This is a brief review of
the Jack the Ripper murders that occurred in London more than a hundred
years ago. Much of the original evidence gathered at the time has been
lost, and many "facts" are actually opinions by the various
writers who have written about the case during the past century. Many
aspects of the case are therefore contested, and so what follows is a
summation of the case in general. There are many books available to the
student of crime who wishes to grapple with the many mysteries
associated with the case.
"Jack the
Ripper" is the popular name given to a serial killer who killed a
number of prostitutes in the East End of London in 1888. The name
originates from a letter written by someone who claimed to be the killer
published at the time of the murders. The killings took place within a
mile area and involved the districts of Whitechapel, Spitalfields,
Aldgate, and the City of London proper. He was also called the
Whitechapel Murderer and "Leather Apron."
Significance and Importance
Jack the Ripper has
remained popular for a lot of reasons. He was not the first serial
killer, but he was probably the first to appear in a large metropolis at
a time when the general populace had become literate and the press was a
force for social change. The Ripper also appeared when there were
tremendous political turmoil and both the liberals and social reformers,
as well as the Irish Home rule partisans tried to use the crimes for
their own ends. Every day the activities of the Ripper were chronicled
in the newspapers as were the results of the inquiries and the actions
taken by the police. Even the feelings of the people living in the East
End, and the editorials that attacked the various establishments of
Society appeared each day for both the people of London and the whole
world to read. It was the press coverage that made this series of
murders a "new thing", something that the world had never
known before. The press was also partly responsible for creating many
myths surrounding the Ripper and ended up turning a sad killer of women
into a "bogey man", who has now become one of the most
romantic figures in history. The rest of the responsibility lies with
the Ripper. He may have been a sexual serial killer of a type all too
common in the 1990s, but he was also bent on terrifying a city and
making the whole world take notice of him by leaving his horribly
mutilated victims in plain sight. Lastly, the Ripper was never caught
and it is the mysteries surrounding this killer that both add to the
romance of the story and creating an intellectual puzzle that people
still want to solve.
The Victims
It is unclear just how
many women the Ripper killed. It is generally accepted that he killed
five, though some have written that he murdered only four while others
say seven or more. The public, press, and even many junior police
officers believed that the Ripper was responsible for nine slayings. The
five that are generally accepted as the work of the Ripper are:
- Mary Ann (Polly) Nichols, murdered
Friday, August 31, 1888.
- Annie Chapman, murdered Saturday,
September 8, 1888.
- Elizabeth Stride, murdered Sunday,
September 30, 1888.
- Catharine Eddowes, also murdered that
same date.
- Mary Jane (Marie Jeanette) Kelly,
murdered Friday, November 9, 1888.
Besides these five there
are good reasons to believe that the first victim was really Martha
Tabram who was murdered Tuesday, August 7, 1888, and there are important
considerations for questioning whether Stride was a Ripper victim. As to
the actual number of women that the Ripper killed, Philip Sugden wrote
in his excellent book, The Complete History of Jack the Ripper,
"There is no simple answer. In a sentence: at least four, probably
six, just possibly eight."
All five of these listed
plus Tabram were prostitutes and were killed between early August and
early November 1888. All but Tabram and Kelly were killed outdoors and
there is no evidence to suggest that any of them knew each other. They
varied in both age and appearance. Most were drunk or thought to be
drunk at the time they were killed.
Method of Operation
Surprisingly, a full
understanding of the Ripper's modus operandi was not established until
several years ago. The Whitechapel murderer and his victim stood facing
each other. When she lifted her skirts, the victim's hands were occupied
and was then defenseless. The Ripper seized the women by their throats
and strangled them until they were unconscious if not dead. The
autopsies constantly revealed clear indications that the victims had
been strangled. In the past some writers believed that the Ripper struck
from behind when the victims were bent forward, their skirts hiked up
their backsides while waiting to engage in anal sex. This is a very
awkward arrangement and the risk that they may scream or elude his
clutch's make this unacceptable. The Ripper then lowered his victims to
the ground, their heads to his left. This has been proven by the
position of the bodies in relation to walls and fences that show that
there was virtually no room for the murderer to attack the body from the
left side. No bruising on the back of the heads shows that he lowered
the bodies to the ground rather than throwing or letting them fall.
Given the inclement weather and filth in the streets it is unacceptable
that the prostitutes or their client would have attempted intercourse on
the ground. He cut the throats when the women were on the ground.
Splatter stains show that the blood pooled beside or under the neck and
head of the victim rather than the front which is where the blood would
flow if they had been standing up. In one case blood was found on the
fence some 14 inches or so from the ground and opposite the neck wound
and this shows that the blood spurted from the body while in the prone
position on the ground. This method also prevented the killer from being
unduly blood stained. By reaching over from the victim's right side to
cut the left side of her throat, the blood flow would have been directed
away from him, which would have reduced the amount of blood in which he
would have been exposed. If the victim was already dead before their
throats were cut, then the blood spilt would have not been very much.
With the heart no longer beating the blood would not have been
"pressurized," so only the blood in the immediate area of the
wound would have evacuated gently from the cuts. The Ripper then made
his other mutilations, still from the victim's right side, or possibly
while straddling over the body at or near the feet. In several cases the
legs had been pushed up which would have shortened the distance between
the abdomen and the feet. No sign of intercourse was ever detected nor
did the Ripper masturbate over the bodies. Usually he took a piece of
the victim's viscera. The taking of a "trophy" is a common
practice by modern sexual serial killers. In the opinion of most of the
surgeons who examined the bodies, most believed that the killer had to
have some degree of anatomical knowledge to do what he did. In one case
he removed a kidney from the front rather than from the side, and did
not damage any of the surrounding organs while doing so. In another case
he removed the sexual organs with one clean stroke of the knife. Given
the time circumstances of the crimes (outside, often in near total
darkness, keeping one eye out for the approach of others, and under
extremely tight time constraints), the Ripper almost certainly would
have had some experience in using his knife.
The Ripper Letters
It is commonly accepted
by the experts on the case that none of the letters purported to have
been written by the Ripper were in fact written by him. A letter dated
September 25 and received on the twenty-seventh by the Central News
agency was the first to be signed "Jack the Ripper". A
postcard post marked October 1 followed. Because it referred to a
"double event" the police thought it might be from the killer
since it was posted the day after the Ripper killed two women. The post
card also referred to the letter and must have come from the same source
as the letter had not been released to the public yet. If the post card
had been sent on September 30, the day of the "double event",
instead of October 1, the likelihood that it was really written by the
murderer would be significantly greater. The Whitechapel Murderer may
have written the letter/post card but there is no evidence to suppose
that he did and the police seem convinced that they were the work of a
journalist. A recently discovered document states that a journalist from
the Central News agency, Tom Bulling, was the writer.
One other letter may have
been written by the killer. In mid-October a small parcel was sent to
George Lusk, who was head of a vigilance committee in Whitechapel.
Inside was half a human kidney and a letter from someone claiming to be
the killer, and that it was part of the kidney he removed from the
victim Eddowes. It is impossible to know for sure if the Ripper really
did send it. Most of the arguments in favor of it being from Jack have
been based on inaccurate information and the myths rather than the facts
surrounding the case. However, Eddowes did suffer from Bright's disease
and the description of the kidney does match what a Bright's disease
kidney would look like.
Evidence
In a time before forensic
science and even finger printing, the only way to prove someone
committed a murder was to catch either him or her in the act, or get the
suspect to confess. The Whitechapel Murders unhappily fall into this
period of time. One interesting feature of this case is that not one,
but two police forces carried out investigations. The Metropolitan
Police, known as Scotland Yard, was responsible for crimes committed in
all the boroughs of London except the City of London proper. The single
square mile in the heart of London known as the City of London had their
own police force. When Eddowes was killed, it was in their territory and
this brought them into the Ripper case. It is believed that the rank and
file of the two forces got along and worked well together, but there is
evidence that the seniors in each force did not. To what degree, if any,
their failure to cooperate fully had on solving the case is not known.
Most sources do not fault either police force for failing to solve the
Jack the Ripper mystery, rightly pointing out that catching serial
killers is still a hard task even by today's science and technology.
Other than autopsies and taking statements from everybody who might know
something there was little else that the Metropolitan police force did.
The attitude of the people at the time was that the police were
incompetent and that the Commissioner, Sir Charles Warren, was only good
for policing crowds and keeping order rather than detective work. He was
especially criticized for not offering a reward in the hope that a
confederate or accomplice would come forth and inform against the
Ripper. In fact, Warren had no objections for a reward being offered and
it was his superior, Henry Matthews, the Home Secretary who refused the
sanction of a reward. The City of London Police seems to have done a
better job although they did not apprehend the killer either. City
police officers made crime scene drawings, took many photographs of the
victim Eddowes, and even though she was not in their jurisdiction, they
took photographs of the Kelly victim. She is the only victim who was
photographed at the crime scene. One of the splits between the
leadership of the two forces was over graffito found in Goulston Street
on the night of the "double event". A piece of Eddowes' apron,
which the Ripper used to wipe off his knife, was found by a constable
near a doorway that had a chalked message over the door. This message,
"The Juwes are the men That Will not be blamed for nothing",
may have been written by the Ripper and the City police officers wanted
to photograph it. Warren felt that leaving it until it was light enough
to be photographed might cause riots against the Jews living in
Whitechapel whom the bigoted English residents already believed were
responsible for the murders. Warren did not even compromise by willing
to erase or cover up the word "Juwes" only. In the end the
police never charged any suspect with the murders committed by the
Ripper which shows they did not have a sufficient amount of evidence
that would gain a verdict of guilty in criminal court.
Suspects
In 1894, Sir Melville
Macnaghten, then Chief Constable, wrote a confidential report in which
he names the three top suspects. Although some information concerning
the suspect he believed most likely to have been the murderer had been
available before the turn of the century, the name of that suspect was
not made public until 1959. Macnaghten's suspect was M.J. Druitt, a
barrister turned teacher who committed suicide in December 1888.
Unfortunately for Macnaghten who wrote his memoranda from memory, the
details he ascribes to Druitt are wrong. According to the Chief
Constable, Druitt was a doctor, 41 years of age, and committed suicide
immediately after the Kelly murder. In actuality Druitt was 31, not a
doctor, and killed himself nearly a month after the last official
murder. No other police officer supported Macnaghten's allegations, and
one in fact, stated that the theory was inadequate and that the suicide
was circumstantial evidence at best that the drowned doctor was the
Ripper. While it is still possible that he was the Ripper, correct
information gathered about Druitt so far makes him seem an unlikely
candidate.
In 1903, Frederick
Abberline, a retired crack detective who had been in charge of the
Ripper investigation at the ground level stated that he thought that
multiple wife poisoner Severin Klosowski, alias George Chapman, might be
Jack the Ripper. As with Macnaghten, no other officer has concurred with
his opinion and modern criminal profiling science tends to reject
Klosowski as a serious candidate.
The name of Macnaghten's
second suspect was confirmed as Aaron Kosminiski in the early 1980s when
a researcher came upon Donald Swanson's personal copy of Robert
Anderson's book of memoirs. Both Swanson and Anderson were officers who
participated in the Ripper investigation; indeed, they were the ones
given the responsibility of being in charge of the case. Anderson had
written in his memoirs that appeared for the first time in 1910 that the
police knew who the Ripper was. According to Anderson the Ripper was a
Polish Jew who was put away in an insane asylum after the crimes, and
then died soon after. Swanson had made some notes in his copy of the
book concerning Anderson's suspect, and wrote that the suspect's name
was Kosminski. At first it seemed that the case had been solved, but
research has found a number of problems with the theory. No other
officer supports' Anderson's allegation, and Swanson's notes seem to
question his superior's claims rather than support them. Aaron Kosminski
was a real person and was placed in an insane asylum. His records show
him to be a docile and harmless lunatic that heard voices in his head
and would only eat food from the gutter. The dates of his incarceration
are wrong, and he did not die soon after his committal but lived on
until 1919. Some researchers have tried to explain the problems by
saying that the name Kosminski' was confused with another insane Polish
Jew, who really was dangerous.
The search continues. The
third Macnaghten suspect, Michael Ostrog, has been investigated and
there is nothing to indicate that he was nothing more than a demented
con man.
Dr. Francis Tumblety, the
latest serious suspect, only became known to students of the Jack the
Ripper murders in 1993. A collector of crime memorabilia obtained a
cache of letters belonging to a crime journalist named G.R. Sims. Among
the letters was one from John Littlechild, who had been in charge of the
Secret Department in Scotland Yard at the time of the murders. Dated
1913, Littlechild writes to Sims: "I never heard of a Dr. D. (which
many assume is a reference to Druitt as Macnaghten thought Druitt was a
doctor and Sims was a confident of the Chief Constable), in connection
with the Whitechapel Murders but amongst the suspects, and to my mind a
very likely one, was a Dr. T . . . He was an American quack named
Tumblety . . . " A book by the collector who found the letter goes
to great lengths in trying to prove that Tumblety is the final solution
for the mystery. Unfortunately, he fails to do so. There is no doubt
that Tumblety was a legitimate suspect and that when he fled to America,
Scotland Yard detectives came over to investigate him further. It is
unlikely that Scotland Yard continued to view him as a serious suspect.
James Monro, who succeeded Warren and was in overall command of the
Secret department before becoming Commissioner, thought that the Alice
McKenzie murder of July 1889 was the work of the Ripper. He stated in
1890 that he did not know who the Whitechapel murderer was but that he
was working on his own theory.
Ripper Research
At the time of the
murders and for the next few years, a lot was written about the murders
including some tabloid type books. Most of it is worthless and only
helped to set up many myths that have clouded serious attempts to figure
out what really happened that autumn in London. Other than memoirs of
officers who worked on the case, which is valuable, little else was
written until after the first world war. In 1929 the first full length
book in English about the Ripper, The Mystery of Jack the Ripper by
Leonard Matters, was published. Once more there was growing interest in
the murders again in that the Ripper was appearing in both nonfiction
works and fictional formats such as Alfred Hitchcock's The Lodger.
Cult-like interest, the interest that has really never left, began in
the 1950s. Dan Farson did a television show about the Ripper and
uncovered a version of the McNaghten memoranda. The first really good
books began to be published in the 1960s, such as Tom Cullen's Autumn of
Terror and Robin Odell's Jack the Ripper in Fact and Fiction. Interest
in Jack the Ripper exploded in 1970 when a new theory was published in
which the grandson of Queen Victoria, Prince Albert Victor, Duke of
Clarence and Avondale, was accused of being the Ripper. Just like his
nemesis in fiction, Sherlock Holmes, the 1970s saw Jack being either
paired with someone famous or identified as being someone famous. It was
a decade that also featured some entertaining but patently absurd
conspiracy theories explaining who the Ripper really was. Plots
involving Freemasons, court physicians, and sinister figures from occult
organizations, have been paraded before the public as the final
solution. In the midst of the madness some good came out. Donald
Rumbelow's The Complete Jack the Ripper was published, and police files
still existing from the investigations were made available to all and
sundry. The 1980s saw a tide of books published to cash in on the
centennial of the Murders in Whitechapel, and lost evidence was returned
anonymously to the police and Swanson's notes on Anderson's suspect were
found. The FBI's Behavioral Science Unit did a criminal profile of the
Ripper and aspects of the murders were discussed in various professional
journals. During the 1990s, two new books have appeared that are musts
for people who are interested in the Ripper murders. The Jack the Ripper
A to Z by Paul Begg, Martin Fido, and Keith Skinner is indispensable for
doing research and Sugden's The Complete History of Jack the Ripper has
replaced Rumbelow's worthy tome as the authoritative source for
information. An interesting phony diary supposedly written by the Ripper
was published and the authentic letter revealing the suspect Dr. Francis
Tumblety has also been released to the public.
The Future
In the past ten years
more evidence has been recovered, new information garnered through the
young criminal sciences, and serious research conducted on the mystery
of Jack the Ripper than at any other time since the case was officially
closed in 1892. After more than a hundred years the case is still
fascinating, and results are still being gotten through research. Nick
Warren, a student of the crimes and a practicing surgeon, studied the
second Kelly crime scene photograph that was recently recovered, and was
able to establish that a hatchet was used by the Ripper to split one of
his victim's legs! The likelihood of the case ever being solved is open
to debate. If the police solved it but for some reason kept the Ripper's
identity a secret, then I think that the odds are good that the answer
will be rediscovered. Unfortunately, I and I think most serious students
on the subject, do not think that the police did solve the case.
Individual officers had strong opinions on who Jack the Ripper was, but
not the Forces as a whole. This makes the challenge much more difficult
as today's researchers must find new evidence rather than unearth that
which has been lost. The evidence lost is considerable. Virtually all of
the City of London Police files were lost in the Blitz during the last
world war. What remains of the Metropolitan Police files are available
to the public but the files are sparse. Some have claimed that the files
were purposefully destroyed to keep the Murderer's identity a secret.
The truth is more pedestrian and unromantic. Almost from the beginning
items were removed for souvenirs. Often in those olden days when they
ran out of room, the clerks would go to the end of the shelve and simply
dump out the old files by the armful. When Abberline was interviewed in
1903, the journalist noted that the retired Scotland yard Inspector was
surrounded by official files. Once, upon the death of a retired officer,
a trunk full of files concerning his old cases was found in his
possession. Modern day "Ripperologists" were not above
souvenir hunting themselves. A number of documents were taken in the
late 1970s/early 1980s and as a result the remaining material was put on
microfilm. It seems perfectly possible that Jack the Ripper's identity
may one day be discovered; it may be one of the serious suspects
mentioned in this report, or one that the police dismissed too
cavalierly all those years ago, or it may be someone completely unknown
at this time. The future may or may not reveal the Ripper's name.