Suggesting a valid interpretation
Hi,
I think the we can answer the question as to the boarding up of 26 Dorset Street.
Wickerman has put forward the idea that the room was used for costermongers barrows. He has found some article indicating this.
I have hypothesized that 26 Dorset Street was boarded up after the murder on Kelly.
So our scientific problem is: Which interpretation is right?
I would like to suggest that both are right. So what are the sources for this?
Firstly, thanks to Rosella who writes:
“The rooms in McCarthy's rents were tiny really, 12 feet by 8 feet. You can imagine it being a bit crowded with several large policemen and the doctor inside!
With regard to the front room of No. 26, (the room used as a storeroom) the Evening Express of 12 November noted 'The room was formerly left open and poor people often took shelter there for the night but when the Whitechapel murders caused so much alarm the police thought the place offered too much temptation to the murderer and so the front was securely boarded up'.”
We can see the boards in the picture from The Pictorial News 17 November 1888.
So if there was a gate, this gate was boarded up.
The boarding up of 26 Dorset Street should have been done either to prevent people from looking in through the gate or from breaking in, or to prevent the killer from entering the room – or both.
Another problem with the idea of keeping costermonger barrows in the room is that, as Rosella says, the rooms were tiny. Number 26 was just the double size of number 13.
Wickerman also seems to be aware of the size of those barrows as he writes:
"though if you know how large a costermongers barrow was, you'd appreciate it would not fit through a front door"
So even if there was a gate, the room was small and could not keep many barrows.
And even if there was a gate, it was “securely boarded up” (The Evening Express 12 November 1888) and we have a drawing showing these boards (The Pictorial News 17 November 1888).
Regards Pierre
Originally posted by Wickerman
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Hi,
I think the we can answer the question as to the boarding up of 26 Dorset Street.
Wickerman has put forward the idea that the room was used for costermongers barrows. He has found some article indicating this.
I have hypothesized that 26 Dorset Street was boarded up after the murder on Kelly.
So our scientific problem is: Which interpretation is right?
I would like to suggest that both are right. So what are the sources for this?
Firstly, thanks to Rosella who writes:
“The rooms in McCarthy's rents were tiny really, 12 feet by 8 feet. You can imagine it being a bit crowded with several large policemen and the doctor inside!
With regard to the front room of No. 26, (the room used as a storeroom) the Evening Express of 12 November noted 'The room was formerly left open and poor people often took shelter there for the night but when the Whitechapel murders caused so much alarm the police thought the place offered too much temptation to the murderer and so the front was securely boarded up'.”
We can see the boards in the picture from The Pictorial News 17 November 1888.
So if there was a gate, this gate was boarded up.
The boarding up of 26 Dorset Street should have been done either to prevent people from looking in through the gate or from breaking in, or to prevent the killer from entering the room – or both.
Another problem with the idea of keeping costermonger barrows in the room is that, as Rosella says, the rooms were tiny. Number 26 was just the double size of number 13.
Wickerman also seems to be aware of the size of those barrows as he writes:
"though if you know how large a costermongers barrow was, you'd appreciate it would not fit through a front door"
So even if there was a gate, the room was small and could not keep many barrows.
And even if there was a gate, it was “securely boarded up” (The Evening Express 12 November 1888) and we have a drawing showing these boards (The Pictorial News 17 November 1888).
Regards Pierre
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