[QUOTE=David Orsam;412759]
As I thought, this type of answer would be the result.
Another smoke screen from you, David. The "oh, murder" is what we have in the statement of Prater in the original inquest source.
Prater was the person you explicitly referred to in your post, as you wrote:
"...,as Prater said."
And why do you refer to newspapers when you could refer to Lewis in the police investigation from the 9th or the inquest source from the 12th. They are higher up in the source hierarchy.
And if you look at the police inquest from the 9th you do not have Prater telling the police "Oh, murder" in that source. But you have it in the original inquest source, so it could certainly be worth discussing.
Especially since you referred to Prater.
Pierre
Oh my dear boy, that was most kind of you to type all those words out for me in such an amusingly random order but you are quite right, and remarkably prophetic, I couldn't decipher the code at all.
But allow me to offer another example, in addition to the evidence of Prater and the reported remarks of the Hewitts, which can be found in the evidence of Sarah Lewis as reported in the Evening Post:
Sarah Lewis, living at 24, Great Pearl-street, Spitalfields, a laundress, said she went to Miller’s court on Friday morning at 2.30 a.m. She went to a Mrs. Keller’s. Standing outside a lodging-house she saw a man on the pavement. He was by himself; he was not very tall but rather stout, and wore a black wideawake hat. He was looking up the court, as if waiting for someone to come out. She heard no noise in the court; there was no one there. On getting into Mrs. Keller’s room she sat in a chair and dozed. She woke up at half-past three. She heard the clock strike, and sat awake till nearly four, when she heard a female voice scream loudly – it seemed to be a young woman – “Murder!” It was only one scream. They often hear such screams and cries in the neighbourhood, but no notice is taken of them.
Sarah Lewis, living at 24, Great Pearl-street, Spitalfields, a laundress, said she went to Miller’s court on Friday morning at 2.30 a.m. She went to a Mrs. Keller’s. Standing outside a lodging-house she saw a man on the pavement. He was by himself; he was not very tall but rather stout, and wore a black wideawake hat. He was looking up the court, as if waiting for someone to come out. She heard no noise in the court; there was no one there. On getting into Mrs. Keller’s room she sat in a chair and dozed. She woke up at half-past three. She heard the clock strike, and sat awake till nearly four, when she heard a female voice scream loudly – it seemed to be a young woman – “Murder!” It was only one scream. They often hear such screams and cries in the neighbourhood, but no notice is taken of them.
Prater was the person you explicitly referred to in your post, as you wrote:
What I posted was corroborating evidence that the cry of murder was a frequent one in the neighbourhood of Whitechapel, as Prater said,
And why do you refer to newspapers when you could refer to Lewis in the police investigation from the 9th or the inquest source from the 12th. They are higher up in the source hierarchy.
And if you look at the police inquest from the 9th you do not have Prater telling the police "Oh, murder" in that source. But you have it in the original inquest source, so it could certainly be worth discussing.
Especially since you referred to Prater.
Pierre
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