."

    S.Lewis: " I sat awake until nearly four, when I heard a female's voice shouting "Murder" loudly. It seemed like the voice of a young woman. It sounded at our door. There was only one scream."

    Your reasoning as to why a woman who had seen the devastation in that room might be shocked enough to scream "oh-murder" and not come forward later to give testimony in that regard is narrow...surely there are quite a few possible reasons why someone wouldnt come forward...including one that includes the woman screaming from within the conspirator realm.

    Someone screamed it, 2 witnesses heard it around the same time, and if it was Mary Kelly, the scream did not signal the attack commencement because no noise followed it,... by Elizabeth, living a floor above Mary.

    I think the odds are Mary didnt scream it. But someone unknown did.

    Cheers

    Comment


    • Originally posted by DVV View Post
      Hi Jon
      I like Mary Williams (and old sailor's tales).
      Hi Dave.
      It just demonstrates that there are still leads out there, however tenuous.


      Originally posted by Debra A View Post
      I do too,for now.
      And if MJK's family could have sneaked into the funeral unnoticed, unmolested by police or press, then why not Mary Williams' dear old salty pops? Coming in a bit too late to alter the paperwork?
      I suspect we'd have heard more about this in the press. A father would not sit by and have his daughter buried as someone else without making as much noise as he could about it.
      Assuming this story has any basis in fact that is.

      Regards, Jon S.
      Regards, Jon S.

      Comment


      • Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
        We can only judge by what the witnesses said Jon, and combined they favour a time around 3:45am.

        E.Prater: "A kitten disturbed me about half-past three o'clock or a quarter to four. As I was turning round I heard a suppressed cry of "Oh - murder!" in a faint voice. It seemed to proceed from the court."
        Hi Michael.
        I was more drawn to Prater's official testimony, MJ/SPC, NE1888, not the version given in the press.
        In the GLRO file (above) we read:
        "I noticed the lodging-house light was out, so it was after 4 probably.."

        Prater was not actually above room 13, Prater lived above the front room (shed), another couple (unidentified) lived directly above MJK, according to the Daily Telegraph, 10 Nov.

        "...and the couple in the room overhead had slept soundly without being awakened by scuffling in the room beneath them.

        Elizabeth Prater, the occupant of the first floor front room,..."


        So there could have been other faint noises which Prater may not have heard, maybe.

        Your reasoning as to why a woman who had seen the devastation in that room might be shocked enough to scream "oh-murder" and not come forward later to give testimony in that regard is narrow...
        Agreed, I could have expanded on the list.


        I think the odds are Mary didnt scream it. But someone unknown did.

        Cheers
        I'm inclined to think along those lines, but its an argument that cannot be supported at this stage.

        Regards, Jon S.
        Regards, Jon S.

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
          Hi Dave.
          It just demonstrates that there are still leads out there, however tenuous.
          Regards, Jon S.
          True, Jon. And well said.

          Comment


          • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
            Hi Dave.
            It just demonstrates that there are still leads out there, however tenuous.




            I suspect we'd have heard more about this in the press. A father would not sit by and have his daughter buried as someone else without making as much noise as he could about it.
            Assuming this story has any basis in fact that is.

            Regards, Jon S.
            You are something else Wickers!

            Comment


            • Always people think the witnesses who saw Mary alive as late as 10:00am are argued to have mixed up their days or times. Always the time of death is questioned. Both of these are legitimate concerns. They are certainly plausible.

              I believe it equally plausible that the identification of the body could be mistaken. It has happened in more than a few cases where the body is highly decomposed or mutilated. When I started this thread it was simply to suggest a possibility.

              I was reading book review trying to decide which Ripper author's book I might buy next in my pursuit of why a particular suspect is even considered, when I came across one who favored no one in particular. He mentioned that he believed Mary did indeed survive, and that another woman died in her bed.

              I had the author, book, and quote saved to post. Wednesday I was in Augusta GA to visit my son. We went out for lunch at around 12:00pm and got back at 3:00pm to find the house broken into and a lot stolen, including my laptop with all my data on a lot of things. Fortunately their insurance should replace my laptop soon. Either way, I'll have to find that book again.
              And the questions always linger, no real answer in sight

              Comment


              • Hi all,

                Jon, the "shed" quote is one of many press quotes, most of which insist that Praters room was above Marys. I had a long drawn out thing here with Sam Flynn one time arguing that 8 press accounts that agree are not superseded by the one that states "shed". The 8 were written differently, but had the same data, which makes me think Central Press info. Ive seen the floorplans and the drawings, the shot of the shed door facing Dorset, but the courtyard photos that include the archway, with a window, and a window directly above one of Marys indicate to me that its probable one or both of those windows allowed courtyard noise into Elizabeths room. And Elizabeth did state that she could hear when "Mary moved about in her room".

                Cheers

                Comment


                • I suspect we'd have heard more about this in the press. A father would not sit by and have his daughter buried as someone else without making as much noise as he could about it.
                  Assuming this story has any basis in fact that is.
                  Why? Bearing in mind Victorian moral values and judgements, could not a father be so deeply ashamed of what his daughter had become that he kept quiet?

                  How do we know anything about this and on what evidence? With respect it's all a bit speculative Jon...

                  All the best

                  Dave

                  Comment


                  • Sad story, Raven. I'm sincerely sorry for you.

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by Cogidubnus View Post
                      Why? Bearing in mind Victorian moral values and judgements, could not a father be so deeply ashamed of what his daughter had become that he kept quiet?
                      This is an old sailor we're talking about here Dave, this is not Upstairs Downstairs
                      If Old Salty was so class conscious the press wouldn't have got hold of it, assuming there is any truth to it to begin with.

                      How do we know anything about this and on what evidence?
                      We 'know' nothing.

                      With respect it's all a bit speculative Jon...
                      Of course it is Dave, ....this is Casebook.

                      Regards, Jon S.
                      Regards, Jon S.

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by DVV View Post
                        Sad story, Raven. I'm sincerely sorry for you.
                        Thank you, DVV

                        It could have been worse, they stole my son's loaded .40 caliber semiautomatic, and they could have been waiting on us when we got there! Renter's insurance should cover everything including my laptop, but my data on many things is lost until I can rebuild it. Still no one was hurt, and possessions can always be replaced.

                        God Bless

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

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
                          And, again, accepting the accuracy of the stories, her father, and brother?, came looking for her so they must have also known her as Mary Kelly in order to ask around to locate her. Likewise, if she was receiving and sending mail to her mother, the mail must have been addressed to a Mary Kelly.

                          On balance there seems to be precious little left to argue with that Mary Kelly was not her real name.
                          Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
                          Except that crack researchers like Debs and Chris cannot find a trace of this person. If, however, her records are located, I would agree.
                          I guess we don't know what name she wrote to her parents under-- that is, whether it was something other than Kelly. Since she spoke of being married to someone named Davies, who was killed in a mining accident, I always wondered why she didn't use the name Davies. Was it normal for very young widows to resume their maiden names? Is it possible she married again, to someone named Kelly? That presents the problem of what happened to him, of course, and if she talked about one husband dying, she probably would have talked about another. Do we know for a fact she was Catholic? I assume there's the Catholic problem with divorce, although I don't really know whether the rules in the RC church vs. Anglican church today, which I am familiar with, tell me anything about the rules in 1888. Suppose she was married by an Anglican minister?

                          We won't ever find Mary Jane Kelly in Wales or Ireland, if that wasn't her maiden name.

                          I'm assuming people have looked at coal mine accidents, and deaths of miners named Davies, Davis, and the Welsh spellings thereof, although I've never seen anything on it. I'm not able to get over to Cardiff much to do my own looking-up.

                          Was "Kelly" ever used as a given name, the way it is now, back in the 1880s? It isn't possible her birth name was "Mary Jane Kelly Lastname," is it?

                          Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
                          I think we may have had one clue all along that has been either ignored or misinterpreted, the "oh-murder" near 4am. 2 witnesses were awake enough at the time to notice the cry and the volume of the call seems to be directly linked to the proximity to the witness. Sarah heard it "as if at the door", and Elizabeth heard it "as if from the court". Hence, we have a courtyard warbler.
                          I still think "Oh, murder!" is a strange thing to say upon finding a body. I've a feeling something else was said, or shouted, that was retrospectively translated to "Oh, murder!" by the hearers once they learned what had happened.
                          Originally posted by RavenDarkendale View Post
                          Always people think the witnesses who saw Mary alive as late as 10:00am are argued to have mixed up their days or times. Always the time of death is questioned. Both of these are legitimate concerns. They are certainly plausible.
                          I have never said "mixed up the times," just that "10am" is not atomic accuracy, and it could be as much as 12 minutes earlier. Additionally, Bowyer probably did not check a watch as soon as he found the body, so rather than 45 minutes, as much as 1hr. 15 minutes could have elapsed.
                          I believe it equally plausible that the identification of the body could be mistaken. It has happened in more than a few cases where the body is highly decomposed or mutilated.
                          Do you know of a case where a body was misidentified as a still-living person, and the mistake was not discovered very quickly, when the living person turned up? and it wasn't something deliberately orchestrated, where the misidentified person either committed murder of a homeless person, or procured a body from a morgue?

                          I can't find one case like that. I suppose it's possible that they were so well-done, we still don't know about them, but you say "It has happened in more than a few cases." The only ones I know of are ones where the still-living misidentified person turned up soon after the misidentification, or an unknown body was identified as someone who had been missing for a long time, based simply on process of elimination, then later, a body in a better-preserved state turned up, and was identified as the same person, through dental records, so the earlier body went back to "unknown" status. Or where a body previously identified through process of elimination, or even a killer's confession, is re-evaluated through DNA testing, and found to have been misidentified.

                          The body in Miller's Court was very mutilated, but it was fresh, so estimates of height and weight, race, gender and hair color were very accurate, which is not the case with a highly decomposed body. It was not found in the middle of nowhere, but in someone's residence, and the resident was no where to be found. At the time the body was found, it wasn't really "unidentified," like some mysterious bodies found in the middle of the woods, without clothes, or so badly decomposed, weight and gender can't be determined outside a lab. It simply hadn't been formally identified. Any dead body that dies alone goes through a process of formal identification. I don't see any reason to question the formal identification here, other than it makes a good story.

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by RivkahChaya View Post

                            I still think "Oh, murder!" is a strange thing to say upon finding a body. I've a feeling something else was said, or shouted, that was retrospectively translated to "Oh, murder!" by the hearers once they learned what had happened.
                            The cry was described a little clearer in the Morning Advertiser..

                            "..The cat went on to the floor, and that moment I heard "Oh, murder!" I was then turning round on my bed. The voice was "a faintish" one, as though some one had woke up with a nightmare."

                            So she did not hear a loud scream, probably more like a gasp of surprise? Whereas, Sarah Lewis in an upstairs room looking down on room 13 below, across the passage, claimed the scream was loud, and just the single word "murder", it appeared to come from outside her door.

                            Mrs Kennedy just confirms Lewis's claim as to the direction of where the cry came from, but, I wonder if the cry appeared louder because of the broken window in Kelly's room. Either that or the cry came from another woman stood outside, in the Court, who presumably had either just opened Kelly's door, or had peeked through the window?

                            Who knows..

                            Regards, Jon S.
                            Regards, Jon S.

                            Comment


                            • Hi,
                              Until proven otherwise, I will stick to the ''Nightmare'' opinion as voiced by Prater.
                              It would be the most likely solution ,if indeed Kelly was seen at 8 15am.
                              The horrors of drink as poor Mary put it, as she had been drinking for some days past.
                              I do not believe the cry was the actual attack on her, it would not fit in with Blotchy, or A man[ time wise], but IF witness Hutchinson was telling porkies about leaving the area at 3am, he would be in the frame.
                              I wish the police had left us a inventory of room 13, was there a red hanky present? if so it would leave us with two options.
                              a] The tale of the Hanky involving Mary and A man, was the truth.
                              b] The tale was invented, as indeed Hutch was in the room, and left his hanky there,[although most likely innocent of her murder]
                              B] is a educated guess, as who else but the owner would be certain of its colour.
                              It would not surprise me in the least, if Hutch spent some time in Mary's room that morning, even if he was without money, he could have promised her a IOU, and I am sure she would have welcomed the company anyway, as I would suggest, she was paranoid about being alone in that room.
                              It all adds up to either 'A' man existing , but leaving Kelly alive , and Hutch telling all the truth, or 'A' man existing, but Hutchinson not walking about after three o'clock, spending a couple of hours in her room, again leaving her very much alive, being present when she awoke with the cry.
                              All of this would be on par with the morning sightings.
                              Regards Richard.

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
                                The cry was described a little clearer in the Morning Advertiser..

                                "..The cat went on to the floor, and that moment I heard "Oh, murder!" I was then turning round on my bed. The voice was "a faintish" one, as though some one had woke up with a nightmare."
                                That is interesting. I suppose "Jack the Ripper" nightmares were not uncommon in Whitechapel at the time, and it's not impossible, and even somewhat likely, that someone in the area had one the night night of the Kelly murder. It's even possible that Kelly herself had one, and it wouldn't be a premonition, since we have Barnett's account of her being afraid of the Ripper. It might not have been her first nightmare. Assuming that is true, it's an interesting coincidence that someone having bad dreams about the murders should meet up with him, but given how many women were probably having similar experiences, probably not unusual.

                                Comment

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