4 Torso Murders: Complete Section From 1894 'A System of Legal Medicine'
The primary source for study of the Torso Murders has always been a very well-known book titled 'A System of Legal Medicine.'
This is the book that authors writing about the Torso Murders have relied upon. It too is quite detailed, as it is derived from the original Inquest reports of Drs. Bond and Hebbert.
This book was published in 1894, 6 years after Charles Hebbert's wrote the first of his two Westminster Hospital lectures on the Torso Murders.
Dr. Hebbert is credited for assisting with much of the book's content, including the lengthy portion devoted to the Torso murders.
The basic facts and measurements presented in this book are of course the same as in Hebbert's earlier Westminster Hospital lectures, because they are the ones that he and Dr. Bond established for the 4 Inquests.
However, the book entry and the two hospital lectures are not identical, so I think it's helpful to view them in conjunction.
'A System of Legal Medicine' was published again in 1900 and the Torso material is identical in the two editions; it merely occurs on different pages.
>Please note that Debs posted a very helpful SUMMARY of the doctors' findings on the thread titled 'Autopsy Notes'.
As far as I know, no one has ever posted the actual pages of 'A System of Legal Medicine' which relate to the Torso Murders in their entirety,
so I decided to go ahead and do so here so everybody can see it for themselves.
Best regards, Archaic
The primary source for study of the Torso Murders has always been a very well-known book titled 'A System of Legal Medicine.'
This is the book that authors writing about the Torso Murders have relied upon. It too is quite detailed, as it is derived from the original Inquest reports of Drs. Bond and Hebbert.
This book was published in 1894, 6 years after Charles Hebbert's wrote the first of his two Westminster Hospital lectures on the Torso Murders.
Dr. Hebbert is credited for assisting with much of the book's content, including the lengthy portion devoted to the Torso murders.
The basic facts and measurements presented in this book are of course the same as in Hebbert's earlier Westminster Hospital lectures, because they are the ones that he and Dr. Bond established for the 4 Inquests.
However, the book entry and the two hospital lectures are not identical, so I think it's helpful to view them in conjunction.
'A System of Legal Medicine' was published again in 1900 and the Torso material is identical in the two editions; it merely occurs on different pages.
>Please note that Debs posted a very helpful SUMMARY of the doctors' findings on the thread titled 'Autopsy Notes'.
As far as I know, no one has ever posted the actual pages of 'A System of Legal Medicine' which relate to the Torso Murders in their entirety,
so I decided to go ahead and do so here so everybody can see it for themselves.
Best regards, Archaic
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