The Rest Is History - 625. Jack The Ripper: Horror in Whitechapel (Part 2)
Episode Date: December 11, 2025Who was Jack the Ripper’s second victim, and why was their murder considered the true starting point of his terrifying killing spree? How did the police investigation unfold? And, when and how did t...he Ripper strike again…? Join Dominic and Tom as they travel further into the dark streets of Victorian London and follow Jack the Ripper’s depraved trail, as they unravel the truth behind the world’s most famous murderer. Hive. Know your power. Visit https://hivehome.com to find out more. Learn more at https://www.uber.com/onourway Give The Rest Is History Club this Christmas – a year of bonus episodes, ad-free listening, early access, the private chat community hosted on Discord, and an exclusive t-shirt! Just go to https://therestishistory.supportingcast.fm/giftsAnd of course, you can still join for yourself at any time at therestishistory.com or on apple podcasts. Get our exclusive NordVPN deal here ➼ https://nordvpn.com/restishistory It's risk-free with Nord's 30-day money-back guarantee ✅ For more Goalhanger Podcasts, head to www.goalhanger.com _______ Twitter: @TheRestHistory @holland_tom @dcsandbrook Video Editor: Jack Meek Social Producer: Harry Balden Assistant Producer: Aaliyah Akude Producer: Tabby Syrett Senior Producer: Theo Young-Smith Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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London lies today under the spell of a great terror.
A nameless reprobate, half beast, half man is at large,
who is daily gratifying,
his murderous instincts on the most miserable and defenceless classes of the community.
There can be no shadow of a doubt now that our original theory was correct, and that the White
Chapel murderer who has now four, if not five, victims to his knife, is one man, and that
man, a murderous maniac. Hidious malice, deadly cunning, insatiable thirst for blood.
All these are the marks of the mad homicide.
The ghoul-like creature who stalks through the streets of London, stalking down his victim like a porny Indian, is simply drunk with blood, and he will have more.
The question is, what are the people of London to do?
The police have not even a clue.
They are in despair at their utter failure to get so much as a scent of the criminal.
London must rouse itself.
No woman is safe while this ghoul is abroad.
Up citizens then and do your own police work.
So that was the evening star on Saturday the 8th of September 1888 after the discovery of
yet another victim of the Whitechapel murderer, and I use the phrase Whitechapel murderer
advisedly because he is not yet known as Jack the Ripper, although Dominic today we will be
exploring how the Whitechapel murderer comes to get that appellation.
We will indeed, yes. So let's remind people where and when we are.
We are in the late summer of 1888. We are in the east end of London, which we describe,
last time is this kind of labyrinth, this warren of crowded, narrow streets and sort of reeking
tenement slums. And it's a national byword, the East End for poverty, for homelessness,
for prostitution and for crime. And one of the things that's going to become very important
in the next couple of episodes, it's an area that is being transformed by immigration,
specifically Jewish refugees from the pogroms in Russia and in Poland. So to really, to really,
To recap the story of the last episode, Tom, you described how on the 7th of August, a woman called Martha Tabram was found murdered in a tenement building off Whitechaple High Street, and her body had been stabbed almost 40 times, to quote the accounts at the time, butchered with virulent savagery.
And then in the second half of the last episode, we talked about a second body, which was found in a narrow lane called Bucks Row, just before 4 o'clock in the morning on the 31st of August.
and this is another woman who was lying on her back
and the details, as they will be throughout this series,
even more horrific.
Her throat slashed from ear to ear,
her body ripped open to reveal her intestines.
And this was Mary Ann or Polly Nichols,
very poor, alcoholic, homeless,
possibly an occasional prostitute.
And she's the first of the canonical five Ripper victims
because really,
although it's quite possible that Martha Tabram was also killed by the same man,
it's with Polly Nichols that the press for Aurora begins
and the Jack the Ripper phenomenon begins, I suppose, doesn't it?
Yeah, and the police, as we mentioned in the previous episode,
are at a complete loss.
There are no clues.
None of the people who lived in Bucks Row had seen or heard anything out of the ordinary.
And the press, as you mentioned, I mean, they had,
been fascinated by the murder of Martha Tabram. It has received quite a lot of coverage,
a unique and mysterious crime because of its sheer savagery, the East London Observer said.
And because of that, and because you now have a second killing, the newspapers immediately assume
that both Martha and Polly have been killed by the same person and that this person must be
a lunatic or perhaps someone of blood-drinking, vampiric, cannibalistic tastes.
Yes.
So when the evening pollies found, the Evening Star, which is the biggest evening paper in Britain,
runs the banner headlines, revolting murder, another woman found horribly mutilated in Whitechapel,
ghastly crimes by a maniac.
And Dominic, then, as now, these are the kind of headlines that are guaranteed to get readership,
aren't they? They are indeed, absolutely. And the same paper comes back to the story in the
next few days, so the very next day. In each case, the victim has been a woman of abandoned
character. Each crime has been committed in the dark hours of the morning. And more important
still, as pointing to one man and that man a maniac being the culprit, each murder has been
accompanied by hideous mutilation. And the paper says, clearly these crimes are, quote,
the work of some cool, cunning man with a mania for murder. They love a bit of a literate.
in a late Victorian newspaper.
The reason that we're quoting so much from the newspapers
is that they are absolutely central,
not necessarily to the crimes,
but to the Jack the Ripper phenomenon,
to the historical phenomenon of the Jack the Ripper case.
Because I think, as lots of Ripper historians think,
this is as much a story about the newspapers
and about publishing and indeed about mass literacy
as it is one about crime or poverty or prostitution.
And part of that, I think, is because so much of what we know about the murders actually comes to us from newspaper reports.
Yeah.
So not from official documents.
Because a lot of those have been lost, haven't they?
The inquest reports and so on.
Exactly.
So what we know of the inquests comes to us often through the newspapers or street scenes and so on.
And there's a brilliant book on the Ripper case.
I think the definitive book, really, by a guy called Philip Sugden.
If that name rings a slight bell, it's because he's actually the brother of the John Sugden, who's the design.
definitive biographer of Nelson.
I mean, imagine the discussions they have at Christmas.
Yeah, incredible.
So Philip Sutton's book is called The Complete History of Jack the Ripper.
And, you know, it's I think by far the most scholarly and sort of serious book on this.
And he points out that the newspapers in 1888 are competing for a new readership and
they're doing so with ever goria and more salacious stories.
And so everything that we understand about the Jack the Ripper is coloured by that.
And the context for this is that Britain has been transformed by the 1870 and 1880 Education Acts,
which mandated state education and basically drove up adult literacy to 100% for the first time in history.
So for the first time, Britain is genuinely a nation of readers.
And the streets are awash with people selling, for example, penny dreadfuls.
These are these cheap stories of crime and horror and adventure and mystery that are read over,
overwhelmingly by young men and boys. And I think the entire reporting of the Ripper phenomenon,
including Jack the Ripper's name, owes a huge amount to these penny dreadfuls. So that's one
thing to bear in mind. And then the other is the mass market newspaper. So newspapers are
cheaper than ever before to produce new technology and so on. There's hundreds of competing
titles. And crime and sex are absolutely central to their appeal. So one example that we'll
come back to, the Palmao Gazette. Tom, tell us about the Palmael Gazette. There's a case for saying
that the Palmael Gazette is the original tabloid newspaper of the kind that anyone who's read a
British newspaper will be familiar with. And it was edited by a guy from Northumbria called WT
Stead throughout the 1880s who ultimately would end up on Titanic. So that's a link between
the two stories. And he ran a series of incredibly sensational stories,
boses, of which the most famous was a crusade against child prostitution. And these stories
and campaigns have a direct knock-on effect on the program of slum clearance that is
lapping at the borders of Whitechapel throughout this period and the closing of brothels. And we
will be coming to him and his role in the story in a later episode. Yeah. But he's a key figure.
So it's through papers like the Palmael Gazette and its competitors that people know about the murders.
They both stoke and they report the fear and anger on the streets.
So there's a great example.
The 4th of September, the Daily News, sends a reporter down to Buck's Row, where the body was found.
And he finds, or he says he finds, crowds of poor women who are sort of studying the paving
stones for bloodstains.
And he takes great glee in reporting what they say.
I say reporting, but of course.
He might be making it up.
He might be making it up, right?
Because it sounds often too good to be true, because he says,
There's a little woman with a rosy cherub face who says to him,
Life ain't no great thing with many on us, but we don't all want to be murdered.
And if things go on like this, it won't be safe for nobody to put their heads out of doors.
And this is precisely the kind of thing the readers of the newspaper want East End women to say.
But Dominic, I mean, there is also, I mean, it is expressive of a genuine sentiment of kind of horror and people rallying together, isn't it?
And so there's huge crowds for Polly Nichols when she's buried in the,
the city of London Cemetery, of course, in Ilford.
And this was a woman who was on her own, and now at her death, there are people who
think, well, you know, she was one of ours.
It's not just made up, is it?
Well, no, no, no.
It brings out the latent sentimentality of the British silent majority.
Do you not think of the British working classes that's always there.
And of course, all of this, the genuine horror and fear on the streets, plus the press,
puts enormous pressure on the police.
And we haven't really talked that much about the police so far.
So I think in the popular imagination, there's a general sense that the police are either unbelievably incompetent or uniquely malevolent, don't you?
I'd say they're incompetent.
They're either the blundering fools of Sherlock Holmes, the Lestrade and his colleagues, who are always one step behind the murderer and, of course, any amateur private detective who went to investigate this case.
And I think most serious historians are much more generous.
and say, you know, the police are far from perfect, but they're actually, you know,
in an age before modern technology, they're doing the very best that they can in an
impossible situation. So to paint a picture, the Metropolitan Police was set up by Sir Robert
Peel in 1829. If you think of the Mets catchment area, as it were, you're looking at
around about, about 6 million people, and they have 15,000 men to do it. Of course, they are all men.
Now, today, the vet has 43,000 people policing about 8.5 million people.
So they're comparatively understaffed back in the 1880s.
They, in some ways, they're very modern organisation.
So their police stations are linked by telegraph.
But they're still working out of the sort of original, very cramped, sort of office building in Whitehall, Scotland Yard.
And in recent months, in particular, they've become.
very controversial. You mentioned in the last episode the chief commissioner of the Met, Sir Charles
Warren. He's come from a military background, hasn't he? So he's served two terms in South Africa,
but also just because it will feed into some of the theories that we'll be talking about
in our final episode, he is a Freemason and he has an obsessive interest in the site of the
temple in Jerusalem, which is fundamental to Freemasonry. And he was actually, he'd spent a term
in Palestine and had conducted the first serious archaeological excavation of Temple Mount,
the site of the temple.
So I just throw that out as some contextualization.
Maybe that's an important clue, or maybe it's a mad red herring, but we'll find out.
Anyway, he's been trying to modernize the Met, reflecting his military background.
He's been trying to centralize it, to bring in more military discipline, and to bring in more
people from the army. And at the same time, the Met has been dragged into politics. So, for example,
you talked last time about the bloody Sunday, sort of the homeless camp, the demonstrations,
the police had cracked down on it. And radical papers have ever since been painting the police
as a tool of the capitalist establishment, you know, a tool of repression of the working class.
It's literally like listening to Theo Young Smith, their producer, isn't it? So the police have been
getting a lot of stick and they're in a very difficult place. Now, these murders are a massive
challenge for the police as they would be today, but even more so. So to remind people,
the crimes so far have been carried out in this warren of very poor, very narrow streets
at night with no witnesses. The killer, they assume, works alone. I mean, I think this is
what most people who studied the Jack the Ripper murders still believe there was just one person.
He has no accomplices. He leaves no trace and no clues. He has no obvious motive. That's the
key thing, isn't it? Yeah. Now, today, people would say out, but there's an obvious motive of serial
killers. Do have motives. They're mad. But people don't have a sense of this in the 1880s. The
studies have not yet been done on serial killers. So people are bewildered and horrified. This is why
there's so much talk of him being a maniac. And to make him,
matters more difficult for the police, the people he kills and their friends are the kind of
people who generally keep, as it were, to the shadows of society. They are down and outs. They're
poor. They're homeless. They've maybe been in trouble with the police. They're part of the sort
of the underclass, as it were. So all of this means that it's a tough case to solve. Police forces
today find such cases very difficult to solve. But in 1888, the CID, the criminal investigation,
department. They are only 10 years old. They can't test blood. There's no fingerprint
bureau that doesn't get opened until 1901. And they don't have a science laboratory.
They don't have any form of laboratory and they won't have one for another 40 years.
So as Philip Sugden, to quote him, says, the odds were in favor of Jack the Ripper from the
very beginning. You don't have to believe there's a cover-up or a conspiracy. It would have been
a very difficult case to solve. But also, just to throw into the mix, there's also the evident fact
that the murder is incredibly audacious, very opportunistic, and clearly, I think, very lucky.
Yes, I think so. These are all factors that are making it more difficult for the police.
Exactly. So now at this stage, the police, I think, it's just two murders as far as they're concerned, if you count Martha Tabram.
And they see no great cause for alarm. So Sir Charles Warren has been on holiday in France, and they've just brought in a new guy, Dr. Robert Anderson, as assistant commissioner and head of CID.
But on the 7th of September, he leaves for a month's holiday in Switzerland.
When he takes the job, he says, sure, I'll take the job, but I'd like to go on holiday in Switzerland first.
And they later get a lot of stick for this.
But of course, it never occurs to them at the time that these, you know, apparently inconsequential killings in the East End will become defining stories of late Victorian Britain.
Why would it?
As far as they're concerned, these are two kind of homeless women or whatever had been murdered.
so what? They've gone on holiday. But the newspapers, I think it's pretty clear, are itching for the
next installments because they can see that this is going to be a big story. Because this is how
the Victorian publishing industry works, isn't it, through installments. Yeah. And, you know,
if you're kind of waiting for the next chapter in the story, then when it happens, you're going to
go massive with it. Of course. And you get a sense of them, they're desperate for it to happen.
And so the East London advertised, we've quoted that already.
This came on the streets, this newspaper, on the morning of Saturday, the 8th of September.
Throughout the week, the interest in the Whitechapel murder has been kept at fever heat.
The murderer must creep out from somewhere.
He must patrol the streets in search of his victims.
Doubtless, he's out night by night.
Every woman in those parts goes in nightly danger of her life as long as he remains at large.
So here's a thought.
Yeah.
What if it's a newspaper editor?
to improve circulation.
Yeah.
That's a good thought, actually.
Throw that into the mix.
Listeners can let Tom know what they think of that suggestion.
They don't need to let me know, just let Tom know personally.
I think I might have contributed what is very unusual in riparology, an original theory there.
Wow, that's exciting.
Well, listen, even as people were reading those words in the East London advertiser,
that the murderer must creep out, he must strike again.
On that Saturday morning, the news is spreading that just as predicted
the Ripper has struck again.
Well, Dominic, the Whitechapel murderer.
Yes, of course.
You're right.
He's not yet the Ripper.
So the scene is 29 Hanbury Street in Spittlefields.
And it's on the north side of the street.
We're in the dilapidated three-story house at number 29.
Almost every room of this house is rented by a different family.
And that tells its own story.
So it's a real warren of people.
And to picture the house, at the back of the house,
there are three stone steps that go down and
a little yard and in the yard there is an outside toilet and there's a woodshed and the whole
thing is enclosed by a wooden fence and it's very tight it's very narrow and that's saturday
morning the 8th of september some of the people living in the house get out very early because
it's market day and they're going to work as you said before this is going to be a theme of this
whole story yeah and one of them is a guy who's a carman which is a kind of cart driver called
john davis he's a little man with a stoop and he rents the attic and he lives in the attic
with his family.
And he gets up when the Spittlefield church clock strikes 5.45 a.m.
His wife makes him a cup of tea because he's going off to the Ledenhall Market.
He goes downstairs and he notices that the door to the street is wide open.
Now that's nothing unusual.
There's so many people living in the house.
They're coming and going.
They're working odd hours and things.
So he shuts that door.
Then he goes to the back door.
The back door is closed.
He goes out of the back door into the yard because he just,
just wants to take some air before he goes off to work and he steps outside and he sees something
terrible it's the body of a woman sprawled on her back between the steps and the fence and he rushes
back through the house and into the street he hails some workmen the workmen come and look they're very
shaken they go off to find a policeman and by the time of the policeman inspector joseph chandler arrives
the place is packed so the house is suddenly alive there's loads of people in the corridors and the
and stuff. But no one's gone out into the yard. They've left it alone. So he pushes through and he
goes into the yard. He's the first person to inspect the body. And to quote his written report,
and of course this will be very gruesome. So if you're listening to this in the car with small
children, I mean, frankly, why are you listening to a podcast about Jack the Ripper with small
children? But anyway, you've been warned. He said, I at once proceeded to number 29
Hanbury Street and in the backyard found a woman lying on her back, dead, left arm resting on left
breast, legs drawn up, abducted, small intestines and flap of the abdomen lying on the right
side, above right shoulder, attached by a cord with the rest of the intestines inside the
body. Two flaps of skin from the lower part of the abdomen lying in a large quantity of blood
above the left shoulder, throat cut deeply from left and back in a jagged manner right around
throat. So it's a hideous spectacle and it's confirmed by the police surgeon. Dr. George
George Bags to Phillips, who's very highly respected and in his 50s, and he's an important person.
Some of his thoughts about who might have done this kind of run right through this case.
Phillips thinks that it's possible that the victim was strangled first, and then there was this
terrible savage cut in her throat.
And that is one of the factors that would have stopped there being kind of excessive
blood loss.
Exactly.
And then the really shocking thing, the really gory thing, the abdomen was cut open.
And basically the intestines were taken out and placed by the victim's shoulder.
And then Dr. Phillips finds that the victim's uterus, most of her bladder, and part of her vagina were completely removed with a kind of clean cut and taken away.
Now, of course, I've called her the victim.
But this was, let's remind ourselves, a living, breathing woman with an inner life of her own.
And her name was Annie Chapman.
and we will be talking about her life
and what brought her to this position
on our bonus episode for club members
along with the lives of Elizabeth Stride
and Catherine Eddows, two of the other victims.
So if you're not a member of the Restis History Club,
you can sign up at arresticitoria.com
and you'll find out about these lives
and what they tell us about the late Victorian world.
But a quick summary, just for now, about Annie.
She was 47.
She'd had a very tragic life.
Her father was a soldier and then a kind of a manservant.
She'd been born in West London.
She'd married a coachman.
And as actually with Polly Nichols, the curse is alcoholism.
She's been a drinker from a young age.
She has three children, but she ends up separating from her husband because of drink,
because of disorderly conduct and whatnot.
By the time she gets to 1888, she's very badly off.
She's ill with tuberculosis as well, isn't she?
Yeah, tuberculosis.
She's kind of drifting from one Doss House to another.
We can discuss in the bonus episode whether or not she is a prostitute.
What we do know is on the afternoon of the 7th of September, she'd run out of money.
She said to a friend of hers, I need to go and get some money.
Otherwise, I shall have no lodgings.
So very like polynickels.
I mean, almost identical.
Exactly.
She did get some money, whether through begging or through selling sexual services, we don't know.
But then she spent the money on drink instead of lodgings.
and that decision cost to her life.
So again, like Polly.
Yeah, because she was kicked out of her lodging house on 35 Dorset Street.
She goes out just before 2 a.m. onto the streets, probably to earn the coppers for a bed.
And her last words, I shall soon be back.
Don't let the bed.
I said, Dominic, right from the moment that Annie Chapman's body is discovered,
the police recognize that they are dealing with the same killer who had dispatched
Polly, definitely, and probably Martha before her.
Yes.
And they assigned to the case the same inspector who is handling the investigation into Polly
Nichols' death.
And this is a guy called Frederick Abiline, who is age 45.
He's from Dorset, the son of a clerk, and he is often produced, isn't he, in kind of
popular versions of the Ripper story.
And he's kind of portrayed as an alcoholic or weirdly obsessed with prostitutes or being comically
incompetent. Although in the film From Hell, he's portrayed by Johnny Depp as an opium addict who
sees glimpses into the truth of the actual case. And Johnny Depp has his very fine features
and his cheekbones and everything. In reality, Abiline had the appearance of a bank manager.
So he's very stocky. He's very round-faced. And he has an absolutely colossal Victorian moustache.
He does. Yeah, we like a good moustache on this show. And that endears Abiline to me, I have to say. I think Abiline is really, really hard done by in the sort of pop history versions of this case. Because all the evidence we have is that he was a very, very good policeman. He had risen through the ranks precisely because he was competent, efficient, reliable. And he knows Spittle feels like the back of his hand, doesn't he?
He genuinely does. He's an old East End hand. He'd been in charge of the CID in Whitechapel.
in the late 1870s and early 1880s.
He is the obvious man to put on this case
because he knows the area, he has contacts there,
and he will go on to work incredibly hard on this case.
You know, he goes for days without sleep,
and he's drowning in paper and stuff,
and he's doing his absolute best.
So it's really harsh for these sort of, you know,
to portray him as this sort of prostitute crazed drug addicts is bonkers.
Yeah, and I think he is highly regarded.
by his peers and he does come up with two quite influential theories as to who the Ripper might
have been which again we will be exploring in due course so the problem that he faces as before
is that there are no clues the local tenants the people living in 29 hambury street have
seen nothing this body has just appeared in the yard overnight and they don't know how it got there
none of the neighbors of course the police talk to every single neighbor none of them have
seen anybody acting suspiciously or with bloodstained hands or clothes or whatever.
However, there are three important witnesses, so we should take a bit of time to look at
what these people say.
The first one is a market porter called John Richardson, and his mother rented the ground floor
rooms at number 29.
Now, she'd had a break-in, you know, very common in this area, and so every market morning
he would go to look, just check the door of her cellars, see that it was, you know,
locked. And he'd done so this morning. He'd actually gone out into the yard just before five
o'clock in the morning to fix his boot. And he didn't see a body. So that means that Annie must
have died after five o'clock. Unless he did it. Well, unless he did it, I suppose. So we've got
quite a narrow window of time now because that bloke who found the body, remember, he heard
the Spittlefield's clock toll 545. So we're narrowing down the window.
The second witness is a local woman called Elizabeth Long.
And at about 5.30 in the morning, she'd been walking along Hanbury Street to Spittlefield's
market, and she'd seen a man and woman talking outside number 29, and she later went to
the mortuary, and she positively identified the woman as Annie Chapman.
I mean, that's a very narrow window, then.
Yes.
It's only 15 minutes, isn't it?
I mean, less than 15 minutes.
So if she's right, and I think she probably is right, then the murder must be.
be committed between about 530 and 545. And not only does she say this woman was Annie
she gives us a pretty good description of the man that was talking to Annie. And I'll quote
it, he was dark complexioned and wearing a brown deer stalker hat. I think he was wearing a dark
coat. He was a man over 40 as far as I could tell. He seemed to be a little taller than the
deceased. Now Annie was quite short. She was five foot tall. He's only a little taller. So he's maybe
you know, 5-3, 5-4, 5-5, something like that.
He looked to me like a foreigner as well as I could make out.
Hard to say what that means.
He looked what I should call shabby genteel.
Philip Sugden in his brilliant book on the Jack the Ripper case says,
this man was the murderer.
This is what the murderer looks like.
And actually, in the next couple of episodes,
we'll be describing other witnesses and other murders
who see similar-looking men, short, mustache,
Dear Stalker hat, you know, this is a common kind of description, isn't it? It's a common profile, Tom. Yeah. And one thing that he is, not, by the way, he's not tall. And there's no sense whatsoever really important and probably disappointing for the conspiracy theorist community among our listeners. He's not an aristocrat. He's not wearing a top hat or an opera cloak. He's not carrying a medical bag. He is none of those things. Although witnesses will in due course,
claim to have seen such a man.
They will indeed.
Yes, we'll be coming to that.
Now, I said there are three witnesses.
The third witness is a carpenter called Albert Kadoche.
He lived next door to number 29 and number 27.
He got up early and he said at about 520 or so he couldn't be sure.
He went out into the yard and he heard low voices from over the fence
and the only word he could make out was no.
And then a few minutes later he said he heard a noise like and I quote,
something falling against the fence.
then he left for work
and as he passed Spittlefield's church
he looked up and he saw the clock
and he noted that it was 532
so that would seem to sort of tally
you know Mrs Long sees the couple talking round about 530
then he similar time
hears people talking in the yard
and then he hears someone falling against a fence
and then at 532 he looks up and sees the clock
you know they're probably out
each of them is out probably by a couple of minutes
because people can never be precise about these things,
but it seems to tally.
So, remember that Annie had gone out to earn some money
just around 2 a.m.
So there are two possibilities.
Possibility number one,
Hallie Rubenhold in her book, The Five,
she believes all the women were killed as they slept.
So she thinks Annie just went into the yard of number 29.
She lay down in a corner, went to sleep and was murdered as she slept.
Philip Sutton, on the other hand,
she went out to solicit to get customers,
sometime around 5.30 just before 5.30 she fell in with the killer. He took her into the yard,
or she took him into the yard, rather. Then he probably strangled her, lowered her to the ground,
cut her throat, and then started the ripping process. Mrs. Long's testimony would suggest
that is probably more feasible, wouldn't it? Definitely would. And I don't think Callie Rubenhold
mentions Mrs. Long's testimony in her book, The Five. But I find it quite convincing. So a couple of
quick observations from this before we take the break.
Number one, as you've said, Tom, the Killam is incredibly daring.
I mean, there's no doubt about that.
The sun rose that day at 523.
So it is light when he is going about his business.
And it's as a market morning.
There are loads of people moving around.
Even as he and Ania are in the yard, people are getting up in the house and moving about.
Yeah, which makes the question of motivation all the more striking.
I mean, what is so desperate that he would take such incredible risks?
Are the risks not the thrill?
Is that not the thrill of it for him, do you think?
But I'm just thinking in terms of the police.
Yes.
I mean, these are kind of dimensions of psychology that they're not really attuned to as yet.
Of course not.
They don't employ psychologists or anything like that.
No.
Number two, the killer is incredibly quick and he obviously knows the area.
So if he did this crime, you know, and did the disembarker, you know,
and did the disemboweling and stuff. He's done it in a matter of moments. You know, no hesitation or
anything. He's very fast. And then he gets away so quickly. And there's a really interesting little clue.
There was a tap in the yard with a pail of clean water underneath. And it was still there after he had
left. In other words, he didn't clean himself. He didn't turn the tap on because it would have
had blood in it. So in other words, he has left covered presumably in blood. I mean, I know you
don't bleed that much if you've been strangled and then stabbed. But the disemboweling would be
gory work, right? Yeah. He's got away through the Warren of Streets carrying some of
Annie Chapman's internal organs without being spotted. So he must know the area, right? Here's a
spoiler alert. I think if you're a member of the royal family, you're going to get lost in that area
and you're going to be spotted pretty quickly, frankly. Or a distinguished former prime minister or
whatever. Yeah. Or if you're the elephant man, frankly, people are going to spot you. Yeah.
Right. Finally, the killer knows what he's doing. This is a really, really important thing.
Dr. Phillips said to take out those internal organs would have taken me an hour, you know, to do the
surgery, to find them, all of this. The killer must have done it in moments, in minutes, you know,
five minutes, three or four minutes. The coroner at the inquest said he must have been
somebody who had considerable anatomical skill and knowledge. He basically knew what he wanted,
where to find it, and how to use his knife. No unskilled person could have known where to find it,
this is the victim's uterus, or could have recognized it when it was found. Now, that doesn't
mean the victim must be a doctor or a surgeon, but it does mean it's somebody who knows a fair
bit about anatomy and knows how to use a knife.
So perhaps a butcher or a medical student or perhaps a slaughterman working in one of the knacker's yards or whatever.
Exactly. So all interesting clues. Anyway, Annie is buried in secret on the 14th of September.
And by this point, Whitechapel is in a state of near hysteria and we'll come back to the heart of the East End after the break.
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Hello and welcome back to the rest of history. We are in Whitechapel, East London and people
on the streets of the East End and beyond are coming to terms with the fact that a second,
And perhaps even third, gruesome murder has been committed by the man who is not yet called Jack the Ripper, but is already a massive star of the popular press.
And the news breaks during the course of Saturday the 8th, and journalists, editors go berserk.
And we were talking in the first half, Dominic.
I mean, this essentially is their dream scenario.
you've got another murder, and it seems to be even goryer than the previous one.
So in our first episode, I quoted the Evening Star, which is the stuff about a ghoul stalking
the streets of London and so on.
This is when it runs.
And the headline of that article was horror upon horror.
Whitechapel is panic-stricken at another fiendish crime.
And again, you can see that is absolutely calculated to fly off the newsstands.
And it has to be said that the slightly posher, more quality broadsheets, as they would describe themselves, you know, they're piling in as well.
So the Daily Telegraph, still going strong today at the time the best-selling newspaper in the world, it also buys into this kind of notion of the Gothic of the supernatural.
It tells its readers that the East End is haunted by, and I quote, beings who look like men, but are rather dead.
demons, vampires, and the result is exactly what the press wants.
Mass hysteria, mass excitement, a demand to know more.
Because there is a huge mystery.
Who is doing this?
Yeah, it is absolutely.
So there are huge crowds at the murder sites or all the murder sites.
There are crowds outside the mortuary, outside police stations.
Reporters said that the crowds were particularly made up of women.
and women would bring their children with them, you know.
And that's actually a phenomenon that you often see.
I mean, we've seen it in recent British history.
Crowds of women outside, you know, murder sites and police stations and so on.
Well, I think also, I gather that women are overwhelmingly the consumers of true crime podcasts.
They are indeed, yeah.
And going back to the golden age of detective fiction, largely read by women.
Exactly so.
Right to this day, true crime shows are watched or listened to by women.
Interesting. I don't really have an answer for why that is, but it just is what it is.
Some locals saw this as an opportunity to make money. So, as ghoulish as it sounds, the neighbours on Hanbury Street opened up their houses and they were charged visitors a penny ahead to come and look at the yard, to peer out at the yard of number 29.
There was a man on Whitechapel Road who run a sort of despondent little waxworks exhibition.
Yeah, the poor man's man to swords.
Yeah, and he got some red paint and daubed it on three waxworks.
and he charged people a penny to come and see the George Yard, Bucksrow and Ambury Street victims.
And there are loads of stories of kind of copycats and false alarms and people almost being lynched.
So that very first evening, a man punches a policeman in the pub or something and is basically taken to the police station.
And the word gets around, we've got the Whitechapel murderer.
And so people pile in and they're desperate to lynch this bloke, basically, it's just had a fight in a pub.
That's all it is.
And there are some kind of properly suspicious people as well that the police are feeling their collars, right?
Yeah, there are.
So in the next sort of week or two, the police arrested nine different people and interrogated them on the suspicion that they might be the killer.
And it's tempting to laugh at the police and say, oh, they got it wrong, which they did with all of these men.
But it's instructive to look at who they arrested because it shows you how their minds are working.
So to give a couple of examples, there's a German barber called Charles Ludwig who was arrested with a prostitute and he was carrying a clasp knife, a razor and a pair of scissors with him.
Yeah, that's suspicious.
You could say the tools of his trade or you could say she was terrified when police finally found them and she was worried that he was going to murder her and, you know, he fits to some extent, he fits the bill, right?
It makes sense.
Then there's a butcher, a pork butcher from Switzerland called Jakob Eisenschmidt.
He was a drinker.
He suffered depression.
He would often sort of meaningfully sharpen his long knife at people, which I think didn't inspire great confidence.
Again, suspicious behaviour.
Yeah.
And also he'd been in and out of lunatic asylums.
And he had a strange habit of he would sometimes get hold of bullocks entrails and post them to his old shop as a sort of threat.
I think the evidence is stacking up.
And it's also interesting that both of those men are foreign.
Yes.
And Mrs. Long had said that the person that she'd seen talking to Annie Chapman, he looked to me like a foreigner.
Yeah.
And this sense of whether the Ripper is a foreigner or not becomes quite important to editorials and so on,
because there's a kind of assumption that no Englishman could possibly be doing this, that it must be someone from abroad.
Absolutely, right. Absolutely.
And the most significant of these early suspects is also somebody with an overseas background.
And he is a shoemaker, a Jewish shoemaker, called John Paiser, who was arrested on the 10th.
And he is the man who was mentioned in the last episode, because his nickname was Leather Apron.
And in the days and weeks since the Polly Nichols murder, his name or his nickname had appeared a lot in the press.
And the press had said, there's this bloke apparently called Leather Apron, who goes around,
harassing prostitutes and threatening them and beating them up.
It's such a terrifying name, isn't it?
And I do think that in these cases, a suspect with a terrifying name ramps up the tension
massively.
Oh, definitely it does.
So there was a hunt for this bloat leather apron.
They find him at last, and he does tick a lot of boxes.
He's 5'4, he has a very strong Polish accent, and he has a history of violence with a
shoemaker's knife.
And the police genuinely, I think at first think, this is.
is the guy. This is him. Yeah. But unfortunately, he has a pretty cast iron alibi for Polly Nichols's
murder because he'd been staying at a lodging house and he'd gone outside with the owner of the
lodging house to watch a fire at London docks. They'd watched it in the distance. And the bloke
from the lodging house said, I absolutely know for sure I spent the evening with this bloke because
we stood together watching the fire and talking about it. And with all of these people, with almost
all of these people, they were still in custody when future murders happened. So the police
could be certain that it wasn't them.
But people start to mock the police
so that the humorous magazine Punch
produced a kind of parody
called a detective's diary
and they said, you know,
oh, we heard that there's a rumor
that the bloke wore a blue coat
so we arrested everybody who wore blue coats.
The blue coat people were innocent.
We heard it might be a soldier.
We found a small drummer boy.
We arrested him and all this kind of thing.
Which is sort of mildly amusing,
but it's not really fair
because actually there is definitely method
in their madness.
Yeah, I mean, I think that if you're kind of going around thrusting daggers and knives in the face of prostitutes, I would arrest them.
Yeah, correct, exactly. So actually, of these people they arrested, three of them had been in asylums. Three of them were widely regarded as being of unsound mind. Five of them knew about anatomy. There might be butchers or slaughtermen or whatever. Interestingly, only three of them actually had been born abroad. So the element about being a foreigner, she's vague about that. She can't really explain why she thinks he's a foreigner. So the police clearly don't put as much weight on that.
as they do on other elements of her testimony.
Because obviously the police know that English people are perfectly capable of doing murders
because they, you know, they're arresting murderers all the time.
Yes, I think that's fair, actually.
Now, this business about being a foreigner, though, it is incendiary
because it's so dangerous for one group in particular.
And this takes us back to the social background of Whitechapel.
Whitechapel has been transformed in the last 10 years, in particular,
by Jewish immigration.
So in 1881,
Tsar Alexander II
was assassinated in St. Petersburg
and that kicked off
wave upon wave
of repressive anti-Semitic legislation
and then pogroms
in the Russian Empire.
And people are fleeing that
and fleeing to Britain,
in particular, on the United States.
So in 20 years,
the Russian and Polish population of London
went from less than 9,000 people
to almost
54,000 people concentrated above all in East End neighborhoods like Spitalfields or Myel End or
Whitechapel. And if you read Jerry White's brilliant book on 19th century London, he talks about
how there's an undercurrent of anti-Semitism all through this period. In some ways,
quite small-scale stuff, it's kind of broken windows, it's graffiti, it's newspaper cartoons,
it's kind of, you know, punch-ups on the street and stuff. But, you know, I said in the previous
episode. There's been an economic depression, really, since the early 1870s. So there's a lot
of job competitions, a lot of anxiety about people coming over here and stealing our jobs and
whatnot. And so it's not surprising that straight away some of the newspapers and some people
on the streets say, the killer must be a Jew. And that's one of the reasons why leather apron
is such a kind of popular candidate to have been the murder, isn't it? Because he is Jewish.
Yes, exactly. Exactly. And it's not surprising either that prominent Jews are
then keen to push back. So the very first reward that was put up for the killer's capture was put
up by Whitechapel's MP, who was a liberal, who was Samuel Montague, who was an Orthodox Jew
and was a kind of proto-Zionist. And he put up £100 for the killer. And he was then backed
up by a group called the Mile End Vigilance Committee, which will play a bit of a part in this
whole series. And the Mile End Vigilance Committee was set up by local, largely Jewish traders and
shopkeepers. And as we will see, they became nationally famous because they were to receive a letter
and a hideous gift from somebody who may well have been the killer himself. From hell.
From hell, exactly. Now, the police are not terribly keen on groups like this. First of all,
the Home Office don't like rewards. Arguing about rewards, whether or not to give a reward,
is a big, big part of the kind of police investigation. The Home Office hate rewards because they say,
Basically, if somebody knew who the killer was, they'd tell us because his crimes are so horrible.
And almost by definition, anyone who gives us information hoping for a reward is probably a hoaxer, and it's probably a false lead.
And actually, the weird thing is that Abilene and his colleagues, I mean, on the one hand, they wish they could have more clues.
But on the other, they actually have too much information.
Yeah.
They have so many false leads and so many rumors and.
and allegations and stuff.
Well, I suppose, Dominic, that the fact that, you know,
you were saying how there's a mass market now for the press
means that there are vastly more numbers who can read these stories
and say, oh, it could be this or it could be that,
or I've got this idea, or I've got that clue.
So the letters just keep coming in, right?
Of course.
And, right, their filing system collapses under the strain.
They have no computers.
I mean, it's actually the same story, oddly,
as what happened in the 1970s in West Yorkshire
with the Yorkshire Ripper, again, a pre-computer world where they were totally overwhelmed by
too much information. So the days go by, there was no breakthrough, and the pressure begins to
build on the authorities. So by the 14th of September, the star is calling the Home Secretary Henry
Matthews, and I quote, a feeble mantabank who would pose and simper over the brink of a volcano.
It's really like really one of my old columns, actually.
Well, I mean, it's amazing to know that Home Secretaries were getting abuse back then,
as they do now.
Yeah.
And even the telegraph, a Tory paper,
which should be supporting him,
said of Mr. Matthews,
we've had enough of Mr. Matthews,
who knows nothing,
has heard nothing,
and does not intend to do anything.
I mean,
plus it change.
Even so,
you get to late September,
and there is a sense,
I think,
that maybe the panic is easing,
the authorities have weathered the storm,
things are,
you know,
the killer has not yet struck again.
It's a fine summer.
You know,
the weather has been dry,
people are out and about some of the fear has dissipated and then on the 22nd of September
another murder grips the public imagination another woman has been killed her name is
Jane Bidmore but she has been stabbed and killed on a fell outside Gateshead in the
northeast of England they're a long way from the east end a long way hundreds of miles away
Now, at first, there is speculation she's another victim of the Whitechapel murderer.
As it turns out, she was actually murdered by her ex-boyfriend.
She'd dumped him.
It was a crime of passion, and he killed her.
So like Mariah Martin in the Red Barn.
Right.
But at the time, people said, well, maybe this killer has moved north.
So again, there's a sort of slackening of tension in the East End.
And on the 27th of September, the Daily News sent a reporter to Whitechapel.
and he wrote a long feature about the atmosphere.
And he said, you know, a few days ago, he said people seem very, very shocked and very frightened.
But now he says things are back to normal.
And he paints, like you can look it up online.
It's on the kind of casebook, Jack the Ripper casebook website, this story.
And he paints a really vivid picture of Whitechapel, the steaming cookshops, the flaring gin palaces and noisy shows, the cheap jacks and shooting galleries, the streaming lights and roar and rattle and hurrying throngs and noisy.
groups. Dominic, we mentioned that it's the entertainment capital of the entire East End.
So lots to do. And a lot of eccentric entertainment, shall we say. So he finds people
crowding around a performing boy with no legs, for example, or a huge crowd around a trader
who's selling trousers for nine shillings. And he stops in Hambrey Street, which is where
Annie Chapman had been found, he stops an elderly passerby. And he says to this bloke, people don't
seem very anxious about these murders. And the guy says to him, no, there's very little anxiety.
People most of them, they think he's gone to Gateshead. But has he gone to Gateshead? Because that same
day, the 27th, the editor of the Central News Office in London gets a letter written in red ink.
And that is the letter, Tom, with which we began the first episode. Do you want to read a couple of
extracts to remind people? Yeah, so just to remind people of what he said.
I keep on hearing, the police have caught me, but they won't fix me just yet.
I'm down on oars, and I shall quit ripping them till I do get buckled.
Grand work, the last job was I gave the lady no time to squeal.
I love my work, I want to start again.
You're so near of me with my funny little games.
And he said that he'd saved blood from the last job, so Annie Chapman to write with,
but it went thick like glue and I can't use it.
And then he says, the next job I do, I shall clip the ladies' ears off and send to the police.
My knife's so nice and sharp, I want to get to work right away if I get a chance.
So we said this is the most notorious letter in the entire history of crime.
And the reason for its fame is the sign-off because it ends.
Yours truly Jack the Ripper.
Don't mind me giving the trade name.
Yes.
and the reaction of the editor at the news agency
to begin with is a hoax
because obviously there have been lots of other letters
that have been obvious hoaxes
and so there is the you know this question hanging
well was it a hoax or is it real?
We'll come back to this in the next episode
but most experts think it's a hoax
the killer never did cut off of victim's ears
so he did mutilate a future victim Catherine eddows
and cut off the lobe of one of her ears,
but that was a minor thing compared
with the other mutilations he carried out.
Philip Sugton points out that this letter,
people can Google it,
they can see lots of examples of it online.
The punctuation is all over the place,
but there is not a single spelling mistake.
So as Sugden says,
it seems like the work of an educated man
pretending to be an uneducated one.
He thinks it's revealing that it's sent to a news agency,
not the police.
In other words, it's a letter sent
not to taunt the police, but to get the maximum possible publicity.
And Sulton also notes the postcode, the East Central Postcode, which covered Fleet Street,
the offices of the major newspapers, and he thinks this is probably the work of a young reporter
who is having a bit of fun and is hoping to generate a story.
And that would tally with the Jack the Ripper nickname, because first of all, the ripping bits.
of it, the ripper. The newspapers had used the word ripping and ripper a lot. They described the
ripping open of the bodies. So somebody who's immersed in the world of newspapers, that would make
sense. And then the second thing, Jack. Jack is the most common name for criminals in the
penny dreadfuls that I mentioned in the first half. And of course, monkeys. And monkeys.
Well, that occurred to me as well. So when we did our episode about history's greatest
monkeys, a lot of them were called Jack. Jacko McCacko, Jack the Signalman, Corporal Jackie,
and so on. Jack was a standard name that you reached for, you know, if you were creating a
character, should we say. Yeah, and there's a hint of a kind of a rogue, a lad, an adventurer as
well, isn't there? Jack the lad, exactly. So one of the most popular figures on the Victorian stage
was the 18th century burglar Jack Shepherd. And there was also a kind of urban legend, I mean,
it seems mad now that there would be such an urban legend, but it was very popular in the
sort of middle of the 19th century, an urban legend of somebody called Springheel Jack,
who would kind of leap out and attack young girls and young women.
Yeah, and kind of vanish in a blaze of fire.
Yeah, and the sort of rumors of this character is the kind of thing kids will tell each other
in the playground.
There's this book called Spring Heel Jack who kind of leaps out and then vanishes again.
The nickname is precisely the kind of nickname.
I think that a young journalist who goes to the stage a lot, goes to the theatre, reads Penny Dreadfuls, would choose.
And it's an exciting, newsworthy name.
Yeah, and the evidence for that is that it goes viral, doesn't it?
It does go viral, exactly, based not purely on this, right?
So the editor of the Central News Agency doesn't think it's real, but two days later, he passes it to Scotland Yard anyway and says, you know, you might want to just check this out.
And then that very evening comes the most dramatic episode of the whole story, one of the most gruesome nights in London's history.
So we'll start in Burner Street, in the heart of Whitechapel.
It's the evening of Saturday, the 29th of September.
And we are at specifically a sort of courtyard called Dutfield's Yard, and it was enclosed by a row of cottages by a print workshop and by the International Working Men's Educational Club, which was a socialist club for Russian.
and Polish Jews.
And every Saturday night, this club had debates about socialism and whatnot.
And it breaks up, the debate breaks up at about 11.30.
Most people go, but a few of them stay upstairs in the reading room to chat.
Now, in the other buildings around the yard, people are still working.
So the print workshop, people are coming and going.
The lights are kind of burning.
At about 1240, the chairman of the Socialist Club, who's a guy called Morris Eagle,
he comes into the yard, he's been walking a lady friend home.
And he can hear someone singing in Russian upstairs at the club, perfectly normal.
He goes through the gates, he goes through the yard, he doesn't notice anything strange
in the yard at all.
So this is, I'm telling you this because it gives people a sense of the wind over time.
Then 20 minutes later, a man riding a little cart comes into the yard.
And he's a Russian Jew called Louis Diemschutz.
He's the steward of the club, and he lives there with his wife.
and he's been out selling jewelry all day.
And he turns his cart into the yard
and almost immediately the pony shies away.
And he looks down to the right
and he sees something huddled by the wall of the club in the darkness.
And he prods this thing with his whip and it doesn't move
and he lights a match and it's a human body.
And he runs upstairs to the club to get help from his wife and so on.
And then he runs back.
And as his wife later told the press,
I at once recognized it as the body of a woman
while to add to my horror, I saw a stream of blood.
She was lying on her back with her head against the wall, and the face looked ghastly.
And a crowd gathers, and they lift her head, they light a match, and they see a gash in her throat.
They go and get the police.
The police arrive.
They bring a doctor.
The doctor is there by about 1.15, and he says she's been dead for about 20 minutes or half an hour.
So in other words, once again, this has happened very, very quickly.
and then about half an hour later
Detective Inspector Reid of the Metropolitan Police arrives
and eventually they identify this woman
her name is Elizabeth Stride
will tell her story in the bonus episode for our club members
just very briefly
she's an immigrant herself
she's from Gothenburg in Sweden
she'd been a domestic servant
then almost certainly in Gothenburg she was a prostitute
she came to England
she married a bloke called Stride
they set up a coffee house which collapsed her marriage fell apart it's a very familiar story the spiral of poverty homelessness and so on she had cleaning jobs but she also definitely worked as a prostitute and she'd probably gone out soliciting that night hoping to get some money for lodgings again a very familiar story and there are intriguing witness reports that describe her talking to a man and we'll talk about them next time but for now let's rewind to the discovery of the body
in Dutfield's Yard.
So that was just before 1 o'clock in the morning, right?
But the drama is not yet over.
So if we move the camera now,
three quarters of a mile to the west,
12 minutes walk away,
and we're now in another enclosed space,
mitre square just off all gate,
which is close to the eastern edge of the city of London.
And this has a very different fear.
It's not that far away.
It's only 12 minutes walk.
But the atmosphere is different.
This is much more respectable.
It's a square lined with offices and warehouses, and it's pretty empty.
And it's in the city of London.
So there is a different police jurisdiction there.
It's a much older centre of habitation, and the name Maita derives from the fact that a priory had stood on the site.
Oh, nice.
So it's this dull, lonely spot surrounded by offices and warehouses.
And at 1.30, so we're talking about just over half an hour.
after Elizabeth Stride's body was found.
At 1.30, police constable Edward Watkins
entered Mitre Square as part of his regular nighttime beat
and he walks into the square
and there's no sound but his own footsteps.
And he looks around the square and there's nothing.
Seems completely deserted.
So he leaves the square at the far end and he carries on his beat
and it takes him 15 minutes to come round.
So now he's come round and he comes back into the square
and it's 144.
and again he hears nothing, and then by his own account, I turned sharp round to the right
and flashing my light, I saw it in front of me. A more dreadful sight I never saw. It quite
knocked me over. And he runs towards the nearest lit window, which is a warehouse on the far side.
And there, the night watchman is sweeping up. And PC Watkins runs in and he shouts,
For God's sake, mate, come to my assistance. There's another woman cut to pieces. Because
for the second time in barely an hour, Jack the Ripper has struck again.
But who, Dominic, has he slain and what further horrors may lie ahead?
And rest his history, club members can find out right away, because the next three episodes,
including the final episode in which we will be unmasking the identity of the murderer,
are available to hear right now.
And if you would like to hear them too and you're not signed up to the Restis History Club,
then you can go to the Restis History.com and do so there.
Thank you very much, Dominic.
Thank you everyone for listening.
Goodbye.
Bye-bye.
Throughout time, celebration has meant giving.
So the Romans at Saturnalia handed out all kinds of gifts,
The three magi handed out gold, frankincense and myrrh, and the Victorians absolutely loved
wrapping things up in paper and then tying it up in string.
It's on those are lovely gestures, but I wonder if they're a little bit too extravagant
for the typical Christmas morning.
So this year, here's my suggestion to our listeners and our viewers.
Why not give something a little bit more enlightened?
Why not give the gift of the rest is history club membership?
It's the discerning choice for anybody who prefers a Hannibal to a hamper.
It's ad-free listening.
You get a weekly bonus episode.
You get early access to live shows.
And you get exclusive deep dive series.
Also, on top of that, this year's special gift edition of Restis History Club membership comes with a sensational exclusive t-shirt.
It will make you the envy of all your neighbours and all the cool people in your neighbourhood.
if such people exist, will admire you and want to spend more time with you.
So just head to the rest ishistory.com and click on gifts.
That is therestishistory.com and please click on gifts.
