Accents
Can anyone point me in the direction of references to witnesses’ or victims’ accents in the various WM cases? Or more broadly in the late Victorian press?
The Victorian East End was a melting pot of people from across the British Isles and beyond, so there would have been examples of accents from just about everywhere.
Take Henry Tomkins for example. Although he had been born in London, his family had relocated to Manchester when he was a child and he had grown up there. The family were still in Manchester in November, 1887. The first reference to their being in London was in April, 1888, so it’s extremely unlikely that HT had acquired a Cockney accent by August, 1888. His appearance - lack of stature and ‘roughness’ - were described in the press. Why not his accent? And what about the numerous references to people of Eastern European birth or ancestry? Did they all speak like native Cocknies?
Given the enormous variety of accents that must have existed in Victorian London, shouldn’t we be able to find numerous references to them in the press? Maybe there are, or maybe for some reason a person’s accent wasn’t considered noteworthy.
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