Details on the open web are scarce...
From what I 've found out in the newspaper archives, there were at least two murders of young children in New York, between March and May of 1915. The victims were named Leonore Cohn, five years old, from a Jewish family; and Charlie Murray, four years old, from a Catholic family. Both lived in tenement buildings. Both were found in their tenements. Letters signed "Jack the Ripper" were sent to the mother of at least one victim.
Additionally, there was an unsuccessful attempt on another girl, named Louise Neideig or Neidig (? spelling might be variant), which I need to track down the details about. I'm not yet sure if additional victims followed Murray.
I came about this while searching the term "Jack the Ripper", and that is when I realized that for some time following the Whitechapel murders people around the world seemed to use the term "ripper murders" to describe a particularly horrific crime.
Like you, I failed to find much about the Cohn and Murray murders on the general Internet. It seems like we must dig into newspaper accounts for more details. I gather these child murders and the "Ripper" moniker led to a good deal of panic among mothers and children in that time and place, as well as a huge police investigation.
Why are they forgotten now? Inquiring minds want to know...
Originally posted by Brenda
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Additionally, there was an unsuccessful attempt on another girl, named Louise Neideig or Neidig (? spelling might be variant), which I need to track down the details about. I'm not yet sure if additional victims followed Murray.
I came about this while searching the term "Jack the Ripper", and that is when I realized that for some time following the Whitechapel murders people around the world seemed to use the term "ripper murders" to describe a particularly horrific crime.
Like you, I failed to find much about the Cohn and Murray murders on the general Internet. It seems like we must dig into newspaper accounts for more details. I gather these child murders and the "Ripper" moniker led to a good deal of panic among mothers and children in that time and place, as well as a huge police investigation.
Why are they forgotten now? Inquiring minds want to know...
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