If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
As I said before, your work and Neil's here is top notch. This is just regarding the 1912 Kings Block photo which I've always liked and is obviously taken from the junction of what was Harrow Alley and Back Gravel Lane.
Might you happen to have a photo of what this view looks like now?
As I said before, your work and Neil's here is top notch. This is just regarding the 1912 Kings Block photo which I've always liked and is obviously taken from the junction of what was Harrow Alley and Back Gravel Lane.
Might you happen to have a photo of what this view looks like now?
I Haven't Stephen as it's a pretty crap view. The photo was actually taken at the corner of Cuttler Street looking towards the Liverpool Street Travelodge.
I've just downloaded this of Google Earth, it's more or less from the same spot.
I haven't Stephen as it's a pretty crap view. The photo was actually taken at the corner of Cuttler Street looking towards the Liverpool Street Travelodge.
I've just downloaded this of Google Earth, it's more or less from the same spot.
[ATTACH]14382[/ATTACH]
Thanks Rob
So everything on the 1912 photo is gone now. Ah well........
May I add my sincere thanks to all those who worked hard to bring us these pictures from Wood Lane. I would also echo the praise for Cath Coulthard, who I have never met in person but communicated with by email and found to be helpful. She under took her stewardship of the museum as a volunteer on top of her regular Police work.
It is the periodic drip of new discovery that gives us hope and will keep us all bickering for years to come.
Ah, Harrow Place Travelodge. A great place to stay. A cockerel's stride, (It censored the short version of cockerel! ), to the heart of Spitalfields and yet 3 minutes away from Liverpool Street station from where you can reach the rest of London.
Looking towards the Travelodge the jewellers where the three Police Officers were callously murdered that led to the siege of Sidney Street would have been on the right where the modern office blocks are now.
The memorial plaque to Sergeants Tucker and Bentley and Constable Choate is located on the low wall on the left, disappointingly positioned well below eye level of those that pass by.
Last edited by Hutch Orris; 08-15-2012, 11:15 PM.
Reason: Spelling (The shame)
May I add my sincere thanks to all those who worked hard to bring us these pictures from Wood Lane. I would also echo the praise for Cath Coulthard, who I have never met in person but communicated with by email and found to be helpful. She under took her stewardship of the museum as a volunteer on top of her regular Police work.
It is the periodic drip of new discovery that gives us hope and will keep us all bickering for years to come.
Ah, Harrow Place Travelodge. A great place to stay. A cockerel's stride, (It censored the short version of cockerel! ), to the heart of Spitalfields and yet 3 minutes away from Liverpool Street station from where you can reach the rest of London.
Looking towards the Travelodge the jewellers where the three Police Officers were callously murdered that led to the siege of Sidney Street would have been on the right where the modern office blocks are now.
The memorial plaque to Sergeants Tucker and Bentley and Constable Choate is located on the low wall on the left, disappointingly positioned well below eye level of those that pass by.
Thank you, Hutch, for your newsy and informative post. I shall have to look for the memorial plaque to Sergeants Tucker and Bentley and Constable Choate when next I am in the vicinity.
Best regards
Chris
Christopher T. George
Organizer, RipperCon #JacktheRipper-#True Crime Conference
just held in Baltimore, April 7-8, 2018.
For information about RipperCon, go to http://rippercon.com/ RipperCon 2018 talks can now be heard at http://www.casebook.org/podcast/
Here are a few Houndsditch/Sidney St related shots.
1) The plaque Hutch mentioned. Cathy was part of the team which bought that to be placed on the wall near the scene. It couldnt be placed on the scene as its a little bit out of the way and its location is a private building, so they placed it near as they could to the spot.
2) One of the guns used at the Houndsditch scene. I felt very uncomfortable holding it but I wanted to give an idea of its size. Extremely heavy and, as I said, I did not like holding it.
3 & 4) Exhibits used at the inquest, including scale wooden models of the scenes.
Oh rats, the word 'signed' is missing from the pic. The writing bears a superficial resemblance to the 'From hell' letter, but none at all to 'Dear Boss'. I don't understand the practice of writing the word 'signed' to the far left of a signature. Rather like stating the obvious.
<snip>
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
Tom, the term "signed" or an appropriate abbreviation for it has, in my experience looking at documents, always been indicative of a copy; if a true copy, it is normally, at least in American older documents, indicated on the top-left of the first page.
Comment