I know that people have delved into the identity of Mary Kelly nearly as much as the Ripper himself. My question is, how close have people gotten over the years?
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The real answer is no-one can claim they have found her 100%.
It simply cannot be achieved without some kind of DNA proof.
My candidate is Welsh girl Mary Thomas who was born in 1863 in Carmarthen, Wales. Her story I have tracked so far has unearthed very close similarities to the stories MJK herself gave to people including Barnett. It is an ongoing investigation, but I am confident I can answer most of those qestions around the clues to her identity.
My Mary had a few sisters, so I plan to at some point try and trace their lines as close as I can to a living relative for their mDNA. Then,we just need MJK's DNA. Which actually after all this, may yet prove to be the toughest challenge of all. I am not the only searcher, and neither is DJA.
Maybe one of us will get lucky at some point.
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Originally posted by erobitha View PostThe real answer is no-one can claim they have found her 100%.
It simply cannot be achieved without some kind of DNA proof.
So, I don't see how we can utilize this magic DNA if we don't know which bones belong to Mary Kelly.
Which raises the next obvious hurdle....
My candidate is Welsh girl Mary Thomas who was born in 1863 in Carmarthen, Wales. Her story I have tracked so far has unearthed very close similarities to the stories MJK herself gave to people including Barnett. It is an ongoing investigation, but I am confident I can answer most of those qestions around the clues to her identity.
My Mary had a few sisters, so I plan to at some point try and trace their lines as close as I can to a living relative for their mDNA. Then,we just need MJK's DNA. Which actually after all this, may yet prove to be the toughest challenge of all. I am not the only searcher, and neither is DJA.
This for me is the next hurdle, how can we be sure Mary Jane Kelly was her real name?
On the very first day of her murder, one of her neighbors told a reporter 'we didn't know her real name, we called her Mary Jane', none of us use our real name, no-one knows mine' (or words to that effect).
So, are we all ignoring this warning?, if we are, is it because we don't want to believe it?
I'm more inclined to believe this quote, so in my book this means the real Mary Kelly, if it is not an entirely made up name, must be still alive in 1888.
This means my candidate must have been among the living, a Mary Kelly, born in Ireland, family moved to Wales, had seven brother's & one sister.
Regards, Jon S.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
Ah, but we need DNA from her remains, and from what I recall, her body is in a mass grave of unidentified paupers.
So, I don't see how we can utilize this magic DNA if we don't know which bones belong to Mary Kelly.
Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
Did your Mary die in 1888?
This for me is the next hurdle, how can we be sure Mary Jane Kelly was her real name?
On the very first day of her murder, one of her neighbors told a reporter 'we didn't know her real name, we called her Mary Jane', none of us use our real name, no-one knows mine' (or words to that effect).
So, are we all ignoring this warning?, if we are, is it because we don't want to believe it?
I'm more inclined to believe this quote, so in my book this means the real Mary Kelly, if it is not an entirely made up name, must be still alive in 1888.
This means my candidate must have been among the living, a Mary Kelly, born in Ireland, family moved to Wales, had seven brother's & one sister.
In the end, there is a possibility it could be everything she said is 100% true and could have been validated. If most of the Irish census records of the 19th were not destroyed by a fire in Dublin in 1922, the answers could have been there all along. The answer could just be that. The issue remains that Mary Kelly doesn't appear to fit on the Welsh records side either.Last edited by erobitha; 05-14-2021, 10:20 PM.
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Well we'd have to go with what we DO have. For instance, the coffin the Mary Kelly was buried in was a polished elm and oak coffin from Shoreditch Church, if you're going to dig in a mass grave, it's possible that her coffin has a mark of that church on it, or not all coffins were made of elm & oak. We could look at various other surviving information. There may be record of those that were buried there more recently and how to id them. If that's the case then that eliminates them. In the page on Mary Jane Kelly's funeral, Casebook says: "John Sears is the current cemetery super-intendent, and through his dedicated research into the cemetery records while comparing them with headstones which are still standing on old graves by the walls, he was able to find the correct location of the old row 67. From there it was relatively simple to pace out the position of Mary Jane's original resting place. During my conversation with John, he told me that the area of this gravesite is just a rough location, with a tolerance factor of approximately 3 feet: left or right of the centre line of the grave now considered by many, including himself, to be Mary Jane Kelly's true burial place." So we know pretty close to where she's buried, that's part of the battle right there. Now it all depends on how many are buried alongside her.
All I'm saying is, it's hard, it'd be tedious, and a huge pain...but it's remotely possible. Hugely remotely possible.Last edited by clark2710; 05-15-2021, 05:04 AM.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostOne identifying feature could be the two false teeth that protruded, as described by one Mrs Phoenix in the press. Assuming she also had the correct woman."So while life does remain, in memoriam I'll retain this small violet I plucked from Mother's grave."
Stefania Elisabetta
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostOne identifying feature could be the two false teeth that protruded, as described by one Mrs Phoenix in the press. Assuming she also had the correct woman.
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Originally posted by Marie Jeanette Davies View Post
It was just Mrs. Phoenix who said that Mary had two protruding false teeth, wasn't it? Neither Barnett nor Elizabeth Prater mentioned that detail. One could argue that Dr. Bond's post mortem examination is incomplete and that the autopsy report didn't survive, which is absolutely true, but I think that, if she really had them, Barnett would have recognized her by them too. Maxwell said that Mary spoke with a bit of a speech impediment, which could have been caused by two false teeth that didn't fit her perfect of course, but, as I've said before, I think that she was wrong about the identity of the woman she believed was Mary Jane Kelly.
Mrs Pheonix appears to have known Kelly, or at least her brother-in-law must have been acquainted with Kelly for the best part of a year. So, the false teeth must have been common knowledge among those families, and her friends at Breezers Hill.
Regards, Jon S.
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