Originally posted by Wickerman
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There's a paragraph in, Police Work From Within, Hargrave Adam, 1914.
I thought I had read doctors were permitted to be in court while the layperson witness had to wait in a separate room. But this seems to have been in Scotland, and the above is for trials not coroner's inquests.
So, I wonder if what is written above applicable to England was in force in the 1800's.
One of the excerpts from the press at the time of the Kelly murder appears to suggest witnesses were kept in a separate outside (without) the courtroom. Unless it was just the female witnesses that were kept out of court, the males were allowed in?
"The inquest on Mary Jane Kelly began this morning at eleven o'clock, at Shoreditch town hall. There was no crowd at the doors, and little excitement. Without the coroner's court half a dozen wretched-looking women were sitting on half a dozen cane chairs waiting to be called; and for half an hour the gentlemen of the jury dropped one by one into the green-walled square, little room which is sacred to the coroner. A mahogany table, drawn up against the windows, was laden with hats, black bags and papers, belonging to the army of reporters. The jury, twelve very respectable-looking men, sat on the coroner's right on two rows of chairs. At eleven the coroner Dr Macdonald, took his seat".
Pall Mall Gazette, 12 Nov. 1888.
So, perhaps doctor Phillips was in the courtroom at the inquest, it's just a detail that I find of interest in general.
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