Originally posted by Sam Flynn
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Oh, murder!
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostFollowing the murder of Martha Tabram, Francis Hewitt, the superintendent of the George Yard Buildings, and his wife, told a reporter for the East London Observer (as published on 18 August 1888):
'the district round here is rather rough, and cries of 'Murder' are of frequent, if not nightly, occurrence in the district.'
Thus corroborating the evidence of Elizabeth Prater some three months later.
It is, in my opinion, clear that it wasn't unusual for a cry of murder to be hears in WhitechapelG U T
There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostAs opposed to a night on which a murder did not occur in the immediate vicinity of said cry?
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostAs opposed to a night on which a murder did not occur in the immediate vicinity of said cry? Doubtful.I agree, but it's by no means as 50:50 as one might suppose, if one took the view that "such cries were often heard in the neighbourhood" to apply in general terms. The "neighbourhood" is one thing, but a cry of "Murder!" emanating from Miller's Court itself (even the deceased's room), on the night of a murder, is quite another.
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostSo what is it about that particular cry that distinguishes it from all the other cries on all the other nights?Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostThat this particular cry seemed to emanate from the very room in which an 'orrible murder actually occurred on the selfsame night. That, to me, seems to distinguish it from other instances of general "street noise".
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If there was a cry from some other part of the Court, then one would have expected that if the cry was heard at all, it would have been heard by someone who was nearer to the cry than the two people who were in greatest proximity to Kelly's room.
Of course, the cry may have emanated from Dorset St itself, and then Lewis and Prater would have been the Court residents best placed to hear it. I don't suppose the police managed to question everyone in Dorset St.
Ultimately, I think that the 'defensive' wounds, the position of the body immediately after death and the stab holes in the sheet make it quite likely that the cry was Kelly's.
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Originally posted by Robert View PostOf course, the cry may have emanated from Dorset St itself, and then Lewis and Prater would have been the Court residents best placed to hear it.Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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I guess so, Gareth, although when I was a small boy I slept in a back room of the house and would often hear the grinding of train wheels which I supposed emanated from somewhere beyond the back garden. The sounds actually came from the goods and repair yard situated three streets from the front of the house.
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Originally posted by Robert View PostI guess so, Gareth, although when I was a small boy I slept in a back room of the house and would often hear the grinding of train wheels which I supposed emanated from somewhere beyond the back garden. The sounds actually came from the goods and repair yard situated three streets from the front of the house.
The good news is that we have another pair of ears here, those of Sarah Lewis, who provides some useful triangulation. Taken together, and assuming the one didn't crib from the other, both "ear-witnesses" would seem to pinpoint the source of the cry as Room 13.Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostMy dear chap, your questions, which appear to be addressed to me, simply do not follow from what I have posted.
What I posted was corroborating evidence that the cry of murder was a frequent one in the neighbourhood of Whitechapel, as Prater said, thus reducing the probability that the one heard in the early hours of 9 November by residents around Millers Court had anything to do with Kelly's murder.
if you would have answered the questions instead of avoiding them, you would have had to answer "no".
And that answer would have called for new questions, such as:
Prater and another witness heard the cry "Oh, murder!" on the night of the murder of Kelly. This was in the newspapers.
And still, no one stepped forward and said "I was the one who cryed "Oh, murder!".
If it was just a trivial cry on a night of a murder by Jack the Ripper, why did no one solve the problem, presented over several days in the newspapers, by stepping forward and explaining it?
If it was just a trivial cry on a night of a murder (thought to having been performed) by Jack the Ripper, why didn´t the police find anyone who claimed to be the source of the cry, if they didn´t (sources may be lost)?
If it was just a trivial cry on a night of a murder by Jack the Ripper, why didn´t Prater afterwards, when she learned about the murder, interpret the cry as originating from Kelly?
If it was just a trivial cry on a night of a murder by Jack the Ripper, how can anyone just assume - just because there may be no answers to the questions above - that the cry came from Mary Jane Kelly?
PierreLast edited by Pierre; 04-22-2017, 06:29 AM.
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