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  • Geddy2112
    Inspector
    • Dec 2015
    • 1329

    #151
    Originally posted by Newbie View Post
    Few instances period in which a newspaper mentioned the article of clothing of a witness at inquests - only victims.
    Au contraire...

    The East London Observer, which provided a lot of description compared to the other newspapers we have the following descriptions of inquest attire.

    "Before the coroner sat the woman who had identified the deceased as Martha Turner, with a baby in her arms, and accompanied by another woman - evidently her mother - dressed in an old, brown figured pompadour.” - Tabram Inquest

    "The first witness called was a Mrs. Elizabeth Mahoney - a young woman of some 25 or 26 years, plainly clad in a rusty-black dress, with a black woollen shawl pinned round her shoulders." - Tabram Inquest

    "Alfred George Crow was the next witness. In appearance, he was a young man of about twenty-three or four, with closely cropped hair, and a beardless, but intelligent face, and wore a shabby green overcoat." - Tabram Inquest

    "Mary Ann Connolly, otherwise known as "Pearly Poll", was next introduced, wearing simply an old green shawl and no hat, her face being reddened and soddened by drink." - Tabram Inquest

    " Amelia Palmer, the next witness, a pale dark-haired woman, who was poorly clad, said: I live at 35, Dorset-street, Spitalfields, a common lodging-house." - Chapman Inquest

    "The next witness was James Cable, a man from Shadwell. A youngish-looking man, with a bullet head and closely cropped hair, and a sandy close-cut moustache; he wore a long overcoat that had once been green, and into the pockets of which he persistently stuck his hands." - Chapman Inquest

    "Her evidence was not very material, and she was soon replaced by John Richardson, a tall, stout man, with a very pale face - the result, doubtless, of the early hours he keeps as a market porter - a brown moustache, and dark brown hair. He was shabbily dressed in a ragged coat, and dark brown trousers." - Chapman Inquest

    "Piser wore a dark overcoat, brown trousers, and a brown and very battered hat, and appeared somewhat splay-footed - at all events, he stood before the Coroner with his feet meeting at the heels and then diverging almost at right angles." - Chapman Inquest

    ...you're welcome

    "The Lechmere theory never shoehorns facts. It deals in facts."

    Comment

    • FrankO
      Superintendent
      • Feb 2008
      • 2109

      #152
      [QUOTE=Geddy2112;n856759]

      They do not work as you need to share the drive so to speak.

      Even using the rather inaccurate Google Maps - we have three routes ALL saying 1.5 miles. Astonishing.
      Here are the measurements I did a number of years back, Ian. There's about 60 metres between one Hanbury Street route and the Old Montague route.

      Click image for larger version  Name:	ordinance map 1894 including HS & OMS routes I.jpg Views:	0 Size:	209.3 KB ID:	856769

      All of these routes assume that Cross/Lechmere entered the Broad Street Good's depot at the entrance in Eldon Street, while we don't know for a fact that this was the only entrance.

      Cheers,
      Frank

      PS It was about 880 metres from Doveton to the meeting point with Mizen and about 300 m from the crossing of Bishopsgate/Liverpool Street to the entrance in Eldon St.
      Last edited by FrankO; Today, 10:27 AM.
      "You can rob me, you can starve me and you can beat me and you can kill me. Just don't bore me."
      Clint Eastwood as Gunny in "Heartbreak Ridge"

      Comment

      • Geddy2112
        Inspector
        • Dec 2015
        • 1329

        #153
        [QUOTE=FrankO;n856764]
        Originally posted by Geddy2112 View Post
        Here are the measurements I did a number of years back, Ian. There's about 60 metres between one Hanbury Street route and the Old Montague route.
        Many thanks Like I said previously the distance in the two routes Hanbury and Old Monty Street is negligible and both approx 30 mins for a 3.1 mph walking speed. Which nicely ties in with a 'about 3:30am' for Cross to be leaving home like he said.

        "The Lechmere theory never shoehorns facts. It deals in facts."

        Comment

        • Fiver
          Assistant Commissioner
          • Oct 2019
          • 3346

          #154
          Originally posted by Newbie View Post
          A quick check on Lech's Hanbury route to work using google map and I got roughly 2.1 miles.
          Very different from the 1.55 mile version.

          Anyways, its about a half mile longer than the Old Montague route to work
          Here's Bing - 1.7 miles, 32 minutes, best route is Hanbury Street.

          Here's Google Maps - 1.7 miles, 38 minutes, best route is Hanbury Street.

          How do you get 2.1 miles and Old Montague?


          "The full picture always needs to be given. When this does not happen, we are left to make decisions on insufficient information." - Christer Holmgren

          "Unfortunately, when one becomes obsessed by a theory, truth and logic rarely matter." - Steven Blomer

          Comment

          • Geddy2112
            Inspector
            • Dec 2015
            • 1329

            #155
            Originally posted by Fiver View Post

            1.7 miles, 32 minutes, best route is Hanbury Street.

            1.7 miles, 38 minutes, best route is Hanbury Street.
            On the odd occasion I've used Google Maps in real life it has been way way off for walking speeds. I think it was from the Science Museum to Harrods... walked it in about a 1/3 time Google stated and I'm not the quickest.

            "The Lechmere theory never shoehorns facts. It deals in facts."

            Comment

            • Fiver
              Assistant Commissioner
              • Oct 2019
              • 3346

              #156
              Originally posted by Newbie View Post
              Again, any psychopath carman would take off his apron before strangulating a prostitute ... its hard to eviscerate some woman with your apron dangling over the body when you kneel. With Annie Chapman, there was a lot of her blood sprayed on the wall .... was she strangled? I forget quite frankly. However, doesn't matter; the apron comes off before the murder, and then goes back on after, and you can cover up those nasty little red spots with your nice, clean apron.

              Covered in blood & gore? Don't be so dramatic ... that would be a huge problem for anyone fleeing.
              I'm not being dramatic. I'm looking at the actual evidence.

              "A portion of the intestines, still connected with the body, were lying above the right shoulder, with some pieces of skin. There were also some pieces of skin on the left shoulder." - Joseph Chandler, Inspector H Division Metropolitan Police, Chapman inquest.

              Annie Chapman's killer reached into her mutilated abdomen with his hands, pulled out her intestines, and placed them above her right shoulder. At a minimum, his hands and the sleeves of any coat or shirt he wore would be covered in blood and gore. No apron would cover that part of the killer's body and the killer would have to pick the apron up and put it on again with those blood-covered hands.

              Originally posted by Newbie View Post
              Is there any witness who saw someone wandering coated in blood and gore around the time of the murders?

              Anyhow little van boys are easy to push around and intimidate if you are a clever homicidal maniac the age of the kid's father.
              If Cross was the Ripper, he had to do a lot more than just intimidate a van boy. He had to walk into the busy Spitalfield's Market, past dozens of vendors and hundreds of shoppers with none of them noticing his hands and forearms are covered in fresh blood and gore. He then had to work another 12 to 16 hours, most of it in broad daylight, with none of the dozens of people he delivered to and none of the hundreds, perhaps thousands, of people he drove by noticing the blood on his hands and clothes, blood which his job provided no explanation for. He then had to return the cart to Broad Street station with none of his dozens of coworkers noticing the unexplained bloodstains. He then had to walk home, again with none of the dozens that he passes noticing the unexplained bloodstains. He then has to try convince his wife and many children that there is nothing odd about the unexplained bloodstains.

              The idea that Cross killed Chapman is ludicrous.

              "The full picture always needs to be given. When this does not happen, we are left to make decisions on insufficient information." - Christer Holmgren

              "Unfortunately, when one becomes obsessed by a theory, truth and logic rarely matter." - Steven Blomer

              Comment

              • Fiver
                Assistant Commissioner
                • Oct 2019
                • 3346

                #157
                Originally posted by Geddy2112 View Post

                Au contraire...

                The East London Observer, which provided a lot of description compared to the other newspapers we have the following descriptions of inquest attire.

                "Before the coroner sat the woman who had identified the deceased as Martha Turner, with a baby in her arms, and accompanied by another woman - evidently her mother - dressed in an old, brown figured pompadour.” - Tabram Inquest

                "The first witness called was a Mrs. Elizabeth Mahoney - a young woman of some 25 or 26 years, plainly clad in a rusty-black dress, with a black woollen shawl pinned round her shoulders." - Tabram Inquest

                "Alfred George Crow was the next witness. In appearance, he was a young man of about twenty-three or four, with closely cropped hair, and a beardless, but intelligent face, and wore a shabby green overcoat." - Tabram Inquest

                "Mary Ann Connolly, otherwise known as "Pearly Poll", was next introduced, wearing simply an old green shawl and no hat, her face being reddened and soddened by drink." - Tabram Inquest

                " Amelia Palmer, the next witness, a pale dark-haired woman, who was poorly clad, said: I live at 35, Dorset-street, Spitalfields, a common lodging-house." - Chapman Inquest

                "The next witness was James Cable, a man from Shadwell. A youngish-looking man, with a bullet head and closely cropped hair, and a sandy close-cut moustache; he wore a long overcoat that had once been green, and into the pockets of which he persistently stuck his hands." - Chapman Inquest

                "Her evidence was not very material, and she was soon replaced by John Richardson, a tall, stout man, with a very pale face - the result, doubtless, of the early hours he keeps as a market porter - a brown moustache, and dark brown hair. He was shabbily dressed in a ragged coat, and dark brown trousers." - Chapman Inquest

                "Piser wore a dark overcoat, brown trousers, and a brown and very battered hat, and appeared somewhat splay-footed - at all events, he stood before the Coroner with his feet meeting at the heels and then diverging almost at right angles." - Chapman Inquest

                ...you're welcome
                That that's just the examples of people not as well dressed as Charles Cross.

                "John Saunders Reeves - a short man, with a slight dark beard and moustache, a pale and a contracted face, dressed in corduroy trousers and a black overcoat, and wearing earrings - was called next." -- Tabram Inquest

                "Detective-Inspector Reid, dressed in his usual dark blue serge coat and waistcoat, and light striped trousers, sat, cross legged, next to him and stared blankly at the assembled jurymen." - Tabram Inquest

                "The first witness called was Henry Tabram - a sallow complexioned man with iron-grey hair, and wearing a moustache and imperial of the same colour, together with a dark blue serge coat." - Tabram Inquest

                "Next there was called a young man dressed in a light tweed suit, with a pale face and a light moustache and imperial, who said his name was William Turner, and that he was a carpenter by trade, but was out of any regular employment just now." - Tabram Inquest

                "Amelia Richardson took her stand before the Coroner next. She was a somewhat undersized woman, with a pale face and dark hair, just beginning to get streaked with grey. Her dress was very neat for her position in life, consisting as it did of a skirt of dark material, a heavy black dolman, and a black silk bonnet with violet trimmings." - Tabram Inquest

                "Mrs. Ann Norris, a pale looking woman, whose pallor was increased by her totally black, but neat attire." - Tabram Inquest

                "The coroner, however, on this occasion was Mr. Wynne Baxter, who, fresh from his Scandinavian tour, appeared at the inquest in a pair of black and white checked trousers, a dazzling white waistcoat, a crimson scarf and a dark coat." - Nichols Inquest

                "The husband of the woman - William Nicholls - is a printer's machinist, and he came to the mortuary dressed in a long black coat, with a black tie, trousers of dark material, and a tall silk hat. He carried an umbrella, and looked very quiet and very gentlemanly. He is very pale, with a full light brown beard and moustache." - Nichols Inquest

                "Emily Holland, an elderly woman in a brown dress, with a dolman and bonnet, whose naturally pale face was flushed with excitement, and who gave her address in a frightened manner, which necessitated the coroner frequently urging her to speak up, was then called." - Nichols Inquest

                "Mary Ann Monk - a young woman with a flushed face and a haughty air, who wore a long grey ulster - was the last witness." - Nichols Inquest

                "The neighbouring clocks had just struck two on Wednesday afternoon when Mr. Wynne Baxter, the Coroner - still dressed in his resplendent white waistcoat, check trousers, and crimson tie - entered the Alexandra Room of the Working Lads' Institute." - Chapman Inquest

                "The first witness called was F. Smith, one of the brothers of the deceased woman, a tall man, with dark hair and a heavy brown moustache - evidently about thirty years old. He wore a dark morning coat, black and white striped trousers, and, evidently considerably downcast at the identification of his sister, gave his evidence in a low voice." - Chapman Inquest

                "Mary Hardman, the proprietress of the cat's meat store kept on the ground floor of the house near which the murder was committed in Hanbury-street, accordingly took her place. She was a medium-sized, well-proportioned woman, with a very pale face and a curiously rounded chin, and dressed in a black skirt, blue body, white apron, black shawl, and a black crape-trimmed bonnet." - Chapman Inquest

                "Detective-sergeant Wm. Thicke, otherwise known as "Johnny Upright", who was "flashily" attired in a suit of loud checks, was a fresh-coloured, youngish-looking man, with dark hair and a heavy, drooping brown moustache." - Chapman Inquest

                Yet somehow they think the following is suspicious.

                "Charles A. Cross, a carman, who appeared in court with a rough sack apron on, said he had been in the employment of Messrs. Pickford & Co. for some years.' - Nichols Inquest






                "The full picture always needs to be given. When this does not happen, we are left to make decisions on insufficient information." - Christer Holmgren

                "Unfortunately, when one becomes obsessed by a theory, truth and logic rarely matter." - Steven Blomer

                Comment

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