Perhaps the reason for Jack the Ripper’s continued hold on our imagination is how little we truly know about him. That lets us apply our own personal biases and mindsets to identify the killer or motives. Was he a poor Eastern European immigrant? An aristocrat amusing himself with human prey? A sex maniac, perhaps driven insane by impotence?
We still don’t know exactly which of the many murder victims in the time and area were killed by the Ripper. The so-called canonical five victims (Mary Ann Nichols, Annie Chapman, Elizabeth Stride, Catherine Eddowes, and Mary Jane Kelly) are identified by the very similar types of attacks, but were there starter crimes before the killer established that pattern?
1#The Rainham Murder Victim
In the summer of 1887, several body parts were found in the Thames River in Rainham, a rural town more than 10 miles from London. The torso of an unknown woman in her mid-to-late twenties was found in a package in the river in May. The head, legs, and arms had all been cut off, though the victim’s thigh later surfaced in another package.This crime wasn’t associated with the Ripper murders until two years later, when other bodies in packages appeared in the Thames. Some suspect that this woman and others whose body parts were found in the river had died during illegal abortions, and that the abortionists dismembered them not only to more easily dispose of the bodies but to hide any evidence of the abortion or their identity.
2#Annie Millwood
It took her almost a month to recover fully from her injuries, and she was released on March 21. She died a week later from a ruptured pulmonary artery. While the stress of the attack might have exacerbated an existing condition, it was not the direct cause of death.
3#Ada Wilson
A witness saw the man leave and alerted two police constables, who searched but didn’t find him.
4#Emma Elizabeth Smith
She told the keeper of her lodging house that she was suffering from internal pains, and the keeper took her to the London Hospital. She had severe internal injuries and died of peritonitis the next day.
5#Martha Tabram
During the night, several people had heard screams and shouts for the police, but this was nothing that unusual in Whitechapel. The autopsy, though, indicated that Tabram hadn’t had a chance to call for help. Because of the unprecedented brutality of this murder, it drew more attention than the earlier ones, and the press attacked the police for not being able to solve it.
6#Jane Beadmore
He disappeared after the murder, and when he was found and arrested, he pleaded not guilty but later confessed, saying that he had been reading about the Whitechapel murders. While there’s no evidence that anybody other than Waddell was involved, at least the method suggests copycat elements.
7#The Whitechapel Torso Murder
Ordinarily, the missing uterus would suggest that it was an abortionist trying to disguise the true cause of the woman’s death, but leaving the torso there was clearly a message of defiant contempt, as well as an indication that whoever left it there was familiar with the rather confusing layout for the new building. The police later found a leg and an arm but not the head or anything else that could help them identify the victim.
8#Elizabeth Jackson
She was later identified as Elizabeth Jackson from the clothing that she was wearing. Just days before the first body parts were found, the police received a letter, signed “Jack the Ripper,” saying “He is not dead but liveth,” and adding that he intended to begin his work again.
9#Alice Mckenzie
The murder also brought public attention to the particularly decrepit state of the housing in Castle Alley, which lacked adequate ventilation. The authorities had long ago recommended that it be destroyed because of its unsanitary condition, but nobody had heeded that until McKenzie was found there. A year later, the cul de sac was opened up to allow more air to get through to the housing.
10#Frances Coles
Coles was still alive, with her throat cut, when she was found. She never regained consciousness.
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