From The Scotsman 14 February 1891
Relating to the Coles murder:
The woman was again seen at two o'clock, according to one account, in Royal Mint Street; and to another, in Chamber Street, near to the school. A man was with her then. The persons who noticed her at this time were William Friday, Joseph Knapton, and John Knapton, all carmen and living in the same house in Chamber Street. Joseph Knapton told his mother that when he saw the man and woman he thought they were "sweethearting." The description given of the man is, however, vague, and amounts to little more than that he wore a brown overcoat and a black felt hat. The woman wore a crape hat. Her companion was about 5 feet 7 inches, and looked like a working man. He kept his face away, and the chances of recognition are not great. These carmen are among those who daily use the arch to take their horses from the stables to the depots early in the morning. They do not seem to have seen anything in the dark passage, and Arly Shunter, who went through about two, observed nothing.
In the 1891 census:
83 Chambers Street, Whitechapel
Head: William Butler aged 49 born Whitchurch, Hampshire - Railway clerk
Wife: Jane Butler aged 52 born Torquay, Devon
Children:
William Knapton aged 28 born Whitechapel - Railway carman
Joseph Knapton aged 26 born Whitechapel - Railway carman
John A Knapton aged 24 born Whitechapel - Railway carman
Mary A Knapton aged 22 born Whitechapel - Tailoress
Boarder:
William Friday aged 22 born Islington - Railway carman
Relating to the Coles murder:
The woman was again seen at two o'clock, according to one account, in Royal Mint Street; and to another, in Chamber Street, near to the school. A man was with her then. The persons who noticed her at this time were William Friday, Joseph Knapton, and John Knapton, all carmen and living in the same house in Chamber Street. Joseph Knapton told his mother that when he saw the man and woman he thought they were "sweethearting." The description given of the man is, however, vague, and amounts to little more than that he wore a brown overcoat and a black felt hat. The woman wore a crape hat. Her companion was about 5 feet 7 inches, and looked like a working man. He kept his face away, and the chances of recognition are not great. These carmen are among those who daily use the arch to take their horses from the stables to the depots early in the morning. They do not seem to have seen anything in the dark passage, and Arly Shunter, who went through about two, observed nothing.
In the 1891 census:
83 Chambers Street, Whitechapel
Head: William Butler aged 49 born Whitchurch, Hampshire - Railway clerk
Wife: Jane Butler aged 52 born Torquay, Devon
Children:
William Knapton aged 28 born Whitechapel - Railway carman
Joseph Knapton aged 26 born Whitechapel - Railway carman
John A Knapton aged 24 born Whitechapel - Railway carman
Mary A Knapton aged 22 born Whitechapel - Tailoress
Boarder:
William Friday aged 22 born Islington - Railway carman
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