Of the three witnesses Elizabeth Long is perhaps the most contentious but,for me, we have less to go on? Did she actually see Annie and her killer? Was she mistaken? Did she lie? Did she get her time wrong? All are possibilities of course.
To recap: Long said that she’d heard the Brewer’s clock strike half-past just before she turned into Hanbury Street. The couple that she saw weren’t standing directly outside number 29 but a few yards nearer to Brick Lane which is the direction that Mrs Long was coming from. The man’s back was toward her but the woman was facing her. She later saw Annie in the Mortuary and was certain that she was the woman that she’d seen. She said that they were talking ‘pretty loudly’ and that the man had said “will you?” to which the woman replied “yes.” The Coroner asked her if they’d appeared sober to which she replied that she’d seen nothing that led her to believe that either of them were the worse for drink. She also said that she regularly saw people talking in the street at that time of day and that, after she’d passed them, she didn’t look back so she didn’t know where they went. Mrs Long said that she’d arrived at her destination (Spitalfield’s Market) ‘a few minutes after half past five.’
So we don’t have an exact time from Long for the sighting but I think it’s reasonable to suggest that it was between 5.30 and 5.35am.
Could She Have Lied?
Certainly, but I can see no reason apart from a desire for publicity of course.
Could She Have Been Mistaken?
To be honest there’s not much to go on here. She certainly could have been mistaken. The two people that she saw weren't doing anything to draw attention to themselves. They were average looking and seeing two people talking in the street at that time was nothing unusual for Annie. She didn’t know Annie but she saw her body at the mortuary.
Could She Have Been Wrong On Her Time?
This is the most contentious aspect of her testimony, not just because it goes against Phillips’ TOD estimation but because it also conflicts with Cadosch’s timing (and I find Cadosch a creditable witness) So could she have simply been wrong on the time that she saw the couple.
For her sighting to align with Cadosch’s she would have had to have heard the Brewery clock just before 5.15 instead of just before 5.30. The point that she was likely to have walked this route every day at around the same time is a strong one but it’s not at all impossible that, for whatever reason, she might have been a bit earlier on that particular day. The sound of the Brewery clock would have been a familiar one to her; perhaps so familiar that it might have become almost background noise. And so if she wasn’t particularly paying attention; with other things on her mind; and perhaps because nine times out of ten or more she was on that spot when the clock struck 5.30 she might have made an error. It’s certainly possible.
There is another way of course for her sighting to align with Cadosch’s and that would have been for both of them to have been around 7 or 8 minutes out with timings. The problem with this of course is that if correct she couldn’t have heard the Brewery clock at all while she was in Brick Lane.
Of course a third option is the Cadosch alone was wrong in his timing and that he got up 15 minutes later. This is a possibility that has to be considered in my opinion.
Conclusion.
Elizabeth Long is a difficult witness to evaluate. We have no reason to call her a liar but, like all witnesses, she might have been. She might have been mistaken in her sighting or mistaken in her timing. I go backward and forward on this one to be honest. We have little to go on. Those that feel that Cadosch was unreliable point to the fact that he was cautious about the word ‘no.’ Those that feel that Richardson was unreliable point to Chandler’s statement about the conversation in the passageway. With Long we have less to guide us.
For me though I don’t think we have to make any great leaps of faith to make Mrs Long’s sighting tie in with Cadosch as we know the difficulties of coming to accurate timings at a time when few owned watches or clocks. I see no reason to dismiss Elizabeth Long whilst at the same time accepting that there are no certainties.
* A note on option three. I’ll also include that both Long and Cadosch might have been in error with their timings.
To recap: Long said that she’d heard the Brewer’s clock strike half-past just before she turned into Hanbury Street. The couple that she saw weren’t standing directly outside number 29 but a few yards nearer to Brick Lane which is the direction that Mrs Long was coming from. The man’s back was toward her but the woman was facing her. She later saw Annie in the Mortuary and was certain that she was the woman that she’d seen. She said that they were talking ‘pretty loudly’ and that the man had said “will you?” to which the woman replied “yes.” The Coroner asked her if they’d appeared sober to which she replied that she’d seen nothing that led her to believe that either of them were the worse for drink. She also said that she regularly saw people talking in the street at that time of day and that, after she’d passed them, she didn’t look back so she didn’t know where they went. Mrs Long said that she’d arrived at her destination (Spitalfield’s Market) ‘a few minutes after half past five.’
So we don’t have an exact time from Long for the sighting but I think it’s reasonable to suggest that it was between 5.30 and 5.35am.
Could She Have Lied?
Certainly, but I can see no reason apart from a desire for publicity of course.
Could She Have Been Mistaken?
To be honest there’s not much to go on here. She certainly could have been mistaken. The two people that she saw weren't doing anything to draw attention to themselves. They were average looking and seeing two people talking in the street at that time was nothing unusual for Annie. She didn’t know Annie but she saw her body at the mortuary.
Could She Have Been Wrong On Her Time?
This is the most contentious aspect of her testimony, not just because it goes against Phillips’ TOD estimation but because it also conflicts with Cadosch’s timing (and I find Cadosch a creditable witness) So could she have simply been wrong on the time that she saw the couple.
For her sighting to align with Cadosch’s she would have had to have heard the Brewery clock just before 5.15 instead of just before 5.30. The point that she was likely to have walked this route every day at around the same time is a strong one but it’s not at all impossible that, for whatever reason, she might have been a bit earlier on that particular day. The sound of the Brewery clock would have been a familiar one to her; perhaps so familiar that it might have become almost background noise. And so if she wasn’t particularly paying attention; with other things on her mind; and perhaps because nine times out of ten or more she was on that spot when the clock struck 5.30 she might have made an error. It’s certainly possible.
There is another way of course for her sighting to align with Cadosch’s and that would have been for both of them to have been around 7 or 8 minutes out with timings. The problem with this of course is that if correct she couldn’t have heard the Brewery clock at all while she was in Brick Lane.
Of course a third option is the Cadosch alone was wrong in his timing and that he got up 15 minutes later. This is a possibility that has to be considered in my opinion.
Conclusion.
Elizabeth Long is a difficult witness to evaluate. We have no reason to call her a liar but, like all witnesses, she might have been. She might have been mistaken in her sighting or mistaken in her timing. I go backward and forward on this one to be honest. We have little to go on. Those that feel that Cadosch was unreliable point to the fact that he was cautious about the word ‘no.’ Those that feel that Richardson was unreliable point to Chandler’s statement about the conversation in the passageway. With Long we have less to guide us.
For me though I don’t think we have to make any great leaps of faith to make Mrs Long’s sighting tie in with Cadosch as we know the difficulties of coming to accurate timings at a time when few owned watches or clocks. I see no reason to dismiss Elizabeth Long whilst at the same time accepting that there are no certainties.
* A note on option three. I’ll also include that both Long and Cadosch might have been in error with their timings.
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