Morbid - Episode 346: Jack the Ripper Part 3
Episode Date: August 1, 2022Jack the Ripper Part three will cover what is known as, “the double event.” Both Elizabeth Stride and Catherine Eddowes were found killed on this September night. Both women shared a lot ...in common with the previous two victims. They’d struggled through pretty much their entire lives just to make ends meet and then were met with this as their end. In this part we’ll start to entertain the theory that Jack perhaps had some kind of medical background and you’ll see just why one might think so once you dive into the episode! Hold onto your butts!Check out these great books on the case:Jack the Ripper and The Case For Scotland Yard's Prime Suspect by Robert HouseThe Complete Jack the Ripper by Donald RumbelowThe Five: The Untold Lives of the Women Killed by Jack the Ripper by Hallie RubenholdThe Hidden Lives of Jack the Ripper's Victims by Robert HumeThe Ripper Code by Thomas ToughillJack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates by Stewart Evans & Donald RumbelowJack the Ripper: The definitive Casebook by Richard Whittington-EaganAlso check out these sites on the case:JackTheRipper.orgCasebook: Jack The RipperHistory blog mentioned in the episode:The History GirlsSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hey, Weirdos, I'm Alina.
I'm Ash.
And this is morbid. Yeah, we are on part three of the Jack the Ripper series and I'm questioning your psyche
at this point.
Yeah, this has been the longest research I've done.
Really?
Because I started much earlier than I normally do with research.
Yeah.
Because I knew it was going to be a very daunting, very intricate kind of thing.
But I feel like I have been in Whitechapel
in the 1800s for literally like months at this point.
You essentially have Elena has a whole casual 40 pages
between parts one and three.
Yeah.
And I know where Nureton.
Inch of.
Yeah, like, yeah.
I'm only on the double of end tier.
I'm not even through all of the cases here.
You got like more, like, drew as a capricorn,
but I'm like, no, you're not.
It's like, you are just, oh, you're not.
You are just like the epitome of a cap,
like every part of capricorn energy,
like you have all of it.
Yeah, I really, I really like I lean into my sign really hard.
I don't even mean to, it's just, it really is who I am.
It's that that fucking that solar system that was happening
when the whatever configuration it was in when I was born,
it was real powerful in that moment
because I got every ounce of it.
It was intense. Well, you also have Virgo in your chart, I was born, it was real powerful in that moment because I got every ounce of it.
It was intense.
Well, you also have Virgo in your chart,
which I think only makes you a more intense person
when it comes to works.
Yeah.
Listen to me.
Look at you.
I know a couple signs.
You're like, I know some stuff.
I'm about to stretch.
I drink things and I know things.
There you go.
I miss Game of Thrones speaking of. I miss Game of Thrones speaking of...
I miss Game of Thrones so much.
I miss Game of Thrones so much.
Imagine if they redid the last season.
Imagine.
Imagine if they just like said, oops, we were kidding.
Imagine if they made it good at the end.
That'd be fun.
That'd be awesome.
Because I don't know.
Speaking of good shows though, like actually good shows,
I just started and I realized I'm very behind the curve
because what I didn't realize was that this show that I'm about to talk about
Peaky blinders in case you were wondering it came out in like 2013. Yeah, I was still in school. It's still happening
Yeah, they just like really draw out those seasons. I didn't realize that until recently either
That's funny. Yeah, I had no idea and I know I've been wanting to watch it since 2013
But it's been one of those that I'm like,
yeah, I'll watch that.
And then I just haven't.
But last night we were like,
oh, all of our shows are kind of like floating,
just floating or like they're weak to weak
and we've already like, you know,
because we only have precious few moments to watch shows
and then when the kids are asleep,
so we're like, what do we do?
What's my good choice?
Pick right.
And last night, John was like, should we start another one?
And I was like, peaky blunders, let's do it.
There you go.
And we did it.
And I realized that not only is this show fucking awesome,
and I'm so excited to be completely entrenched in it,
but two, it takes place around the same time period
of this in the same place.
Yeah, like only like 30 or 40 years after.
Yeah, it's not that far off.
And it's like definitely got the vibe,
and I was watching it last night being like,
I cannot escape this.
Like I am just not helping myself at all.
Like no escape is in for me.
Oh, I am like an escape artist.
When you come to like walking away from,
I have to like, in order to sleep and like,
function, I have to.
It wasn't great on my, on on my on your sleep things last night.
It wasn't great because it was very like
intertwined with like the cast
for netto's one that I'm going to talk
about today and it was a lot.
I can't research at night anymore.
Yeah it's hard.
Like for that reason and you know me
I'm like a very like spiritual like
spiritual lady. So I get weird dreams that throws me off
for like my whole day.
And then you know I'll just like start crying
in the middle of the day for no reason.
I will say that if you have no other reason to watch it,
watch it for Killian Murphy.
Okay, that's what I was in it for.
There you go.
The time period of course, and Killian Murphy,
we're like big selling points to me.
Of course.
And they gave me everything I needed.
I've been like a Killian Murphy head since like 28 days later,
which I realized came out when Ash was like five.
And that took me for a ride.
Which means that you, I think I was like six or you were 16.
So 16 year old, Elena was standing.
So what did it mean?
That was like, because now I like obviously were 10 years apart. Oh, waste, like that's how time works. So 16 year old Alayna was standing. So we've been in Murphy. So what did it feel?
That was like, because now I like obviously were 10 years apart always.
Like that's how time works.
Yeah, that is how time works.
It's funny because I don't feel that far away from you and age anymore.
So hearing that like you were 16 when I was six and like that doesn't line up.
No. And when you get older, the time difference doesn't, it's not that big of a deal.
Yeah, it's like how like, it's like how older dudes and older ladies
can date younger dudes and ladies later on in life,
and it's not so weird, but yeah.
It's just like the time difference just doesn't make
as much of a difference.
Because you're not as like in such a different form
of your life anymore, exactly.
Like both and like very, I mean,
even still we're in a very different,
but like very similar faces.
Exactly.
And that's our life.
And that is our life, everyone.
So go watch Piki Blinders if you haven't, and if you have, which I know a lot of you have,
because we did about it, like, when I was watching it and everybody was like, oh my god, I love that show.
People are obsessed. I'm here. I'm ready to talk to you about it. And I'm excited to be here.
So I just started Desperate Housewives. So we're in different places.
Me and Drew are watching desperate housewives.
I mean, I don't even, I think just for housewives
came out when I was probably like five, probably.
So it's funny to watch now.
It's also like sometimes you're like,
oh, you could save that back then.
Yeah, there's always that.
But that show is good.
I never watched that.
I don't think you would like it.
Yeah, never really was something I wanted to watch,
but I'm glad you are.
Thanks.
I know I do watching Peaky Blinders.
Thank you.
That's something I do want to eventually watch.
I'm just not there yet.
There you go.
Yeah, that's our TV schedule.
That's our TV schedule, guys.
So I'm excited to watch Peaky Blinders with you guys.
Hopefully somebody else, I think a couple of people
are like, I'm going to start it to now.
And I was like, hell yeah, let's all start it together.
Let's be in this together.
Let's go for it.
And it's basically just gonna get me
until Stranger Things to,
like it's one of those, like,
I needed a good show.
That was gonna get me back to the next Stranger Things.
Cause that is gonna take years to come out, right?
I don't know.
I don't know.
It's not how it usually works though.
That is, but we'll see.
It's like, I need it now.
I'm in a place of freaking, I just feel alone in the world without...
And I feel like you're not alone with you for, if you for, yeah.
I know that because a lot of people watch that.
Oh no, I mean, I feel alone in the world that it's not here.
Yeah, we're all alone in this.
Just know I was going to say you're suffering together.
We are immensely.
So there you go.
All right.
This is, we're gonna get into it today.
She says, I'm gonna need.
I, yep, I do because this is gonna get rougher and rougher.
From here on out, it's gonna to get like so bad. Yeah.
So bad. It's been really bad. It has. It's getting so bad. I mean, one of these is one of the
most horrific scenes I've ever read about. I'm glad that I'm not going into this blindly.
I can't imagine going into a case like this. I'm knowing you. Yeah. Yeah. Even so. I think
when you hear details,
you're gonna be like, oh, that's already happened for sure.
And I can see that coming up next.
This is a rough one.
And the next one we'll talk about in part four
is of course the very infamous Mary Jane Kelly scene,
which I think a lot of people have seen that photograph.
I forgot that that photograph existed until all of a sudden.
I was like, oh, that is a real thing.
And that's a real person.
And that's a real thing that happened.
It's tucked into the back of your head
and then you remember.
Yeah.
So we'll be talking about Mary Jane Kelly in part four.
But today we're going to be talking about the double event,
which is when he killed twice in one night,
very close to each other.
We're in talk about it. I have a lot of theories. I have a lot of questions. I have a lot of like.
So let's get into it. Shall we? We shall. So we just, the last time we, when we left you,
we were talking about how John or Jack Pyser, Leather Apron, he had been brought in, but he had been
cleared.
Had multiple alibis.
And he said, I didn't come forward
when my name was first brought up,
I went on the run because I thought people were going
to hang me without even wondering
whether I actually did it or not.
Because the media had put it out way too soon.
Which fair.
Because it probably would have happened
because there were several times when people thought
that police were bringing in a suspect of,, which at this point he's just called the White Chapel
murderer or the mutilation series they were calling it.
He isn't even Jack yet.
He hasn't even named himself yet.
Why?
We haven't even gotten to the letters because they haven't come yet.
This part or next part?
It's going to be next part.
Okay.
But that's when we're going to talk about the letters. Him naming himself like the, whether we think it's a hoax or not, those letters,
the different suspects, the different theories, the different ins and outs, and also Mary Jane Kelly.
But for this one, leather aprons been cleared. But the last victim was Annie Chapman,
and Whitechapel has lost their collective shit after this. I mean,
it was Annie Chapman's murder was horrifying. There are still some discrepancies as to her
time of death, though that we're kind of complicating the investigation. Because at this
point, they're just trying to get anything they can, because they know that these are connected.
They don't know when the next one's going to hit. They're trying to stop it before it gets,
and they don't have a lot to work with.
So, Dr. Phillips, Dr. Bagster Phillips, our guy,
our guy, he had stated that when he saw
any Chapman at 6.30 a.m.,
he believed that she had been dead for about two hours.
Okay.
But if we put that next to the witness accounts
that morning, it doesn't really make sense.
So someone must have been off.
So there was a man named John Richardson who lived at 29am, Barry Street, where the murder
occurred.
And the body was discovered outside in that yard.
And he said he came out into the yard at 4.45am, and he did not see a body.
Now, if you walked out into that yard, she was right there.
You weren't going to miss it.
Definitely see her.
Albert Kadoosh heard someone yell, no, we talked about him at 5.25am.
And then at 5.28am, he said he heard someone fall against the fence between his yard at 27
Hambury Street and 29 Hambury.
But then we have Mrs. Elizabeth Long's witness account.
She was the first one that I talked about
in the last episode that she saw Annie Chapman
with a man who quote looked like a foreigner
in a deer stalker hat.
We were like, what is that?
We had him like, what exactly does that mean Elizabeth?
But that was at 5.30 a.m.
So remember, Albert Kadoosh said at 5.25, he heard no.
He heard someone fall at 5.28,
and now Elizabeth long saying at 5.30,
two minutes later, she sees Annie Chapman
just talking to this guy before even going into the yard.
That is the problem with eyewitness accounts.
Exactly.
So Dr. Phillips estimate of death is already shot to shit.
If he came at 6.30 and said she was already dead two hours ago,
but an hour ago, she was talking to someone.
Or was she?
So that doesn't make any sense.
And also, now we have to question how Mrs. Long
could have seen her at all.
Like, have she really seen her?
Because who's off here?
Maybe Albert Kadoosh, which I'm thinking Albert
might be the one that's off.
I think Elizabeth Long did see her.
Oh, you think so?
And I think she saw her at that time
because she did mention something
about hearing the clock chime.
Okay.
Again, she could be off.
She could have been off.
Because Albert may have just been off by 15 minutes,
because that's not that crazy to think about.
That he was like, oh, it was five, you know, 20, whatever,
when I heard it.
Maybe he heard the clock chime too, and he got the wrong.
Like, a amount of chimes, maybe.
He looked at something and thought it was this time.
I feel like he's a little more off than Elizabeth Lung.
I could see that.
Because Elizabeth Lung was like very adamant.
Right.
The clock chimed, 5.30.
I heard it.
I looked at her.
I know that's her.
She was talking to this guy.
And it's a little different too because she's probably like out and about going somewhere
and we can assume maybe she had to be there at a certain time.
Exactly.
Whereas he's coming home and just kind of like,
is that home?
Yeah, he doesn't have,
I don't think he had anything that he was like,
really thinking about doing.
So she was on her way to the markets.
I think the Spittelfield market.
So she actually had somewhere that she had to be.
So I think time was more of like at the essence to her.
Now of course, nailing time of death is hard even today.
So there are a lot of factors and back then it was just like way jankier.
They just like threw a dart at a dart board of times.
They were like, sure, this was.
But Dr. Phillips did acknowledge that the massive blood loss paired with the cold air
that morning she was killed definitely could have fucked up his estimate too.
So he wasn't sitting there saying like, two hours for sure.
He was just saying, I think.
He was like within two hours, I think.
And he was saying all of those elements
could have fucked up my estimate.
I am not holding myself to it.
So not even he was holding himself to it.
Okay, but still, it didn't really help
with the investigation that much.
And besides all this, there was this weird obsession
for a bit where police were assuming this
killer was an escaped inmate from an asylum.
I could see why they would think that because of the brutality, but why else?
See, and that's the thing.
So it's weird to me, it's wild to me, actually, that they assumed that at any point that this
person was insane.
Because the care and the meticulousness
with which these murders were carried out
does not ring as someone in the throes of insanity
or someone who was not a sane clinically person could do.
It rings to me very evil and very focused.
And like know what they're doing.
It doesn't feel like it.
Yeah, it doesn't feel like somebody escaped from an asylum.
This had the Metropolitan Police Force concentrating for a long period of time on escaped or recently released asylum patients.
And to me, it feels like a massive waste of time.
I think that was like real dumb.
Also just really using people like that escape goat stuff.
Oh yeah, it was a very low-hanging fruit.
And they went like really hard at it for a while
And I was like guys you got to stop. Yeah, it's not there. Right. It's not there. This is like a way
This is not a careless person
So then this crazy theory popped up and I just had to talk about it because I was like what
This is called the American doctor theory now
This theory came about when the coroner which this coronerer, in particular that I'm going to talk about,
when Baxter was not a medical doctor. So he was not Dr. Wend Baxter. He was a voted-in coroner.
He mentioned during Annie Chapman's inquest on September 26, 1888, that he believed, and I quote,
it was someone who had considerable anatomical knowledge and skill.
There were no meaningless cuts.
The organ has been taken away by one who knew where to find it.
What difficulties he would have to contend against,
and how he should use his knife so as to abstract the organ without injury to it.
No unskilled person could know where to find it,
or have recognized it when it was
found, which I agree. But he then followed this up by saying he knew and believed that
there was a market for these types of organs. The black market.
And he relayed a story that recently, the subcurator, recently at that point, the subcurator
of the Pathological Museum told him that a few months earlier,
an American had called him up on the phone
and asked him if he could buy some specimens
because he said he was writing a paper
that was about to be published.
And he was going to be sending,
he wanted to send specimens to some of these places.
The curator was like, no, we can't do that.
We're not in that business.
And this American, who's like their claiming was a doctor, medical student, said he would
pay a ton of money for them.
And he had already made this request to another institution, apparently, he said.
Now, when Baxter then suggested on the record that maybe someone had heard about this
random American who was allegedly requesting to buy specimens
from the pathological museum for a pretty penny at that, and that this person who heard
this took it upon themselves to procure some of those specimens to sell to him, because
heard you can make a lot of money, I'm going to get some of these.
Okay.
I'm sorry.
No, my good sir. Yeah. That does not, no, no, no, no, no. I was like,
okay, no. And he said this on the record, which of course is going to get everybody like go
and crazy. Yeah. This doesn't make any sense. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
in response to this, the Lancet, which was a weekly medical journal published,
that they like published details
of the cases, but they were the only ones who had published details because they were
a medical journal. They published a warning and they were very dissatisfied with Baxter's
theory. They said, quote, in our opinion, a grave error in judgment was made by the coroner's
informant in this respect. The public mind, which also can I just say this is so relevant to now,
like when you read this, you're like, wow, we haven't changed.
Yeah.
The public mind, ever too ready to cast much,
uh, excuse me, ever too ready to cast mud at legitimate research,
hmm, will hardly fail to be excited to a pitch of animosity against anatomists and curators,
which may take a long while to subside.
Yeah, we're still working on it.
Still doing that.
And what is equally deplorable, the revelation thus made by the coroner, which so dramatically
startled the public last Wednesday evening, may probably lead to a diversion from the
real track of the murderer and thus defeat
rather than serve the ends of justice.
We believe the story to be highly improbable,
although it may have a small basis of fact,
which will require the exercise of much common sense
to separate from the sensational fiction that surrounds it.
So essentially it was a bullshit theory.
He repeated this story.
He had no proof of this. There was no, like, it was a bullshit theory. He repeated this story. He had no proof of this.
There was no, like, it was ridiculous.
He just wanted to say something.
It just didn't make sense to me.
Nothing about these, we talk about how, you know,
these things were taken out meticulously
and very carefully, sure.
But that's a lot of fucking work to go through
to get, when you could technically,
if you're really just looking for organs to harvest,
it's like find somebody who's like,
at that point, people were like dying on the streets.
It's like guys, that doesn't make sense.
Yeah.
They're doing, he's doing it too quickly
and into obvious places and leaving them
in the middle of the street.
Why would he be doing that?
Wouldn't he take them back somewhere?
Right.
Move them out of the way to not get caught.
So he could keep doing this.
If he wanted to make more money,
would he not just take all of the organs,
or like as many as he can?
That's the thing.
It's like, I don't know.
I don't know about this.
That doesn't end.
It makes no sense to me.
He didn't take an organ from everybody at his point.
He did point.
Not from everybody.
Still, that also doesn't make sense.
It doesn't, as soon as they heard that a uterus was taken,
it was like, this must be for the black market.
And it's like, no, I don't think so.
Yeah.
Also, I don't know how, like, so he takes this uterus.
What's he doing with it?
You can't just throw it like on ice and be like,
well, maybe someone will buy this.
Like they can't use that.
What do you think they're using that for?
Like it doesn't make any sense.
Do you think that the real murderer took the uterus and like kept it?
That's what nobody understands.
Do you think nobody knows?
It could have been a trophy for him.
I think it seems like a lot of these are trophies.
And do you think like you know how like people will buy oddities? Do you think he kept it in like an oddity jar? Like a lot of these are trophies. And do you think, you know how people will buy oddities?
Do you think he kept it in an oddity jar?
Like a jar of formalin or something?
Right, yeah.
I mean, it's a very high possibility.
Or that he just tossed it somewhere
and just never got to take it.
Just took it to take it to fuck with people.
Who really knows?
That's the worst part of this.
Now, after Annie Chapman, there was a three-week law.
So people started to get laws into a sense of false security.
That was until September 29, 1988. At 1am, Louis Dim Shultz, I believe it's
Dim Shultz, I think actually. Louis Dim Shultz was coming back from work and he
was taking a horse and carriage. He was the steward of the International Working Men's educational club. I think I mentioned it in part one at some point. On the other
side of the Duttfield's Yard court, around 40 Berner Street. So the Duttfield's Yard was
like this big courtyard that there was all kinds of things around it. One of these was
that club. He was cutting through Duttfield's yard,
and his horse wouldn't walk anymore,
and appeared scared.
It was like pulling to one side,
clearly trying to avoid something,
and it was pitch black.
There wasn't one light in this courtyard,
so it is literally the blackest black.
His horse isn't walking anymore,
and he's like, what the fuck is this?
Animals know.
So he lights a match,
and he sees a bundle
in front of him on the ground.
He thought it was just like a tarp that was rolled up.
So I think what it said was he took like the whip
that he had was for the horse, because the worst.
And he just like poked it,
but was like, I don't really know what this is.
Yeah.
But he jumps down, he sees a woman lying on the ground
next to the wall of the club, but he can barely see.
So he went into the club to grab a candle, and two other men came out with him to go
look back at who was on the ground.
When they all lit matches to see, they lifted her shoulders and head, and she was completely
limp.
When they held the lights to her, they found that this woman had her throat violently
slashed.
There was blood all over the ground and pavement beneath her.
They estimated about two quarts had flowed towards the door of the club.
Oh, my God.
Her hair was completely matted with blood and mud.
She was holding a packet of breath fresh in her hand.
And her, I guess her hand was still a little clenched around it.
There was actually a myth that she was holding grapes in her right hand,
but that's not true. No grapes were found under her.
I remember that for some reason. I remember that piece.
Yeah, and there's a reason for that, because I think people,
there's a, there's a sighting where like she was eating grapes.
Okay.
So I think that became something, but that is in no report.
It's in no cornyers report.
I remember when I wrote my silly paper for high school, like saying something about,
or like reading something about the books. Yeah. Yeah. And you probably would have written it,
because it's, it's stated in a lot of sources that's like, this is in the report. It's not,
oh man. It is not in the report. That's so random. I know it's really frustrating when
that happens, because you're like, what the fuck? Yeah. And actually, before I even go any further,
let me tell you, because I found a couple of other books
for you guys to read.
How many books do you have at this time?
I am on seven.
So the newest one I found was Jack the Ripper,
Scotland Yard Investigates by Stuart P. Evans
and Donald Rumble-O.
Donald Rumble-O also did the complete Jack the Ripper,
which is another book that I recommend. The other O also did the complete Jack the Ripper, which is another book that I recommend.
The other one that I found was Jack the Ripper,
the definitive case book by Richard Wittington Egan.
That one's really good because it kind of
doesn't give you a blow by blow of the case.
It goes into the different theories
and the different myths and the different things.
It kind of gives you a more abstract look at the case,
which is really interesting and fun.
I definitely recommend those.
I've been linking the other ones like the Hidden Lives of Jack the Ripper's
Victims by Robert Hume,
the Ripper Code by Thomas Tuffil,
Jack the Ripper and the Case for Scotland Yards Suspect by Robert House,
and the five by
Halley Rubenhold. They're all really good. They're all tell like they all have
different pieces of the puzzle so I highly recommend you go read all of them
because it's amazing and again I will link all of these summer reading brought to
you by summer reading. So no grapes, no grapes. She was
wearing a long black coat with red and white flowers pinned to it. The whole
thing was trimmed with fur. She was wearing a black skirt, a black bonnet,
NIH, like checkered neck scarf that was pulled very tightly around her neck,
but they said that they thought she pulled it very tightly. And then maybe it
got slightly tightened when, you know, she was attacked, but they didn't
think it was like he tied something around her neck.
Like he didn't choke her or do her anything.
Now, they got a police officer immediately, of course.
And soon there was a crowd gathering around her.
Our boy, Dr. Bagster Phillips, was at it again.
He declared that she was still warm and had likely just been killed. Oh, Dr. Bagster Phillips, was at it again. He declared that she was still warm
and had likely just been killed.
Oh wow.
Now, everyone in the club and everyone who was outside
from the club got searched.
They got interviewed.
Their homes were searched.
They were probably not psyched about that,
but like you're in the wrong place at the wrong time,
my dudes, I don't know what to tell you.
No one was found to have blood on their hands
or their clothing.
And nothing was found out of the ordinance.
Which is great, but also just a fucking bummer
because you're like, I know, you're like,
he wasn't just someone running back into the club.
Can you imagine if it was just one of them?
He just walked back into the club.
Crazy.
Now, on October 1st, 1888,
he was identified as Elizabeth Stride,
who sometimes went by Annie Fitzgerald.
I know that is a totally different name.
That is just another one that she went by.
An alias, isn't alias, baby.
She was known around the area
to be constantly arrested
for being drunken disorderly as of late.
She's finding.
Yeah, you know, Elizabeth had many nicknames
aside from Annie Fitzgerald.
She was known as Long Liz.
Long Liz.
Likely.
Now, this is interesting because I didn't realize
that this was a thing, but I guess like people
with the last name stride,
that was like a running joke at the time,
that they call them like long whatever.
Because you're stride, yeah.
Which of like, wow guys.
How fun.
The hilarious.
But other people, because it was like a whole thing
where people were like, is it that? Or is it because she had like a long face? Was she, and she wasn't that tall,
so it doesn't make sense. Maybe that was why though. Yeah, I could have been like a funny,
like long-lose over here. But she was also known as mother gum. Because she always had breathments.
No. Because when she laughed, which was often because she was known to be very jovial and very sweet,
because when she laughed, which was often, because she was known to be very jovial and very sweet.
She showcased kind of a gummy mouth
because she was missing several teeth,
including, I know people were real dicks.
She was missing her two front teeth.
So, you know, people are dicks.
People have always been dicks.
It just trolls be trolling.
But it seems to me like a lot of these women,
even when people were like dicks,
they just kind of like took it and stride,
and we're just like, yeah, fuck off.
And we just like go about their business.
The UK.
Yeah, like they, they water off a duck's back in the alley.
Yeah, like they just, they know how to joke.
Yeah.
And they know how to let jokes roll.
Because they're cheeky.
They are, they're cheeky.
And we fucking love them.
And they're not so sensitive.
Like, we love them.
Some people can take in, they know how to do it.
Yeah.
They really do.
My stepmom is like British and her mom was like actually
like lived in Britain.
Her name was Cleo and she was the coolest fucking lady.
And she would just like read you,
but like in the funniest way.
Yeah.
And you know that it's like, it was silly.
Yeah, you can take it because it's funny.
All in good fun.
And it's all in good fun.
Everybody just roasts each other.
It's wonderful.
So we see you, we love you.
So who was Elizabeth?
Who was Mother Gum?
Who was Long Liz?
Who was Annie Fitzgerald?
Who were they?
So we're talking about Elizabeth Stride here.
She was originally named Elizabeth Gustaf's daughter.
She was born November 27th, 1843, and Stora might say lots of these things wrong because
it is in Sweden.
Stora, Tom Lehead, and Sweden.
I think that she might be a Capricorn.
Get it, girl.
Let me double check.
She was one of four kids with an older sister Anna Christina and two brothers Carl Bernhardt and Spont. Her father was
Gustaf Erickson, which is why her last name was Gustaf's daughter. Makes sense.
Where you were. There you go. You were close. Yeah. Her mother was Bita Carl's
daughter and they lived on a farm. All everyone was expected to work on this farm.
Kids included from a very early age.
They grew potatoes, other vegetables.
You know, it was a pretty, it was like a nice little farm, but yeah.
Not very lucrative, not very easy work.
So it was tough growing up.
They literally kept the kids home from school to work on the farm like they were expected
to just work on the farm. And in were expected to just work on the farm. Oh, man.
And in that time, it just, that was the way.
It was just that important to make sure
that they were making money from the farm,
because that was all they had.
Yeah.
So especially the girls, they were definitely not
considered at that time worse going to school
if they could work at home.
It was just the way it was.
Now, when she was 17,
she took off to start her own life
in the city of Gothenburg.
She was known as a very kind and very respectable girl
who didn't get into any trouble.
She was also known to always have her Bible with her
because that is one thing growing up.
They went to church.
They could, I think, what I read in the hidden lives
of Jack the Ripper's victims was that the only thing
she really did know how to read was survival.
Like that was it.
Now, people really liked her,
and they really got along with her.
She settled in pretty well,
and by February of that year,
she had gotten work as a domestic servant
for Lars Frederick Olipson and his wife.
It was a super nice environment.
She took care of their kids.
She did work around the house.
She worked for them for three years.
Everything was great, no complaints at all.
Then out of nowhere with no notice
and no hint of displeasure, she just walked out.
Something had to have happened.
And that's why I'm like, what happened there?
Yeah, what's the tea?
Something happened there.
Of course, now she had to go find somewhere to stay
because she no longer had a nice roof over her head.
And she walked out of a nice home.
So it's like, what happened there?
We're missing a piece of that puzzle
and I don't know if we'll ever get it.
And it's interesting too, because it's like,
you know, your mind goes to like certain places,
but she had been there for three years
and all of a sudden something happened.
Like did something come to a head or what happened here?
I would like to know, but I don't know if I'll ever find out.
Now, she ended up getting a room on like a street
that was in not a great area.
Of course.
Because that's really all she could afford at the time.
Where they were, yeah.
August 1864, her mother at only 54 years old died of a respiratory illness.
Could have been TB, could have been anything we don't know, but she was young.
And she's devastated. Of course.
She took to the area she was finding herself living in and she took to the streets as a sex worker.
Because she had no other options.
And often that is what we find in these situations. They had no other option. And often that is what we find in these situations.
They had no other option.
And I wonder if she had lost some faith, you know, for sure.
A lot of them were hopeless at the time that they were killed.
And I had been hopeless for a long time.
Unfortunately, this was like a really sad time.
There was not a lot of hope.
And there was not a lot of like positive stuff to look at.
Now, this is interesting.
Again, from the hidden lives of Jack the Ripper's victims,
I found out that she was registered
in the Gothenburg police files as a quote prostitute.
Interestingly, in Sweden,
this registration wasn't like they registered her
to arrest her.
This, she registered as one.
That meant she was legally allowed to be a sex worker
and would not be arrested for it in the 1800s.
In Sweden, yeah.
The Swedish government figured it was better to just control
and regulate what was going on.
Imagine that.
Now, it wasn't all, it wasn't great.
I will say that.
It sounds great.
Like it sounds like, oh, wow, progressive.
But like, I don't know.
Basically, they were just trying to stop because at the time, the spread of disease it sounds great, like it sounds like, oh wow, progressive. But like, I don't know.
Basically, they were just trying to stop,
because at the time, the spread of disease was very random.
And especially, like, and the spread of illnesses,
like sexually transmitted illnesses,
so they figured instead of criminalize it,
they were just going to try to keep it under control.
So they registered sex workers and allowed them to work,
but just wanted to be made
aware of any health concerns, which sounds fine. Each worker was described in the register,
and other information was put in their file aside from like diseases or illnesses, other health
information. Elizabeth was 21 at the time. She was labeled as female prostitute, number 97,
which like, wow. And described as being slight build blue eyes,
brown hair, a straight nose,
and other random information.
Okay.
This sounds again, like I said, very progressive way
to look at sex work, but it wasn't,
especially for like 18, whatever, 1860s.
1660s.
But it wasn't just as simple as that.
She was also not allowed to be outside in public until after 11 p.m.
Oh.
So, you did.
With that little dollop of progressiveness, you're like, wait, what?
What was that?
Like, at all?
Yeah, like she could not work out in public until after 11 p.m.
All right. she could not work out in public until after 11 p.m.
Now, she had to also go twice a week to the doctor
to be examined and had to make sure
that nothing was happening.
Which like that's the good part of it.
Yeah, exactly.
There's been her and other things.
There's beneficial things here,
but it's like little too controlling.
Now, at one point when she was young,
she gave birth to a stillborn child from an unknown father.
This was devastating for her, obviously, and she had just lost her mother.
I mean, I think she was only 21 years old at the time when that happened.
But she went back to the street life and was in and out of the hospital with sexually transmitted
illnesses several times over the next few months and maybe a couple of years.
Now in November 1865, she ended up being taken off the register by the police, and this
would really only happen if they like moved, died, something big happened.
Now this one was for a positive thing.
It was she got another job as a domestic servant for Carl Wenzel Whizzner and his young
wife Maria.
So she only stayed there for a few months though.
She ended up leaving when Maria informed her
that she was pregnant.
I don't know if it was because she didn't want to take care of a baby.
She just wanted to be a domestic servant.
She just lost a baby.
She just lost a baby.
Maybe she just wasn't ready.
But at this point, she did find out that she got a little money
from her dead mother's estate.
Okay.
So this was her chance.
She was like, I'm gonna get far away from this shittiness in Sweden.
And I'm going to London.
Oh, no.
Because the grass is always greener.
Oh, yeah.
No, she worked briefly in the West End in London,
which we discussed at one point.
It was like kind of the opera class elite.
She liked it. Like she was finding work as a domestic servant. She liked it, but I think, I don't
know if I mentioned it in the Mary, the Polynickles one, but Polynickles was struggling with
the fact that when she was a domestic servant, they paid you three months out. So for the
first three months, you didn't get paid. And then you got paid the back three months.
Okay. So if you could stick it out for those three months, you didn't get paid. And then you got paid the back three months.
So if you could stick it out for those three months,
cool, you're getting a big check.
But most of these people are taking this job
with no money to their name, they can't afford that.
Right.
So it's like kind of this terrible cycle
of like people can't deal with the three months of no pay.
Right, like what are you supposed to do?
And that was just how it was there.
Like that was like standard that like you supposed to do? And that was just how it was there. Like, that was like standard
that like you didn't get paid for the first.
I don't know if it was like your probationary period maybe?
Oh, probably.
And like, like a 90 day probationary period.
I'm sure that makes perfect sense.
I think that's kind of how it went,
but like, you know, get paid and that's tougher back then,
especially when like nothing,
like these people are coming in there
with not anything to rub together.
But they could live in the house and they could live in the house.
And I think they could eat,
but it was like still,
and a lot of them were very reliant on alcohol
at the time, because they're struggling.
Yeah.
I think that has a lot to do with it.
Yeah.
Now, and I think a lot of them just want to be able to like have,
you know, people want their own money.
You know, like you don't want to have to rely on someone for three months.
So, a lot of people dealt with it, but some people couldn't.
And she was struggling with this, like this three month period, because that's not how it was done in Sweden.
And she didn't know that this is how it was going to be.
So Elizabeth split from this domestic servants job
in the West End, found her way to a known Swedish parish
in the area, because she figured I can meet some people
that I can go to their church.
Yeah, it'll feel like home, but without all the stresses.
Right, right, right.
So it worked for her for a while,
and she was staying in lodging houses
and trying to make her way.
She had gotten herself a small job making
and cleaning bed linens for the lodging house,
which a lot of these women did as well.
They would sometimes be able to clean the floors,
clean the kitchen, cook at the lodging houses,
change the beds, do the laundry,
and them doing that was like,
okay, you get your free nights day.
It was like a work house without being a work house.
So she got herself that small job.
It seemed to be working out a little bit.
This is when she became known as long Liz.
That's when people started calling her that.
It's, again, I guess it was a common nickname
for people with that surname, but like, what?
It's so weird.
Like, all right.
Now around this time is when she,
like it was right before she was being called long-liss
that she met John Thomas Stride.
He was a carpenter from the Isle of Sheppie Kent.
He was said to be a short, unattractive man who was abrasive and loud.
So it's like, okay.
That short abrasive and loud.
All right, I guess so.
I love the word abrasive.
Abrasive is a great word to describe a lot of people.
Because you feel it.
Yeah, abrasive is like a feeling, you know what I mean?
It really is.
It's abrasive.
Like I feel like I know who he is.
Yeah, like I know exactly who this short
unattractive abrasive man.
Yeah, but you know Liz was taken, I suppose. She was taken with this short unattractive man who was abrasive and movement. Yeah. But Liz was taken, I suppose.
She was taken with this short, unattractive man
who was abrasive and loud.
Oh, good.
Now, they married.
March 7th, 1869.
They moved into the East End, into a lodging house,
and together.
So hot.
Not so hot, but you know, and they opened up
a coffee shop together, because he was already, I think.
Yeah, right. See, we're getting there.
And he was already kind of like in that business, he wanted to open up his own coffee place.
And this was an East India dock road in Poplar.
I would love to open up a coffee place.
Yeah, this sounds like it would be awesome.
It wasn't.
It wasn't working out.
And they actually moved a couple of times the coffee shop locations,
because like one would fail,
and they just moved to another one.
They just weren't getting enough customers.
Yeah, it just wasn't happening.
And I don't think they were like super on it
when it came to the business stuff.
But the third one that they opened was at 178
popular high street next to the docks.
They were scraping by at this point.
John was a carpenter, so during the day,
he was working, and Elizabeth was
prudent managing the shop.
But she was taking more time at pubs
and just drinking than managing the shop
because she was like, I don't feel like sitting here.
Again, vibing.
She's got places to go.
She's on the move.
A lot of these women.
By the way, guys, she's a sadge.
So, Sagittarius, you know, we like to be all around.
All over the place.
There you go.
You're right away.
Because I'm a sadrising.
Oh, I was like, you're a gem, I'm not going to tell you.
I am, but they say that's older.
You get the more you start to align with your rising.
Oh, look at that.
And I do feel that way, actually.
Well, there you go.
Yeah.
A lot of these women that became victims of Jack the Ripper,
it seemed like they were just not,
they could have gone a lot of places
if life had given them any card to work with.
I think that's a perfect way of putting it.
Because I feel like they all were not content to sit
and just rot.
They wanted more,
and they wanted to go, go, go, but they just, life was just kicking them,
kicking them, kicking them every single time.
A way to get there.
Yeah, it just kind of was like banging their heads
against a brick wall, and I feel,
the more you read about them, the more you're like,
damn, I'm sorry.
Yeah, shit.
Like it just, like a shit was not great.
But again, she was, this is,
alcohol tends to play a very heavy role in all these people's lives,
I think just because escapism and just to get away from the terribleness that was surrounding them.
But again, she didn't really want to sit and manage the shop.
She was known around all the pubs and around the locals to be fun, sweet, she was really funny.
Just like she was known back in Sweden, she was the same girl.
People at the Blackenys pub, Blackenys Head pub,
excuse me, were the ones to name her mother gum.
And that was because she laughed a lot.
And when she would laugh, they were like, mother gum!
Like, man.
But I think it's against it.
I think it was just like, she probably thought it was like whatever.
Like, good fuck.
Yeah.
In 1874, the coffee shop was actually almost just closed down.
But instead it changed hands, so they were able to give it over to someone else.
They were kind of running it into the ground, so another businessman just took over.
I know, because that actually, when you said it was near the docks, I was like, oh, great
location.
You would think, yeah, but I think they were just kind of running it into the ground.
Need it somebody there to be a good location. I was like, oh, great location. You would think. Yeah, but I think they were just kind of running and it's a great place.
Need somebody there to be a good location.
They just like washed their hands of it.
Yeah.
Now March 21st, 1877, there was a police report
where she was seen in the Thames Magistrates Court in Stepney
and then ordered to enter popular workhouse.
That usually means you got in trouble
and that was your punishment.
Often to avoid jail, people would take on hard labor
at work houses to pay their debts to society.
So jail.
But we don't, yeah, it was gonna save some jail.
We're not going to jail.
Yeah, but we don't know what she did.
Yeah, we don't know exactly what she did there.
I'm assuming as most of the time
there was probably some kind of disorderly intoxication
that kind of thing,
because they were always getting in trouble for that,
because people just need to chill out.
Yeah, it's like calm down, whatever, just let her live.
So again, she's vibing.
She's just vibing.
Let her write.
So it was September 3rd, 1878,
that she got herself into a scam
that was kind of reprehensible, to be quite honest.
For her. Not a great look for her. Not a great moment in her life that kind of reprehensible to be quite honest. Not a great look for her.
Not a great moment in her life that kind of carries out.
Okay.
Now, a steamer ship by the name of Princess Alice on this day collided with another ship,
a ship named Biwell Castle on the Thames River at its sank.
Somewhere between 600 and 700 people died in the tragedy. It was a huge tragedy.
There was a collection put together where people could donate to the families who had lost loved ones in the ship.
She pretended to be a survivor of the accident and that her husband and two of her what she said were nine children
were killed in the accident and
she claimed she had seven other kids to take care of now.
Ooh.
She even claimed that those two front teeth
that she didn't have were kicked out
by another passenger who was deaf-spirited
trying to save themselves in the accident.
Okay.
And she said she managed to survive
by climbing the ship's mass to safety.
What about the seven kids though? How'd they get out?
That's the thing. You never see those seven kids.
She did not have seven kids.
I was like, where are your kids at?
Um, it didn't work.
Because people were like, we're those seven kids and she was like about that.
And they were like, yeah, you don't have that.
Like that's, and they were like, you are not listed on the manifest anywhere.
Neither is anyone with that many kids,
and no one lost a husband and two children,
and there's people did, but like,
no one by the name of you.
Right, right.
So it didn't make sense.
Oh, kido-kido.
She did, unfortunately, use this story over and over and over,
and she, you know, it's, she, I think she's desperate.
I was gonna say, it's reprehensible, but it's also
Completely born out of desperation and you know like if we were in that position
We don't know what we would yeah, I mean like eat it live to survive bad to to play off a tragedy like that
Absolutely, it's bad and I'm not gonna sit here and give her any credit on that. No at all
It's like and again nobody's perfect. No victim At all. It's like, and again, nobody's perfect.
No victim is perfect.
They don't have to be perfect.
No matter what, they didn't deserve what they got.
It doesn't.
Just because you're not perfect
and you did some shit in your life,
doesn't mean that anyway,
you deserve to end where you ended.
Nobody's perfect, you live and you learn it.
Poe but he's an perfect.
Yep.
We're in different places entirely. There you go. I love you learn it. PoeBody's an perfect. Yep, you know? We're in different places entirely.
There you go.
I love you so much.
But it's true though, it's true.
It's what I will say, at least she wasn't like working
like as a domestic servant and like making that money.
And then being like, yeah, by the way,
like I died in a ship crash and I didn't die,
but everybody else didn't take the money.
Like she didn't have anything.
No, and it's again, it's a shitty thing.
It was a bad use of her time.
It was a bad decision she made.
A lot of these women made some bad decisions.
Because when the system is working against you,
that's what can make bad decisions.
Exactly.
And you don't even need to justify all of them.
Everyone makes bad decisions.
And sometimes they're unjustifiable.
I hope we could do a whole last podcast
about the bad decisions in my life.
Exactly.
We've all been there.
Everybody's been there.
So it's like, we don't need to sit here and be like,
but you know, it's like, no, she made a shitty choice.
She had to live with it.
But again, by no means does it give anybody
any justification to harm her?
That's not like a, you know, so it's like,
we don't have to pretend they were perfect people
that just like didn't do anything bad in their lives
for everybody shitty in some way.
And it's like, yeah, like people look on,
like right into us and they're like,
listen, when you cover me on the podcast,
like if you ever do someday, don't say that I lit up a room.
I didn't.
But I didn't.
And it's like, I'll say it, you probably did.
But you know what, they did a lot of great things.
They had a lot of people who loved them.
They wanted to do better and they just couldn't.
They were in bad circumstances.
But this is a bad decision that she made.
And she did use this over and over again.
And she used it sometimes.
She'd say, she'd just tell people if they asked,
like, where's your husband?
Oh, he died in the crash.
In the crash. And she'd say, like, where's your husband? Oh, he died in the crash.
In the crash.
And she'd say, oh, I lost these teeth.
Like in that accident, or my kids died in that accident.
It was usually to try to get ahead a little bit.
Yeah.
But it never really worked.
She just really clung to that story.
OK.
But she learned early in life how to sew in tailor.
And she would sometimes use those skills during money too
But it was just never consistent. That's a problem back then. It just was never consistent money
Now she was always known by friends to carry sewing equipment
And this was just in case the opportunity arose that she could use her skills
Okay
She always had buttons, thimbles, a needle and some thread on her
She was like really cute. She was just ready to jump into action.
A seamstress.
So you can see that Elizabeth was ready to make legitimate money.
She just needed the opportunity to do it.
By 1881, she and John Stride had moved into a lodging home at 69 Usher Road in Bow.
This was very cramped.
They didn't have it to themselves.
They had to share with several of the other families.
She began drinking heavily around this time.
John, on the other hand, was very religious
and the idea of drinking horrified him.
She left around Christmas, leaving their house and John
because they just couldn't, it wasn't working.
He was like getting angry that she was drinking,
it became a constant source of fighting.
Well, he's abrasive too, so.
Yeah, and she's probably getting a brace up as well.
Exactly, it's not good.
You're in a cramped place.
Now, she became sick around this time
and was admitted to Whitechapel Workhouse
and Furmery Aunt Baker's Row for Bronchitis and Exhaustion.
Now after a week, she was made to go to Whitechapel Workhouse.
She struggles that they were like,
hey, recover from your Bronchitis and your exhaustion
for one week and then get to work.
Like not even just like start sewing again,
like go tie the fucking ship things together
and have your dance bleed all over. Feel like you feeling good? Okay, get in there. Go, go, go, tie the fucking ship things together and have your dance bleed all over the place.
So you feeling good?
Okay, get in there.
Go, go crush the bones for me.
Yes, Amaro.
Woo.
Now, she was, so she went to Whitechapow Workhouse.
She struggled in and out of these kind of situations,
not really finding work to rely on.
So like the other victims,
she was in these workhouses and lodging homes
and casual wards constantly,
just over and over again.
And John would give her money every now and then, but then they were still estranged.
And he was in bad health too.
So now everything's starting to kind of crash.
She's not even getting that because he ends up dying very shortly after this.
And meanwhile, while they're not together, like a strange, she's still claiming that he
died and that ship sinking.
So she moved into a lodging house at 32 Flower and Dean Street, which we mentioned in part
one, is one of the worst areas.
Flower and Dean Street is that one of those infamous, like, ah, I love that flower.
Flower and Dean Street.
Yeah.
Can you name it something? I would tell you.
No, you can't.
Give me away from it?
Exactly.
In 1884, John did end up dying of heart disease.
By this time, she had turned back to the streets and back to sex work to make money, finding
herself absolutely desperate and without options.
She got herself caught a few times, then she would have to work off the demerits and
work houses. Now, this is when I came across,
in one of the sources, and I cannot remember which one it was,
they mentioned something about like, you know,
had to walk hours a day on a giant treadmill.
And I was like, I'm sorry, what?
I looked it up.
That was like a thing they did back then to prisoners.
They would have them work like a treadmill
was the name for this big fucking contraption
that worked on like a mill wheel and it was literally a treadmill that are like almost
like a step treadmill like almost like a master.
Yeah, that you just, they would make prisoners walk for hours to make this mill run so that
they could like make flour and shit for just like be useful.
But the stairmaster would get you snatched real quick.
And it was literally eight hours a day though.
No.
Yeah.
Isn't that why I do the stairmaster for 15 minutes?
And I'm like, I literally will never be the same again.
I look at a stairmaster and I heave.
I bet.
I can't imagine.
Yeah. I can't imagine. That's horrific. It just blew up when I sawave. I bet. I can imagine.
Yeah.
I can imagine.
That's horrific.
It just blew it when I saw that.
I was like, whoa, I like, you know what?
I'll even put a thing in the show.
No, don't blink too.
Because you guys just need to do your research.
It's a wild rabbit hole to go down.
I was like, what is the world?
You would be like skin and bones for me.
I mean, you have a dump truck, but like, damn.
But at what cost?
Exactly.
Now, around this time, again,
people really like Elizabeth.
I like Elizabeth.
Regardless of some bad choices,
Elizabeth was a very likable person.
I mean, the likable people like that,
I know sometimes do make bad choices.
Yeah, everybody does.
We're humans.
And you know what?
She was someone who would try to help you if she could.
And she was very jovial, very help you if she could and she was very
Jovial very like happy. She was very goofy. She was always laughing even when she was sad
She just was always someone that like people were like, you know what she was just fun to be around even when she was a like bummed out
You just didn't feel it. Okay, so it's like damn Elizabeth, right?
This is when she started seeing a dock worker by the name of Michael Kidney.
They stayed at lodging houses together
on Dorset Street, another really bad street.
I remember that.
It was along what was called the Wicked Quarter Mile.
Oh.
And not Wicked, like, that's Wicked Cool Kid.
Yeah, it was like Boston.
It was Wicked.
Like something Wicked this way comes.
Now, at the lodging house, they made friends
and had a kind of community there.
So like, you know, now it's becoming like a thing.
We're like, we stay at the same lodging houses
and like me and Michael, we're doing this thing, you know?
That's really sweet.
She worked in the kitchen sometimes.
She was a good cook.
Okay.
So people liked her cooking.
She was like, just getting her feel here.
And at this point, I'm like, come on.
I know.
I know, if that's the thing,
you can do it with a little bit of a frustrated.
But you just didn't get the chance.
Would they let, you might not know the self-conopted
of your head, but could a woman work in a restaurant
at that point in time as a chef?
I think it was basically barmaid.
It was like, I don't think you were gonna be hired
as a chef, but I don't know that person.
You wish that she could get hired
to cook for a family.
Yeah, that's the thing.
Like, she was decent at it.
So it's like, with more practice and more just doing it,
I think she could have like really found her way.
But they were eventually able to get some money together
to move into a room together on Devon Shere Street.
But they weren't really happy together.
They were not.
Yeah, Michael Kidney is a shithead.
Fuck him.
So she was drinking heavily again and started taking to the street again to get some extra
money, kind of just falling back into that life because it was the life she had known.
She felt comfortable with it.
And it's a guaranteed way to make money.
It's a guarantee.
They all said it at one point that it was just quick.
They would disassociate and they got their money
and they would go, which is horrifying to think about for real.
Now, he assaulted her one night because he found out
that she had gone back to sex work and he was pissed.
So one night when she got home, he assaulted,
like physically assaulted her. And he was pissed. So one day when she got home, he assaulted, like physically assaulted her.
And he was pissed that she was drinking,
pissed that she was on the streets.
And meanwhile, he was an abusive drunk.
Like, what the fuck are you mad about?
He wasn't a abusive drunk.
So he's mad that she's drinking.
And he's like, you're a piece of shit drunk.
And it's like, yes.
So we're a piece of shit drunk.
And then he's pissed.
And I'm like,
well, she doesn't have any opportunities, motherfucker.
Like, what do you want?
Because you're sitting around drinking the money away.
You're a shitty asshole too.
Like, come on.
So she had enough after she assaulted her and she left.
So on March 21st, 1886, she went to live
at Poplar Union Workhouse and was sent to the infirmary
because she was in extremely bad condition.
She was not doing well.
It was probably like all the drinking, like exactly.
Exactly. And it was just like the life she was having to leave.
That was going to say, yeah.
Now she did go back to Kidney several times.
It was one of those very toxic moments.
Each time it got worse and worse, he was more and more abusive,
but she needed a roof over her head a lot.
So she was willing to put up with it.
That's so sad. Which is really sad. She was brought before the
Thames Magistrates Court eight times between 87 and 88, one year. It was all for drunken
disorderly stuff. So she was really going through it. She was.
Here before she was killed, she was going through it. And like we said, that seems to be
the case. It's like they get, and it's just so sad
because every single one so far
has had this little piece of home where like,
ooh, you could turn it around.
But life just doesn't let them.
No, exactly.
And it's like right here is where like she was at her worst.
She was back to sex work,
what she was not happy doing.
She wasn't cooking.
She wasn't by my guckinian her or back and forth,
but every time it was abuse abuse abuse, she's just in a terrible place. September 20th of 1988,
she was walking in white chapel and she met a woman named Catherine Lane and her friend Elizabeth
Tanner. When she started talking to Catherine, she was like, oh, this is Elizabeth.
And Elizabeth Tanner was like, oh, I'm the manager of the lodging house on Flowerin
Dean Street.
And she was like, if you want to stay there, like, I'll help you out because she heard
her story.
And she was like, wow, like, you have a terribly abusive partner.
Like I'm going to try to help you out.
Okay.
So she told her, you can stay there. She was like, you need to do some laundry,
you need to clean.
Do your body.
You have a small amount and you can stay
for a roof over your head, which was huge.
And she was like, I can also help out in the kitchen.
Okay.
She was like, cool, perfect.
This is great.
Okay.
So they got along really well.
Things were going well.
She got, she's a few days into this new job,
this new lodging situation.
Elizabeth Tanner was really liking strides. She said she got along with her. She would have
been happy to have her there for longer. And on September 29th, 1888, they went drinking together
at the Queen's Head pub around 6.30 pm, which it's like, they must have really liked each other.
Yeah. This is the deputy of this lodging house, usually their like manager of lodging house.
She's not like going drinking with the tenants. Exactly. A lot of this lodging house, usually their, or like, manager of the lodging house.
She's not like going drinking with the tenants.
Exactly.
A lot of times they were dicks.
Right.
And it's like, sometimes they were cool.
And it seems like if the two of them are getting along so well, like, must have been a
nice relationship.
Well, and it's like, at that point too, it's like, maybe she could have found herself
like, co-managing this place.
Exactly.
Now, people from the lodging house remember her coming back around 7pm, so after having
that drink with Elizabeth Tanner, and then getting ready to leave again.
And by 7.30, a few of them witnessed her in the kitchen.
They said she appeared to be in good spirits, was happy.
She was openly readying herself to walk the streets that evening.
So she was saying, I'm going to make a few, I'm going to make some money.
Yeah.
Now, witnesses saw her with several different men
slash possibly clients throughout the evening.
Before 11 p.m., a couple of men saw her speaking to a man
they described as wearing a jacket
that had white flowers pinned to it.
They both called him clerkly looking.
Like, you know what that means?
I think it's like, you look like a clerk, I guess.
He had a dark mustache.
I don't know if it's just like, because I saw this and I was like, that's a strange description,
but somebody else describes a man that way too.
The two men saw this man and her leaving the bricklayers arms in, which is a pub, the
bricklayers arms in Settle Street together And they were like kissing each other and hugging.
So it seemed very close.
More witnesses saw Elizabeth with this man,
and they were both going towards commercial street.
Your commercial road, excuse me.
At 11.45 pm, William Marshall, a witness,
reported he saw Elizabeth quote,
kissing and carrying on with a man he described as a clerk looking man. This man was described as having a sailors
hat on and they were walking towards Duttfield's court near the International
Workman's Educational Club. I don't know if you remember that. I do. He heard
this man saying to her, you would say anything about your prayers. Oh, and she
left. So I think he was being like cheeky like you would say anything about your prayers. Oh. And she left. So I think he was being like cheeky,
like you would say anything about your prayers.
And she was like, ha ha cheeky.
But Dutfield's yard, like we said,
is next to that club, which was hopping late at night.
But the yard itself was gated off and pitch black.
Eee.
It was described as a place you would have to
grow up your way through to get to the other side
of where the gate was.
And that's the thing, like, I don't even think we can actually grasp how fucking dark it was.
I cannot grasp the concept of how dark this is, because I'm like picturing it and every now and again I'm like a streetlight and I'm like none.
No. And I panic when the lights go off and there's no source of light and you have to like find a light switch. Nope. That is a real panic moment for me.
I don't like like like heavy heavy darkness.
I don't like the sound of darkness.
Yeah, it's so thinking of that outside when it's dangerous and you know this like tons
of people are just going to stab you around and like rob you.
Yeah.
And like possibly rape you.
Like they're just everywhere.
Mm-hmm.
What?
Like I don't want that.
Dude, I used to have to walk through the common,
like from the salon that I used to work at
to where I would park, and I would be so fucking terrified.
And that place is lit.
Exactly. Like, fully lit.
Fully lit, but still scary at night.
Exactly.
Now, so they were walking towards there.
A few minutes later, they were seen,
they believe that this is the
same guy, seen at a green grocer shop, the grocer was Matthew Packer. It was on Berner
Street. He, I guess what happened in there was the guy walked up to the grocer, Matthew
Packer, and was like, get her whatever she wants. And so she was like, and she was like,
I want some grapes. And he was like, what kind of grapes would you like? We have this grape or this grape. She asked for a certain
kind of grape. She said, I want cotton candy. He bought it. There you go. And he bought
her the grapes. Packer said he believed this man was about 35 years old. Everything seemed
fine according to him. Now, police constable William Smith saw Elizabeth around 12 30 AM
near Dotfield's yard,
with a man he said was about 28 years old,
which is like a very specific number.
He's wearing a dark coat and a deer stalker's cap.
So a different man.
Different man, but if you remember that deer stalker's hat,
Annie Chapman was talking to a man
with a deer stalker's cap.
You might be like, whoa, but deer stalker's hats
were very common then.
So it's not, but we know.
Still weird, but we know that she switched.
There's a different man because the previous man had a sailor's cat.
Exactly.
On paying attention.
There you go.
See, you're on it.
Now, he was also carrying a package that was wrapped in newspaper apparently.
That other man was carrying a package.
There was a few, like, there's different sources
that say, because I think also witnesses
confuse themselves.
Sure.
Sure.
But there is a package in newspaper
that comes up every now and then in these.
Which makes you wonder, is that where he's keeping his tools?
Exactly.
A la Albert fish.
Exactly.
Like does he walk around with them?
And that's how he walks around with them
because no one would question somebody with a pack of
wrapped in newspaper, especially back then.
Right.
Why would anyone care?
I had never picked up.
I've listened to so much coverage about this case,
but I'd never come up with that before.
Yeah.
You don't know.
Yeah.
We don't know, but it would make a lot of sense.
A lot of sense.
Yeah, it's not a weird thing to think about.
Because you walk around with a six to eight-inch knife in his pocket. Yeah, it's not a weird thing to think about. Because you walk around with like a six to eight inch knife
in his pocket.
Yeah, it's like either it's in his pocket
and he's like, she's a some sort, but like,
it would be, it would make more sense
if he was just walking around with it
in a newspaper package.
Right.
Because no one's gonna blink at that.
Right.
And he can walk away still holding the package
and no one's gonna question it.
And if anything, it looks less suspicious because you're just everybody's walking around holding
shit. Right. Now, a few minutes later, she was spotted on Fairclow Street with a man who people
saw was about five foot seven and was wearing a long black coat that went to his ankles.
Okay. This witness heard her say, no, not tonight, some other night. Okay. That particular one, it is reported in everything, but some people, some ripperologists out there,
they believe that that was not her.
And it's just because when you put it together with everything, it seems like that may have
been somebody who they thought was her, but not sure.
Worth noting.
Exactly. Then that brings us to 12.45 AM
when Israel Schwartz was on his way home.
He saw a man about five foot five.
He said he looked to be about 30 years old.
He looked to be a little drunk, little tipsy, entering,
and he was in the entrance of Duttfield's yard.
He had kind of like a round face.
He said he had brown hair, a small brown mustache.
She was wearing all-dark clothing, like,
black shirt, black pants, black hat, black everything.
She was a gauf.
He was.
In the police report from October 19th, 1888,
it states this, and I quote,
so Israel Schwartz stated at this hour on turning onto into Berner Street from commercial
road and having got as far as the gateway where the murder was committed.
He saw a man stop to speak to a woman who was standing in the gateway.
The man tried to pull the woman into the street, but he turned her round and threw her down
on the footway and the woman screamed three times,
but not very loudly.
On crossing to the opposite side of the street, he saw a second man standing lighting
his pipe.
The man who threw the woman down, called out apparently to the man on the opposite side
of the road, Lipsky.
That's what he yelled.
And then Schwartz walked away.
But finding that he was followed by the second man,
the one with the pipe he was lighting,
he ran so far as the railway arch,
but the man did not follow so far.
Schwartz cannot say whether the two men were together
or known to each other.
Upon being taken to the mortuary,
Schwartz identified the body as that of the woman he had seen,
and he thus describes the first man,
who threw the woman down, aged about 30, height
5'5, complexion, fair, hair dark, small brown, mustache full face, broad shouldered, dressed
in a dark jacket, and trousers, black cap with a peak, and he had nothing in his hands.
All right. Now, this was interesting to me, because Lipsky, I'm what does that mean? You
ask me that, the reason I looked away from you
is because I was Googling it.
Well, don't worry, because I'm going to tell you about it.
Oh, good.
So now, according to casebook.org, which I linked in part one,
I believe in the show notes, but I'll do it again here.
There was an article posted in Ripperologist magazine,
which I did not know was a thing.
But apparently, it's like a very big periodical in the ripperology. We space.
This article was written by Robert McLaughlin, and in it he talks about what this
Lipsky could mean. I was curious myself in this article really, it made me think.
So I recommend reading this entire article, and again I'm going to post the
link to it in the show notes.
But basically it's a discussion about what exactly Lipsky means and if that is even what
Israel Schwartz said.
Like maybe he was mistaken.
Maybe he heard it wrong.
Yeah.
Excuse me, not what he said, but what he heard.
So the year prior in 1887 this is very very interesting. On Berners Street, which was very close to the scene,
a man named Israel Lipski.
Oh, bitch.
Murdered a woman who was in the same lodging house as he was staying.
Her name was Miriam Angel, and he murdered her
by pouring nitric acid down her throat.
Jesus.
It's a wild story, and I went into it for like an hour.
I'm going to cover that story in more detail by itself
because it deserves an entire episode.
But he confessed to it and was hanged on August 22nd, 1887.
Damn.
This was only a year earlier.
So did Lipsky start to mean murder?
Well, so his real surname was actually LeBolsk.
But he changed it when he arrived in London.
A lot of people did that.
No one really knows why.
He was Jewish and since anti-Semitism was rampant around this time.
Yeah, you mentioned that.
People think like maybe he thought it sounded less Jewish, Lipsky, but it was a massive
case that was everywhere in all the papers and people had it on their minds, for sure.
Now one possibility for this was that this man shouted
Lipsky at his friend across the street
and meant it as like a verb.
Almost.
According to the complete Jack that rippered
by Donald Rumbolo, which again, I really love,
men would often say these things during their arguments
with their wives, like domestic disputes,
they'd say things like, I'll white-chapple you after these murders.
Yeah.
Oh my God.
It was very common thing in London,
I guess, at the time people would take events
and use them as verbs.
First kind of thing.
I guess we kind of still do that to this day.
Yeah, and I guess then it was just a little more prominent
or two-in-a-diss, I suppose, but...
So maybe this man was trying to harm Elizabeth and yelled Lipski, like I'm going to
Lipski you.
Or possibly he was hurling an insult to Israel Schwartz.
Again, anti-Semitism was rampant and maybe he saw Israel looking their way and not minding
his own business and he yelled Lipsky.
The name of a really infamous Jewish murderer
at Schwartz as an insult.
Because that, I mean, like,
especially at this time during the Jack the Ripper murders,
Jewish people were being, they were in danger at this point.
Like people, so him yelling that would have been like a threat
And it could have definitely been an insult and Israel shorts himself was like he could have looked at me
And been like I think you're Jewish and I'm just gonna yell this nasty insult to you
He's like to get him to go away. Right. So that could be something that in which all of these are
horrifying so far to use Lipski as a verb
first of all, and then to just like hurl and antize, you know, somatic, like basic, like
insult at somebody, right?
Or this was something I had wondered, this next one, and I was glad to see it questioned
in that article as well, because my initial thought was that maybe he wasn't saying Lipski
at all, maybe he was saying Lizzy,
or something like that.
Oh, her name is Elizabeth.
She was called Liz sometimes.
It seems to me, when I read this incident
and I read the report, it felt personal to me.
This man was dragging her out on the street.
And that doesn't feel jacked to me.
It feels very domestic violence to me.
Michael Kidney, perhaps, could be that she was with, that was abusive. Was he trying to get her
to go back home with him somewhere and she was refusing, because again, he's dragging her into
the middle of the street. He's not dragging her into an alley. Yeah. And because when she was
refusing, this man pushed her to the ground. And I don't know, it just feels weirdly personal.
That feels domestic violence-y.
I absolutely agree.
Yeah, she also didn't call out for help.
Like, I feel like she would have had a stranger been assaulting her.
She screamed, but it even says not very loudly.
And no specific-
And that like helped me scream.
Right, and that scream that she did let out could have just been like in pain.
Yeah, it could have just been like a completely involuntary
right?
Yeah, that she just fell down to the ground.
Like you said, in pain, and maybe he yelled Lizzy.
Or something like that.
Yeah.
Or even yelled Lipsky at her.
Like who knows?
Like, I bet Lizzy to me seems like it's like an interesting
thought at the very least.
I agree.
And Robert McLaughlin in that article also said that.
So I was glad to see somebody else thought that.
But all to say, the Lipski incident happened at 12.45 AM.
And by 1 AM, she was dead.
Okay.
So this was 15 minutes later.
Right.
She was dead.
Now, the Matthew Packer statement, which was the one that he was the grocer at the Green
Growsher, they came in. He was like, buy it was the grocer at the Green Grocer.
They came in.
He was like, Bauer, give her all the grapes she would like.
That statement fell apart as well.
He had originally said he saw nothing and no one's strange.
But now he was claiming the grape story, now that a reward was being offered.
The police were not offering a reward they were refusing to, which I understand they were hesitant
to do that, because they were worried people would do these things,
which were private citizens were offering rewards.
And like, media was also her post-mortem showed
that she did not have any grape in her system.
Oh, and his statement is like,
buy her any grape she wants.
And she was like, I want those grapes.
And was like, all excited. When you were explaining that, I was like, I've never really met anybody that is like, buy her any grapes you want. And she was like, I want those grapes. And was like, all excited.
When you were explaining that, I was like,
I've never really met anybody that was like
that stoked about grapes.
Yeah, I mean, it was London in 1888.
So I think grapes were like, that would have been
a great thing to get for her.
I mean, I don't think she's eating that grape.
So I think grapes would have been like, holy shit.
I can have some fresh grapes, like sure.
Because she probably didn't have the money
to buy them ourselves.
That's true.
So that wasn't too crazy for me.
It was just more like that grape story
along with the myth of her holding on
to like a bunch of grapes in her hands.
Yeah, it's just a little bit.
And then over the years, like the weirdest things
got added to things like this.
It's like it's weird by itself.
You don't have to.
The whole thing is weird without the grapes.
I promise you.
Now, Dr. George Phillips and Dr. Blackwell were tasked with her post-mortem examination.
The cause of death was listed as violent hemorrhage from severance of blood vessels in the neck by a sharp instrument.
She was not mutilated any further.
And they believed that this was because Jack the Ripper was
interrupted.
It says, and this is a quote from the autopsy,
the right hand was lying on the chest
and was smeared inside and out with blood.
It was quite open.
The left hand was lying on the ground and was partially
closed.
And it contained a small packet of caches wrapped in tissue paper.
Those are breathments.
Now there were no rings or marks of rings on her fingers.
The appearance of the face was, quote, placid and the mouth was slightly open.
There was a checkered scarf, silk scarf around her neck and the bove which was turned to
the left side and pulled tightly.
There was a long incision in the neck, which exactly corresponded with the lower border
of the scarf.
The lower edge of the scarf was slightly frayed as if by a sharp knife.
The incision on the neck commenced on the left side, 2.5 inches below the angle of the
jaw, and almost in a direct line with it.
It nearly severed the vessels on that side.
Also what's interesting is there's a lot of times in the Jack the Ripper cases where his knife
must be extraordinarily sharp
because it phrase fabric that it's next day.
Oh wow.
That happens in a lot of these.
So that's a me says it's like a very sharp knife,
which a medical examiner might
just say. Now the next day the star newspaper reported, quote,
a man when passing through church lane at about half past one saw a man sitting on
a doorstep and wiping his hands. As everyone is on the lookout for the murderer,
the man looked at the stranger with a certain amount of suspicion. Whereupon,
he tried to conceal his face.
He's described as a man who wore a short jacket and a sailor's hat.
If you remember, William Marshall, the random witness, Saul is a bit stride with a man wearing
a sailor hat as well.
Oh honey, I remember.
Oh you remember.
That's just a little interesting thing.
Didn't really get followed up on.
All right.
Now, next day, Michael Kidney appeared
at the police station himself.
Oh, did he?
Drunk as hell and told them if he was the policeman on beat
when Elizabeth's body was found, he would kill himself.
What?
Okay, Michael.
Like, wow. I mean, you didn't have to come here to say that.
Yeah, they were just like, thank you. Okay, I have a good day, I suppose. Cool of you to
profess. Yeah, he was having a real moment. Now, here, I don't know if I buy Elizabeth Stride
as a river victim. Oh, is the way, is my ending thing here. Her injuries were done according
to Dr. Phillips in seconds. That's
row cut. He said could take in less than five seconds. Boom done. That's where it was
quick. And he said it was done with a blunter, more beveled knife, so that the side of it
could have been sharp, like razor sharp, but it was blunted at the top, he believed.
So not a pointed sharp six to eight inch knife
that was very clear in the other killings.
So this is strange to me that he would use a different knife.
Right.
And it just, I don't know, nothing.
I know that like he could have been interrupted.
And that's why I'm not saying that I,
that she's definitely not a river victim
because maybe he was interrupted maybe somebody came maybe it was the first
guy Lewis when he was on his with his horse and cart and maybe the horse coming into the
yard scared start around away.
Yep.
And then we have a this is the double event.
So within I mean so close to this one,
he goes crazy on another bus.
Maybe he did, because he didn't get to.
That is the thing that a lot of people hang onto,
that must be why Catherine Eddos was so brutalized.
But then at the same time,
we're talking about white chapel.
Yeah, and it's like, I don't know. Elizabeth. Yeah, and it's like, I don't know.
Elizabeth, to me, I'm like, I don't know.
I wonder if she was killed by Elizabeth's tribe
was killed by someone she knew.
You think? I don't know.
I'm not saying it's definitely it,
but to me, it feels a little more like it.
I don't know if she, I would definitely
place her in the canonical five.
I don't know if I would keep her.
I know she's in there, but I don't know about that one. I'll have to get back to you after I
read the 602 books that you recommended. Yeah, there you go. Get all you're reading in and then you
let me know. Okay, sounds good. Talk to you in a few years. I'm not super alone in this feeling.
There are people who don't believe that she's a striad is one of them.
But I'm just saying, I think it's a little strange.
I guess here at Catherine Edo's, and then you can tell me.
So 1.30 a.m. after the Elizabeth's striad, Elizabeth's striad has been found, the scene
has been cleared.
At 1.30 a.m., police constable for the city police Edward Watkins was walking his beat and he
walked directly through Miter Square in Aldgate.
Nothing was out of the ordinary, this is regular beat, but you would just, you know, because
they would, that beat they would take is like the same.
Yes, you know, things were, you know, as chaotic as they normally would be at this time.
Couldn't see and all that kind of thing.
Yeah, all that fun stuff.
But 14 minutes later, 14 minutes later,
he loops back around to walk that same beat again.
This time when he passed through,
he immediately saw a woman lying on her back on the ground.
Jesus.
He had just walked through this.
Right.
He used his lantern for light.
And when he shown it over her, it was clear
that she had been
brutally murdered.
Her clothing was intentionally and aggressively cut open to expose her entire body, like
cut open.
She was soaked from head to toe in blood.
Her torso had been eviscerated, cut open from rectum to sternum.
Yes, I said rectum to sternum, and not growing to sternum. Yes, I said rectum to sternum and not growing to sternum.
Her intestines were slashed and cut.
A two foot piece of intestines were laid on the ground,
cut out of her body and laid on the ground,
but next to her between her body and her arm.
Another larger piece of the intestines
was draped over her right shoulder.
And if you remember, Annie Chapman, same thing, draped over the shoulder.
A clear connection there. Now she had a deep laceration across her throat and her face was
slashed several times. The killer had also cut through part of her right ear, like cut it off.
He had just walked, like this guy had just walked through here, and now he loops around not 15 minutes later,
and this kind of damage was already done.
That is insane.
Like that's a thing.
It's not like he walked through
and he found Elizabeth Stride with her throat cut,
something that could have happened within seconds.
Right.
This is like, and it made-
When you're surgery, but like not for surgery.
When you find out what he did, like this alone is surgery. When you find out what he did,
like this alone is outrageous.
When you find out the details here,
I have no idea how he did all this in that time.
It's in truly wild.
It's Jack the River a person.
I know, he seems like a phantom.
And I can't imagine what this guy must have felt,
like the patrolman, he must have been like
an alternate reality.
You look back around and you're like, what?
Like how did this happen?
Like how did I miss this the first time around?
Yeah.
So she was killed in a corner by an alley.
And looking at a surveyor map of the murder site, I saw that there was literally like two
lamps in the entire square.
Just two lamps.
One was across the street, but far away.
And one was around the corner and probably would have like, no help for lighting purposes where she was.
And next to her were three empty homes,
and across the way, like literally across the street,
was the home of patrol police constable Richard Pierce,
who was asleep in his home at the time of the murder,
and could have seen it from his bedroom window.
Stop.
If you looked out his bedroom, and you look at the surveyer's map,
I'll see if we can post it.
You can see it was right there.
Which again makes you wonder.
Like did somebody know that?
That's the thing.
I wonder if they knew that he lived there
and they did that to be like, wake up, right out your door.
Yeah, like look out your window.
I just did it right under your bedroom window.
Exactly.
I think that was part of it.
Now nearby was a warehouse, Keirley and Tongues, where a night watchman and former Metropolitan
police force officer named George James Morris was sweeping.
Watkins ran in there and told him there was another woman in the square.
He said she was cut to pieces and that her intestines were tossed, quote, in a heap over her shoulder. And that he was like, I need help. Like
you can. Yeah. I think the direct quote, as you read in there, was like, for God's sake,
man, help me. And he was like, what? I don't know what you need going on. Now Morris followed
him out. And upon seeing the body, he whistled for help himself. He told Watkins he had not
seen or heard anything and
that his warehouse door had been open while he swept for the last few minutes.
That's crazy.
And two police officers showed up after their call for assistance. One of them was PC James
Harvey. Harvey showed up and he was shocked. Not only just at the scene in front of him, but because he had actually walked to Miter Square at 140 and had seen
nothing.
What?
He had seen nothing at all.
She was found at 145.
Right.
He had walked there at 140 and nothing at all.
Harvey was there, like literally there, five minutes before and saw nothing.
And he was adamant.
I saw nothing here.
What the fuck do you?
Now, according to Jack the Ripper,
Scotland Yard investigates,
this would mean Harvey was literally within yards
while Jack was murdering this woman.
And heard nothing.
And heard nothing.
You wouldn't think too that he would have heard
even like a, like a, like a, like a,
a, like, a, like, a, like,
that like, yeah, or like, I think he just, he severs that windpipe so quick,
the quick that it's just he can, but for him to do it in the dark,
he does this shit in the dark.
And he's meticulous.
That's the other thing, the fact that he's doing this in the dark
and this is a kind of a crude question to ask.
But to organs make a lot of noise when they're being taken out of the body.
Like I would think that like when you take
somebody's intestines out and slump them over their shoulder
that that would make some kind of noise.
I would, that's the thing because also like the,
the mezzan Terry was cut oftentimes off of these intestines.
The mezzan Terry is what attaches it to the abdomen.
It's like thick, rough piece of skin almost.
Like that, you have to, when we would do an autopsy,
part of it is you remove the bowels.
And you would start at the bottom of the intestines
and you would basically fly away that messantary
so you could pull the intestines out.
Otherwise, you're tearing and ripping them away
from that messantary.
Okay.
So for him to be able to plop some next to her
and also fling some above her shoulder,
he had to take that sharp blade
and he had to know to cut that mizantary away.
It did it was there.
And if you do it, find it.
And this is very, this is gonna sound crude,
but it's just reality.
You know how when you are like,
when you're cutting wrapping paper
and your scissors scissors you get that
nice light. And it just glides. The way we would do it is once you get that one cut on the
metal. On the metal. You can pull the intestines and glide that blade across it and pull them all out
until you get to the end. Okay. And yeah, it's so it's for him to know to do that because otherwise
it would take him a lot longer because he'd be ripping and pulling. You'd hear that and it's for him to know to do that, because otherwise it would take him a lot longer,
because he'd be ripping and pulling.
You'd hear that, and it's hard.
It's not easy to do, like a lot of times
when we would do an autopsy, if you were gonna
not use a blade, because there were some autopsy technicians
that just preferred to use their hands for a lot of things.
That's a red flag, just as the way it is.
A red flag.
There's some things that are easier to use your hands
because you don't want to get a blade lost
somewhere and cut yourself.
Because sometimes you're just blindly having to cut.
You don't have to go super into detail anymore.
I'm an empath and I can feel all of this.
But sometimes they would use their hands
to rip something away from something else
and it makes a very clear sound, a squish sound at the very least.
I said no more to you.
And you know, it takes, I mean,
I worked with like big guys,
it takes them muscle to get that out.
Right.
And that's them in a well lit area
with a very easy leverage of leaning over a table
while we have like, you know,
yeah, this guy's doing it on the ground.
Could you do this?
Have you done this? What ground. Could you do this?
Have you done this?
What the, can you do this?
Like rip things away with your hands?
Can you do the, like, take it from the mezzanine?
The mezzanine.
Not the balcony.
It's the mezzanine.
It's a coosier movie.
Yeah, cutting the mezzanteria away from the intestines
and like, removing the bowels was one of the things they do like when you first start
working there at least where I work it's like that's your like hey you're new you get to do the
bowels and it's like oh thank you because it's like once you learn how to do it it becomes very
second nature. But they make you do it at first. Because it's I mean it's like one of the more foul
little jobs of all the evisceration jobs. That's kind of like when I worked out at Pizza Place
and they made us eat an anchovy for-
It's the exact same thing.
It's exactly like that.
Yeah, it's because you like-
Same deal.
Yeah, it's the-
I know, and all these-
This is gonna be really gross, but hi, we're inject the ripper
and I'm an autopsy technician, so it's gonna get weird.
In a lot of reports, they,
keep it that weird.
I'll keep it that weird.
They mention the intestines, obviously.
That's a very important thing that is ripped out
that it was over her shoulder.
In a lot of them, they mention,
and there was like fecal matter,
like on the intestine, they do it like it's like,
this is a strange thing, and I'm like,
well that's where it is. Like I'm like, if you pull someone's's like, this is a strange thing. And I'm like, well, that's where it is.
Like, if you pull someone's intestines out,
that's gonna be there.
Like, this isn't a weird thing.
Yeah, we all poop.
That's really not something to note.
It's just like, that's where the poop goes.
Yeah.
So I just think it's so weird.
I'm like, I don't have to do that.
No, you don't have to write that.
That's weird.
We know what intestines have inside of them.
I don't need to know.
I don't need to know.
Yeah, it's like, he didn't do that on purpose. That was just part of the intestines. That's probably, like, wouldn't have wanted to do that's rude. We know what intestines have inside of them. I don't even know. Yeah, it's like he didn't do that on purpose.
That was just part of the intestines.
That's actually probably like wouldn't have wanted
to do that on purpose.
Don't they tell you like don't cut the poop pipe?
Don't cut the poop pipe, kid.
But that, you know, that is just that part,
the ripping out the intestines and the mesophagus.
So fucking quickly and doing it with such like ease
and with no, and not even just doing that.
If he just did that, I'd be impressed,
but he does a shit ton of other stuff
in this small period of time with no light either.
Right, and it's really wild.
But to my point then, there would have been a noise.
There would have been a noise.
Exactly, so I think there would have been noises
of some kind, even just like, you know, it's
gooey in there to get things make sloshing noises.
That's what I was picturing to be honest.
There's ripping noises.
In fact, one of the, you know, you just want more things.
It keeps yourself funny when you remove the pelvic block or the, you know, the thoracic
block, whatever you're removing.
The abdominal block, I should say.
When you are able to get it away from the sides of the body, it makes a suction noise.
And that was always called like the noise of victory because it means that you were able
to actually lift the block out because it's hard work.
It's like hard to get that. That noise was actually involuntary. I'm not kidding. It just came out.
That was the noise of victory for me because I terrified you.
I don't even want an autopsy anymore.
Yeah, I'm gonna put in my will to not autopsy me. It's a good thing.
I'm gonna rate it was probably my fault. Don't autopsy me. It was probably my fault.
It's fun. So yeah, wild. Now, Dr. Frederick Gordon Brown, the city surgeon,
was called to the scene at 2.18 AM.
He noted that she appeared to have not been raped,
and she was still very warm.
Can I ask, how would they even know
if she had been raped?
Because he slashed her from growing...
Yeah, I know.
From the blood talks to everywhere.
Yeah, to start them. And yeah, I don't know. I to everywhere, yeah, to start them.
And yeah, I don't know.
I'm going to be honest with that one.
I don't know what they were using as a yardstick there.
But I'll, hey, Dr. Brown said no.
They all said none of them appeared to have been sexually assaulted.
Okay, but yeah, but they were sexually mutilated.
But they were sexually, that's the thing.
And they all obviously are like, they were they were sexually mutilated. But they were sexually mutilated. That's the thing. And they all obviously are like,
they were very much sexually mutilated.
They just weren't like raped in the,
like, you know, I don't even know how you would say that.
During a actual sense of the word rape, I suppose.
Sure.
Well, realistically, he wouldn't have had time
when he wouldn't have had anything else that he did.
That's the thing.
He definitely wouldn't have.
Now, a few police constables looked around the scene
and around the body.
And right next to the body,
some buttons from boots, a metal button,
a thimble, and a mustard tin
with two pawn tickets were in it were found.
One of the tickets was signed with the surname Kelly.
And at this point, they were like,
we don't know who this person is,
so this is the only clue we have.
Now, she was brought to Golden Lane, mortuary, and she was stripped and washed.
Now, obviously, she was not identified right away, because she had no identification on her.
So the press published the details of what they found in her pockets.
Okay.
Because they were thinking, hopefully somebody will be like, oh, I know that.
Yeah. Who carried that around all the time. Or like the pawn shop would be like, she pulled will be like, oh, I know that. Yeah.
Who carried that around all the time.
The pawn shop would be like, she pulled here.
Oh, that's what this is.
And in the paper, so they all included all of this, which, along with wearing,
they said she was wearing basically everything that she owned on her body at the time.
She probably had to.
And she was also carrying pretty much everything she owned at the time.
So they wrote this that this was in her pockets and on her person.
A piece of string, a common white handkerchief with a red border, a matchbox with cotton on it, a white linen pocket containing a white bone-handled table knife, very blunt with no blood on it, two short clay pipes, a red cigarette case with red metal fittings, a check pocket containing five pieces
of soap, a small tin box containing tea and sugar, a portion of a pair of spectacles,
a three cornered check handkerchief, and a large white linen pocket containing a small
comb, a red mitten, and a ball of worsted.
I don't know what that is.
She was wearing like I said, a ton of clothing, many, many layers.
She was wearing a black fur trimmed jacket with an apron tied over the whole thing, a
chin skirt with three flounces, a brown linseed dress bodice with a black velvet collar,
a gray petticoat, a green alpaca skirt, an old blue skirt with a red flounce, a white
calico shameez, a men's white vest with buttons down the front,
men's lace up boots, a neck anchor chiff,
and a black straw bonnet that was lined and trimmed
with green and black velvet.
Most of it had been cut right through
and was bloody on all the edges.
Which then again tells you how sharp that knife.
Sharpness to cut through all of that.
And not with a blunt top
because you would need a sharp knife to get that cut.
Right. So then again, that kind of helps your point.
Yeah. Because why is he switching knives?
Right. Like you wouldn't kill one person with a beveled edge knife,
knife like a blunt knife and then just switch knives for somebody else.
Yeah, I don't think so either. That doesn't make sense.
By the way, Worsted is a high quality type of wool yarn.
Oh, that's good to know. Thank you't make sense. By the way, Worsted is a high quality type of wool yarn.
Oh, that's good to know.
Thank you.
No problem.
Now, with these details that were published, a man named John Kelly came forward, saying
he believed it may have been the woman that he had been living with for seven years.
And he said her name is Catherine Edo's.
She also went by Kate, since we have been together for this long, sometimes people call
her Miss Kelly.
Oh.
So Catherine was born April 14, 1842, and gracily green in the West Midlands.
She was one of 11 children.
Her parents were Catherine and George Edo's.
Her mother was a cook at the peacock inn, and her father was a tin plate varnisher at the old hallworks.
I looked this up because I was like, what's a tin plate varnisher at the old hall works. I looked this up because I was like,
what's a tin plate varnisher?
My god, I just went down like a rabbit hole.
Oh, it's a great talk.
I was.
I was about this portion.
I was like, so last night I looked this thing up,
and then I found, and I was like,
we haven't had coffee here.
Can't stop all of a sudden.
Cannot.
So eventually, because I was looking this up,
and he eventually moved the family to London
because they were bringing in stamping machines
to take over the human tin jobs at the old hall,
like some of the jobs.
So I was like, what?
So tin plate workers made beautiful tin products, actually.
Like when you see those beautiful trays
or plates with intricate designs all over them
from the Victorian era.
Oh, pretty lot of tin designs. That sheving. And like paint designs that she does.
And like painted designs and like gold leaf
and such like that, that's what it was.
So George was described as a varnisher
and I found that this meant he worked in the area
where the beautiful product would come to him.
He would apply several coats of varnish to it,
stove dry after each coat for varying periods of time
until it was all set, then it would
move to painters and all that good stuff to do like the gold leaf and all that.
Very cool.
Interesting jobs they were.
Yeah.
It was just very interesting.
That is cool.
The stamping portion was like dangerous as fuck too.
Like doing the stamp outs because it was like they were doing these tiny cutouts and
if your finger was in there, you could rip your finger off.
Yeah. So that was interesting.
So in 1848, the family had moved to London where he could get a new job in the same kind
of industry.
They actually moved to Burmonsy, which is funny, considering I just covered the Burmonsy
Horror recently.
Four more children were born to George and Catherine, but only two survived.
Catherine attended a school called Downgate Charity School,
specifically created to train poor children
to just be able to get by and stay off the streets.
It wasn't a school where she would learn to be something
great or get out of her situation.
It was teaching her to have the skills she could use
to just keep her head above water.
Because she was a girl, she wasn't taught math or anything that was actually going to aid her
in any kind of business venture.
She was just taught sewing in the Bible of her essentially.
Like at this point, it's like,
don't you want to create more jobs?
Yes, like girls can do it.
I promise you, like I'm at look around.
You'll have a lot less.
You'll have a lot less.
That's to investigate.
Now she was, Catherine was tiny, adorable, with curly, or all-burn hair,
and apparently a sweet and lovely human.
Everyone called her chick because she was so tiny,
and she loved to sing.
This singing voice was something she carried
into adulthood and people commented on her beautiful voice,
her entire life.
Wow.
When Catherine was 13, her mother died of tuberculosis
and 13 years old, and her father died two years later.
Oh, man.
Yeah.
Unfortunately, this meant the younger siblings were all split up and put into work houses and
schools like the ones Catherine was attending.
The older siblings were trying to make sure their siblings were, you know, could keep, basically
just get good work, stay out of trouble like they were trying to become the parents.
They were, her older siblings were able to get her,
Catherine, in with her aunt Elizabeth and Uncle William,
who was her father's brother.
Oh good.
They were happy to take her in.
They were like, we're gonna get her work
as like a domestic servant or something in Wolverhampton.
She was kind, she was sweet, she acted as a surrogate,
and this is on to Elizabeth, acting like a surrogate mother for Catherine.
Like, it was all great.
Good.
And she was in a nice, clean living space, living in a nice home. There were opportunities.
The home was on Bilston Street, and everyone around the community came to know and really love Catherine.
She was restless, though. She wasn't the kind of gal to just settle into a boring job and be content.
She was definitely destined to do something more, but was obviously just not given every opportunity to do it.
And it feels like that is really the thing with a lot of these women I've said it before.
It's the theme throughout. They're restless. They're not content to just sit.
Now, around this time when she was 16 she met in man named
Thomas Conway. He was from Kilgever, Lewisburg, County Mayo, in Ireland, and he
was older than her, and a soldier in the Royal Irish regiment. They took a
liking to each other, but nothing blossomed until later. No. She got a job at her
father's old place of work at Old Hall. She was a scourer, which meant she was
there just to sweep and mop up after the workers. She was fired very quickly for allegedly stealing. Allegedly. Allegedly.
This was all it took. Her aunt and uncle kicked her out of the house. Oh, man. Yeah. So I don't know
how much how allegedly it was. It feels like there might have been some, uh, might have known that
that happened, but you know, she moved in with another uncle, Thomas Edo's, and Birmingham,
and she lasted even less time there,
and ended up moving back to Wolverhampton
with her grandfather who got her a job as a tin stamper.
So really stay in that tin business.
Stay loved tin.
They loved him and the tin in that family.
So basically, she was the only,
she was only gonna be using,
she was there to use the machine
to emboss the design on stuff like I talked about earlier.
It's a kind of dangerous job.
Yeah.
Literally only a couple of weeks later, she quit
and went back to Birmingham.
Well, it was probably a lot.
Yeah, this is where she moved in with none other
than her old crush, Thomas Conway.
Oh my goodness.
The flame flickered.
What?
At this time, he had been pensions from the military
because he had gotten sick, but he was healthier now.
So now the two of them got together
and they started traveling all over together.
He made and sold chat books,
which were tiny little versions of literature
and poetry books.
They were usually hand bound and comprised
of many different sources from the inside.
Other than this, they started making money creating gallows' ballads.
What is that?
They wrote and printed songs and poems about murderers who were about to be hanged.
Oh, shit. That's so very ironic.
So they traveled to different jails and literally sold these to people watching a public execution.
And apparently they made some good money at it.
Wow.
And there were a lot of hangings at this time.
So it was like, the couple were not officially married,
but Catherine went by Catherine Conway
and would describe Thomas as her husband.
Okay, she seemed very in love.
Oh.
The couple was very intense.
And Catherine got TC tattooed on her forearm and blue ink.
Are you shitting me?
I love it.
She was a rebel.
They had two children, two daughters named Annie
and Catherine Ann.
I didn't even realize, sorry, that tattoos could happen.
Yeah, it was like a thing.
Yeah, back then.
Now, in 1866, they actually did a gallows ballad
for her cousin, Christopher Charles Robinson,
who was hanged for murdering his fiancee in cold blood. Oh.
In 1868, they had a son named Thomas.
In this same year, they outlawed public executions, which completely took away the need for gallows,
bellads, and boom.
Sorse of income.
Done.
Depleted.
Gone.
They moved to Surrey around this time, and she took up work as a laundress.
This is when things got bad.
The family was in and
out of work houses now around these times, and money was not coming in at all. August
1873, while living in St. George's workhouse, Catherine had another baby boy named Alford
George. Things went from bad to worse. Things were bleak now in both Thomas and Catherine
were drinking heavily. Oh no. It seemed the only way to cope with the horrid times
that they were living in.
But Thomas was an asshole when he drank.
The real Thomas came out and he was violent
and would beat Catherine when he was drunk.
Oh, no.
Yeah, they broke up.
And he kept Thomas and Alfred George
and she took Annie and Catherine.
So they split the kids.
She asked if she could live with her aunt Elizabeth
and Uncle William again for the time being,
but they said absolutely not,
because you fucked up hard when you were living with us
and you're not coming back.
Okay, a lot of it.
Very tough love.
She was on the streets now in London,
and I think the kids were kind of like staying
with friends a lot of the time.
Yeah.
Her kids had like varied, you know,
they had very conflicting things to say.
One of them felt one way about her
and the other one felt the other way.
OK.
And those were her two daughters.
Her two daughters.
She got to keep.
But they were with friends a lot.
I don't think they were with Catherine all that much.
Now, she was on the streets of London now.
She was drinking even more heavily,
and this was really the beginning of the end.
So she began getting arrested for drunken disorderly behavior, a lot, and started sex work
as a means of getting, even just enough money to put a roof over her head.
It's kind of, unfortunately, a similar tale to a lot of the victims.
It was during this time that she found herself chatting with a man at Spittelfield's market.
His name was John Kelly.
Yeah!
And he had recently become a whitt, he lost his wife.
He was kind, he was sweet, and he just wanted to make her happy.
Okay.
He was also sober.
A great.
And the reason he was sober was he just didn't think it was worth spending money on alcohol.
Agreed.
Because he was like, I don't have a lot, so I'm not going to spend it on alcohol.
For this, well, that's the thing, right?
He was like, and he said, I'm working my ass off for precious little.
I'm not going to waste it on drinks.
That was his whole thing.
Mom.
Sadly, she was still kind of telling people
her name was Kate Conway,
even when people started seeing her and John Kelly together
and people would be like, oh, Mrs. Kelly
and she was like, it's Conway.
And it was like, eek.
But I think she was really in love with Thomas Conway.
I was going to be in a toxic situation.
Well, they had spent years together.
They had four children.
You can't help who you love.
And I think she was just not willing to give up that relationship,
like the idea of it again.
Well, and I mean, she was newly with this edelman.
Yeah.
So she's probably like, I'm not like, no.
Yeah, I like to see.
She basically, she would, the answer to Kelly sometimes, but she would kind of flip back and forth. Like, she would answer to Kelly sometimes,
but she would kinda flip back and forth.
Like she would answer, which again,
a lot of these women too,
and a lot of people back then,
a lot of aliases they were going by.
So I think that was just another way
to have different names too.
Right.
So she was also suffering from Breit's disease.
What is that?
Now we would call it nephritis.
And it's an inflammation of the nephrons
in the glomerulae, which help the kidneys produce and it's an inflammation of the nephrons in the
glomerulae which help the kidneys produce urine. They're part of the kidneys. So
she would have probably been suffering from a lot of symptoms associated with it
including shortness of breath, back and flank pain, fluid retention in her hands
and her face. It would have been like kind of tough, like exhaustion. Yeah, so
I had no idea that one of them was suffering from that.
So she was sick.
Now, that's just interesting.
Hold on to that for me later, until later.
Now put it in my back pocket.
Put it in your back pocket.
So they moved in together at 55 Flower in Dean Street
at Cuny's lodging house.
I was going to say it was rough.
She wore everything she owned because things were always being stolen.
And she was worried that something could get stolen.
I know she was a too hot.
I think it was pretty, well, this was kind of
the beginning of fall at this point.
I suppose.
I was like in the summer.
Warm and not too hot.
Now that's, again, that's why she was found
with so many layers.
Yes, she was wearing them all.
Now the deputy of the 55 flowering dean street place, Frederick William Wilkinson said the Catherine was quote, a very wearing them all. Now the deputy of the 55 flowering deans street place,
Frederick William Wilkinson said that Catherine
was quote, a very jolly woman.
She was described as a very jolly woman
by a lot of people, very jovial.
And he confirmed that she and John Kelly
lived like they were married.
Later he would be the one to give John Kelly
an airtight alibi for being at the lodging home at night,
the evening that Catherine was murdered.
He was like, no, he was here all night.
And I don't think he would have done anything.
They drifted together, they drifted together
and solo in and out of work houses and lodging houses.
Sometimes they would be staying together,
sometimes they wouldn't, they would spend a lot of time apart
but just drift back together again.
Or as John described it later, quote,
be throed together a lot. She would often beg and borrow money from her daughters who
were now grown. They resented it, having been part of the downward spiral that she had
taken when they were young. So that was a difficult relationship that she was
navigating. In the summer of 1888, they were common, they were common law-married at
this point. Yeah. It only takes like 10 years, right?
I think it's less, isn't it?
Like seven.
I think it might be very doubtful.
Yeah, seven, because they were together seven years.
Oh, that makes sense.
It was this summer in 1888 that they walked 40 miles together
with tons of other workers from London
to Kent to do hop picking, which there would be used to make beer.
This was like a huge job.
A lot of people from London and White Chapel did this.
They would go do the hot picking
and they would make some extra money.
You know, this was a nice reprieve
from the horrific air and conditions
that they were living in in the city.
That 40 mile walk was a nice reprieve.
Exactly, but what you got is exactly.
It's true, but this was the first time
that they were apparently together,
like, together, together all the time,
and could not escape each other.
And they were not getting along that great.
Well, I was going to say maybe that's why they weren't
together together so much.
Exactly.
So they ended up, they did it.
They made a little money, not a lot,
and coming back, they left September 27th
without a lot to the show for it. But, you know, they split up 27th without a lot to show for it, but you know,
they split up the night they arrived back at London, didn't split up like break up,
they just kind of like went their separate ways.
Whoa, exactly.
John Kelly went to stay at the lodging house on Flower and Dean Street,
and Catherine ended up having to go to a couple of work houses and do manual labor for her stays.
Apparently, September 28th,
she told the manager of mile and war house, quote,
I have come back to earn the reward offered
for the apprehension of the White Chapel murderer.
I think I know him.
Oh, and they were just like, okay.
I think they were like who is he?
And he's like, she's like, I don't know.
And then they were like, be careful not to become
a victim of him out there.
And she said, oh, no fear of that.
Oh, no.
And this was on September 28th.
That's wild.
And I'm sorry, what day was she killed?
And this was basically, this was the day before.
So and she was like, oh, no fear of that.
How strange is that?
And there's a couple other things
that like weird lineups like that.
Because I think I want to say it was Annie Chapman
that was talking in the kitchen of a lodging house
about how scary it was, about what it was.
Yeah.
Now September 29th, John Kelly and Catherine met
for breakfast.
They had breakfast together.
Kinda went their own separate ways,
but they planned to meet back up later that day.
When they did see each other again, it was around 2 PM.
Catherine said she was going
to try to go to Burmonsy to see her daughter Annie and ask for money. And she told John that she
would be back in White Chapel around 4pm and we can meet up then. I don't know how that went,
but she certainly wasn't rolling back into White Chapel at 4pm in good condition. She was seen on something that they
called prostitutes island. Oh, man. And where a lot of women would stand on to try to solicit
clients, I suppose. She was very drunk at this time. And according to the head and lives of Jack
the Ripper victims, she was many sources say and reports say she was pretending to do an imitation of a fire engine.
Okay. Interesting tidbit I found. There was this blog and I will link to this blog because
it was really good. It was called the History Girls blog spot. This is at least an interesting
explanation for what Catherine was actually going through when she, they said she was doing
in drunken impersonation of a fire engine.
This is just like a take on it,
because I was like, what is that?
What is a drunken invitation of a fire engine,
even like,
Germany, do you want?
Like, what would it be?
What, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what,
but it sound like that back then.
Well, I don't know what a fire engine sounds like back then.
That's what I mean.
I don't know what fire engine sounded like back then.
I don't know.
So I don't know if that would be even,
because that's what I thought of.
Like, I was she making siren noises?
Yeah.
I'm like, is that what they sounded like back then?
I don't even know.
I assume they would have some kind of,
well, I don't know what they said.
But I just don't know if it would sound like they did now.
Now, this is interesting. According to the writer of this blog, who I believe is named Lori, but I just don't know if it sounds like they did now. Now, this is interesting, according to the writer of this blog,
who I believe is named Lori, but I'm not positive.
She posited that maybe due to her kidney issues,
which would have left her short of breath,
maybe she was huffing and puffing like a steam engine,
fire trucks were run that way back then, by the way.
And she either ended up going with it
because she was getting a laugh from people, who thought she was doing some kind of impersonation. And she actually
didn't mean to be causing a scene. Or maybe she was just drunken completely out of control
and just making a lot of noise. But any like, there is a possibility that she was sick and
suffering, which makes the story a little different. And so just being like, what? She was doing a personated of a fire engine?
It's like, maybe she was just like, not able to breathe.
And people took that as like, that's funny.
What are you doing?
And she's like, oh, I'm being a fire engine.
Like, maybe it had to do with her being sick.
I could have.
This just was like, it was basically like a very empathetic,
possible point of view to share.
And I just thought it was like a very interesting one.
It was one that was looking at her
as less of just a drunk person of the night.
And instead of making her and a human who was suffering,
and maybe it was just going with it.
Or maybe she was just fucking hilarious.
Exactly.
It's just like, basically, I kept seeing
the fire engine imitation thing and I was like,
well, I don't know what that looks like, one.
And then two, I was like, I just, I think that's like a different point of view and it's
just interesting because we won't know, but it's just something to think about.
Right.
And it again reminds you to look at her as somebody who was suffering.
So I'll link that blog because I think it's an interesting blog and I wanted to get hit.
Well, and it's nice that somebody took the time to like consider it a different way.
Yeah. And she didn't say like, I know this. She was like,
you just don't know this. Right.
You know, we got a look at the fact that she did have this kidney disease.
So she was arrested that night at 8.30 p.m. when a police constable named George Simmons
and another one named Lewis Robinson found her on the ground on Aldgate High Street
and she was out, cold.
They tried to pick her up and she just like slumped back over.
Which also could have been hand-on-hand again with her illness.
Yeah, she was very drunken.
I was going to say she was shit-faced here.
This was definitely not the illness, but you know, not good.
So she was taken to Bishop's Gate Police Station, very intoxicated at this time.
They asked her her name and she replied, nothing.
Okay, which okay.
She was put in a cell to sober up
because they would just put you in a cell to wait
for a while and be like, you good?
And then just let you out.
Girl, they still do, it's the drug tank.
But everyone who interacted with her at the station
that night said she smelled very strongly of drink
and could not stand up on her own at all. So she was in a bad way that night said she smelled very strongly of drink and could not stand up on her own at all.
So she was in a bad way that night. I love that they just say of drink of drink. At 12.15 AM,
she woke up and they heard her singing softly to herself. She's really little scared.
And that's just what she would do. She would sing softly to herself. Around 12.30 AM, she said,
hey, when are you going to let me out of here?
Oh, I wish they had it. They said, when you're able to take care of yourself, we'll let you out of here.
So around 1 a.m. they let her out. She told them before they left, she left, they were like,
we need to know your name address. She said her name was Mary Ann Kelly. Okay. And that she lived
at Six Fashion Street in Spittelfields. Okay. So PC George Hut let her leave.
And when she did, she turned and said,
good night, old cock.
I con it.
There are reports that she was still drunk at this time,
but they just figured she couldn't go anywhere at all
to get more drinks, so she was going home.
Oh, she did, like, just, like, they had just kept her
a little longer.
Oh, they had kept her a little longer. She would have been probably home around.
It's really sad.
But this is interesting.
She did say, and this is in the official reports,
everywhere you read this, she did say,
I shall get a damned fine hiding when I get home.
And George Hut replied, which I was like, okay, George,
he wrote, and serve you right, you have no right to get drunk.
Fuck off!
Which, that wasn't even like the, but that's like, fuck you, George.
But also, I'm like, so was John Kelly abusing her?
Maybe.
Like, was that, I'm like, who are you talking about?
Or was she just drunk?
And she was thinking she was going home to Thomas Conway.
Oh, yeah?
Maybe she was like, oh, like, because they did say, she was very drunk when she was leave, or they believed she was going home to Thomas Conway. Oh, yeah. Maybe she was like, oh, like, because they did say she was very drunk when she was leave
or they believed she was still.
So maybe she was still drunk and thinking like back to when she lived with Thomas Conway
and like, oh, I'm going to get home and he's going to hurt me.
Or was it possible that she was thinking about going back to the workhouse and like, maybe
somebody there, like, I don't know.
Yeah, I don't know.
Or it would be upset that she was like that.
Yeah.
Just a very strange comment, I thought.
Considering John Kelly, by all accounts,
was not said to be an abuser.
Hmm.
I mean, there are a lot of accounts, though.
I guess everybody who knew him was like,
I didn't know them to get into those kind of fights.
And usually you didn't have a lot of privacy
if you were gonna get into an abuser fight.
It was gonna be around like eight other families in a room.
Yeah, because you're in a warehouse.
So, so I don't know for sure, none of us do, but it's a very strange comment.
I just thought it was weird.
I mean, a lot of people were hitting their wives back then.
They were, that's the thing.
And I'm like, was this just like a normal comment to make?
Probably, but like hard and then also he didn't like that she drank because he didn't drink.
Yeah, exactly.
So maybe that was it. I don't drink. Yeah, exactly. So maybe that was it.
I don't know.
Now, it was just interesting.
So at 135, she was spotted by witnesses, Joseph Levy and Harry Harris at the corner of
Duke Street and church passage, which was an avenue that led into Miter Square.
That's where she would later be found.
She was talking to a man according to them very closely.
She had her hand on his chest.
He was said to be medium builds,
about five foot seven in somewhere in the area
of 30 years old.
He was fair,
complex with a mustache.
We heard this in a lot of the other ones.
He was wearing a grayish jacket with a red scarf
or neck anchor chief and a gray cloth hat with a peak.
Mm.
I heard that before too.
This is a hat that's almost like a Scally cap,
like almost like a Peaky Mlander hat,
but it's got like a little more height to it.
Okay, like almost like a newsboy cap, I guess you would say.
Like one of those.
Yeah, you know?
Yep.
I'm trying to like, is that one with that one?
Yeah, you're right.
Now, Levy said that when they passed by them,
Levy had said he said to Harris, look there.
I don't like going home by myself
when I see those characters about, right?
Like he was really, oh, he later said
he was like, I wasn't nervous
or like thinking they were gonna hurt me.
He just figured seeing a man and a woman
seemingly chatting closely in a dark alley at almost 2 a.m.
Probably meant they were not up to anything
wholesome.
Yeah, it was like that's all I was saying.
I didn't think they were threatening in any way either one of them.
One 45am, only about 10 minutes later, she was discovered, ravaged and disemboweled
on the street in the dark.
Now while removing her clothing, doctors found a piece of her ear when it dropped out
of her, the fabric of her her clothing just dropped on the ground.
Yeah.
Dr. Brown performed the autopsy, but present to observe the whole thing was
Dr. George William Sikera, Dr. Phillips, and Dr. William Sanders.
Now, when he began the examination, he noticed that both eyelids had been
sliced open, like vertically.
The left one had a quarter inch slice through the lower lid and the right was sliced all the way through.
Those also a very deep laceration that began at the bridge of her nose and extended across her right cheek to her jaw.
It had cut down to the bone in her face.
Wow.
The tip of her nose was sliced off,
and her upper lip was also cut in half down to the gum,
which was sliced underneath it.
Her mouth was sliced at the right side of it,
up into her cheek,
and both of her cheeks underneath her eyes
had little triangular cuts
with the, that the skin flapped over.
Okay.
Like very deliberate cuts, triangles under her eyes,
which was not seen in any other ones.
No.
Now the cut to the abdomen that completely eviscerated her
was jagged and described as zigzagged.
But from a sketch I saw in Scotland Yard investigates, it looks
to me like more of an attempt to avoid slicing the belly button in half. And why would you
not want to do that? So this is what, so here's the thing. The cut extends from the breast
bone down to the groin pelvic bone and it takes a quick detour from its straight path when
it hits that navel. And I'm just speaking from my experience with eviscerating, but when we would start the
eviscerations and begin with the Y-shape-to-shape-dincision, we would intentionally divert the cut
around the belly button before bringing it back down to the pelvic area.
It was just a thing we did to not split the enable in half.
Okay, that's all.
To me, this indicates that it could possibly be someone who has performed an autopsy before,
and their muscle memory causes them to eviscerate like that because they've been doing it like
that.
I know this is murder and not a clinical evisceration, but if they are used to doing that,
it may just be habit.
Like, for some reason.
If I'm going to cut a body open, this is how I do it.
Just didn't even think about it.
It just, whoop, takes that detour.
I would never, just, I would never,
my, I don't think my brain would let me
after hundreds of autopsies,
cut straight down through that navel.
It would be an automatic detour around that navel.
Yeah.
So that was interesting to me seeing that
because I was like, wait a second,
that's how I cut.
And that's, and that's just so how I've been taught to cut.
Right.
And was he taught to cut like that?
Yeah, I'm also like, as you're saying this,
I'm just trying to figure out who this guy is.
Now the report even says that the cut was straight down
to within a quarter of an inch from the navel
and then went horizontal and around the left side
of the navel before coming back around and going straight back down again,
leaving that navel untouched. Yeah. I think they said, um, in one of the books I
saw it was like on a tongue of skin, they called it. Sure. Now to make me even
more suspicious that this was someone with at least a medical background, they
had removed her left kidney cleanly., that's also weird because she had kidney per once.
Exactly.
They had sliced through the renal capsule
and removed it.
The renal capsule is like the thin layer
that is like encapsulating the kidney.
Okay.
Dr. Brown said he believed this was definitely
someone with knowledge of anatomy and dissection
because they had to know where the kidney was located, first
of all.
Which I don't know where the fuck my kidney is.
It's not easy to find when you open from the front.
Because their kidneys are closer to the back.
Close back.
Yeah.
And so when you open from the front, you let a look for them.
They're not just right there for you to see.
Like they're not just like hanging above something.
Are they like in the middle or they toward your lower back?
They're towards the lower.
Right.
And they're not easy to find.
And part of her uterus was also removed again.
So another uterus removed and take the killer took these two things with him.
And part of the uterus.
Yeah, like I guess he took most of the uterus,
but they wasn't as clean as the other one was.
But the kidney was clean.
They had cut it at the right vessel.
They had removed it in a way that
wasn't just torn out of the body. She had kidney disease. Was this someone who knew who she was,
knew she had a kidney disease? And did that to kind of... Dr.
Yeah. Also, her liver had been stabbed. Her vagina and rectum had been lacerated and stabbed.
The killer had sliced to the right thigh up to the labia and separated that as well to
create one big flap of skin.
The pancreas and spleen were also lacerated and stabbed.
And like the others, she had died from the hemorrhage of the severed carotid artery,
and everything else was done post mortem.
And so you said the pancreas, the spleen,
and the liver.
And the liver.
And the roster.
Because you first said the liver,
so I thought, oh, is this somebody that knows her?
No, she's a heavy drinker.
And it's great about it.
And it's great about it.
And it's great about it.
And it's great about it.
And it's great about it.
And it's great about it.
And it's great about it.
And it's great about it.
And it's great about it. And it's great about it. And it's great about it. And it's great about it. one big happy family in there. So it's like, you're gonna, but it's just,
and I don't know if those were like frenzied stabs,
but no matter what, he took the kidney,
he took the uterus, he sliced off her ear,
only part of her ear came out of her clothing.
Would her kidneys have looked different?
Because they would have had like a shriveled kind of
appearance and pale.
So again, I wonder if it's like this guy has some kind of like anatomy knowledge, definitely
has some kind of anatomy knowledge, but then also like some kind of interest too.
Yeah.
And like he would want that kidney for some reason, really.
Exactly.
Because that's because I'm like, okay, so did he know that she had a kidney problem or when
he opened her up because he has this medical knowledge, Then he realized she did and he just wanted that kidney and it's like where is the light coming from?
How are you seeing this shit?
How are you finding that fucking kidney in her body in a matter of under 15 minutes?
And the only thing that you can think of is a lantern, but like, but nobody saw anybody
with a lantern.
And is he holding the lantern in one hand while also using Orzy Placing it somewhere?
This is done on the ground, obviously.
Well, and so is that why he does the Winpite thing to silence them, but also to kill them
quickly, maybe to put their light, his lantern on them.
Maybe?
I don't know.
Possibly.
But it's just like, what the fuck is this guy?
She has to have some light.
There's no way that he's doing this without light.
Oh hell no.
So what would be a light source back then
other than a lantern?
Just a lantern.
Right, that's all you would have,
or like a match, which like that doesn't make,
that makes even more sense.
Yeah.
So it's like, what the fuck?
Like was he, he must have just placed it down on her
or on next to her.
But that's not even a lot of light.
That's a lot of work to do and very dim light
and very quickly.
Well, I was just going to say the speed
at which he did it would make you think
that he's somebody who's done this for a while.
And that the thing is it's like, he went in there
with a plan. He went in there looking for a kidney
It seems to me because you think I don't think he's just opening up and being like doop do
The Kennedy is going to be the first thing that jumps out of you because yeah
We said they're closer to your back. He's helping through the front. He's gonna have to like
Sorry, but dig well though and he that he is and it's also in or it's in a capsule of its own
It's not out there.
And like slice it through.
And slice it open without, you know,
and I just don't think he would have just randomly dug in there
and somehow found the renal capsule
and then decided to open it up and take a kidney.
No, it doesn't make a lot of sense.
You don't have a lot of time.
He had to have been going in there with a plan.
I'm fine getting the kidney out.
So then we're back to,
because I had said maybe he just saw that her kidneys
were fucked up so no, that wasn't the case.
I feel like he had a plan that he was going in there
for a kidney.
I don't know why, but he went in there for a reason.
I just don't feel like the kidney
would be the thing you'd rip out first.
It just doesn't feel right to me.
But then I say, I don't, yeah.
Like I want to think that he must have known her medical history.
Yeah.
But then, like how did he know that she was going to be there when she was, you know what I mean?
Well, that's the other way.
Was he following her?
It's like, but then you would think if he was following her that night and she did end
up in jail, he probably would have given up and started walking home.
Well, then there's also the fact that there were a few witnesses who said that John Kelly told
them that he heard that she was in jail, that she had been arrested that night. And he was like,
oh, she'll be out by the morning. So he, I word around town, was that she had gotten arrested.
So maybe someone waited outside that jail for. Yeah. because I'm sorry with this close by the jail,
where she was discovered. Yeah.
So she hadn't walked like crazy far,
because I think it was only like a few minute walk,
because of the fucking stump I could.
It's, there's, I, it's because fascinating case,
because her in particular, I do feel like he knew her,
her, or knew her of her medical history.
But then it's also the case of like,
because the kidney thing is just weird.
She, he also escalates each time.
That's the, that's the other reason I don't believe Elizabeth
stride as part of the series.
And if she was, and that was not his intention,
was just to do that.
Right.
Because if you look at it, it's goes from, you know,
Paulie, Paulie Marion Nichols was the first one.
Yep.
She was ravaged for sure.
But then Annie Chapman had the intestines.
The intestines.
Then we get to Catherine Eddows, who is ravaged.
And then the last one we're gonna get to is the crescendo.
Mm-hmm.
So to me, it felt like it was like he was ratcheting it up
a notch each time
intentionally. Yeah. And this was, I don't know. But it's just really wild to me. And like I said,
in all of these cases, the mutilation is done post mortem. He killed them right away with that
severed windpipe. How quickly would they die from a severed windpipe? Very quickly. Yeah, like because you would just not be able to breathe.
Okay, so that would, and then bleeding out
because he would sever those carotid arteries and boom.
So you'd be on very quickly, at least.
At least they were not alive for any of the mutilation,
but during the examination,
they also found the apron that she was wearing
on top of everything, that like one layer.
It had been cut through with a knife
and part of it was missing.
Like part of it, like there was a piece of fabric
that wasn't there.
So soon after this, constable Alfred Long found the missing
sliced apron piece on Gulston Street,
which was only about a 10 minute walk from the murder scene.
The piece of apron also appeared to have blood on it,
but not just on it, it appeared that someone had wiped blood on it, but not just on it.
It appeared that someone had wiped blood onto it, possibly from a bloody knife.
Oh, like he had maybe taken it and smeared like taking it to use to clean the knife.
Upon further inspection, this is interesting in this point back to the anti-semitism kind
of thing that was going on.
He found writing and chalk right next to where they found this apron,
like down a passageway. And it looks like it had been just written in chalk very recently.
And it said, and I quote, the Jews are not the men that will be blamed for nothing.
The Jews are not the men that will be blamed for nothing. Which to me is someone trying to make it seem like to blame
it on Jewish people. Like this is somebody who's trying to make it look like a Jewish person wrote
that. Like we're not going to believe you're lame for anything. Yeah, and it's just very, what's
and why I point this out is one to point out the anti-Semitism that was going on here and how
they were really trying to pin this on a Jewish person, just for being Jewish, like
no other reason.
And regardless of who did this or what it meant, it was evidence because it was found
right next to the apron and it seemed to be very recently put there.
Right.
Now, a city detective, Daniel Halsey, stayed with the writing and stated to the other officers
unseen that he would remain there and he was like, until he gets lighter outside, then we'll try to take a photograph of it. It rains. No, it rained. It rained stupidity.
It's what it rained. Sir Charles Warren showed up a little before 5 a.m. and told them it had to be
erased from the wall immediately because people would see it and it would be dangerous for people
and he was not willing to wait even less than an hour for light to come.
He was like, I can't you just keep people away from the area, dude.
Halsey begged him to wait until light so they could photograph it but before destroying
it and he was like, I'll stay here with it.
We can even cover it like if you want.
We have to keep it here so we can get it in evidence.
Right.
You can't just write it down.
We need photograph of it.
Yeah. And then like, I mean, handwriting
and I'll also send back them, like, I don't know.
But at least you could, like, have him write something
and look at it.
Because as we'll see, some letters come in later.
I know.
And so Sir Charles Warren was like,
no, they're gonna wreck this house.
They're gonna riot.
No, like, we're not doing it.
Now, this was not a house.
It was a, like, huge apartment building.
And this was in, like, a stairway leading to the apartment building. They wouldn't have Now this was not a house. It was a huge apartment building. And this was in a stairway leading
to the apartment building.
They wouldn't have torn this place down.
No.
And even in complete Jack the Ripper,
the Rumble O-1, he says the same thing.
He's like, that was bullshit.
That was a bullshit excuse for him to use.
And so Halsey was like, come on man.
And then Halsey and the other officers suggested,
why don't we just rub out the word juice on here?
So that it's not immediately igniting anything.
Like why don't we rub that out or cover it,
everything else stays, we take a picture of that.
Please, dude.
And he said absolutely not.
And in fact, according to the acting commissioner
of the city police, Major Smith,
he said that Sir Charles Warren erased the entire commissioner of the city police, Major Smith, he said that Sir Charles Warren
erased the entire piece of writing himself before they were able to get any picture of it.
Don't know what that was about.
Do you only learn about him in criminal justice school because of this case or other cases
as well?
There's so many other cases, like you learn about like Bloody Sunday and you learn about
like he was head of the, you know, the Metropolitan Police Force.
He kind of turned it very militarized, which was like a whole thing.
So not the past.
So it's like,
eek.
But by this time acting ahead of the CID, Robert Anderson,
our little Swartzland buddy who's on holiday, does he come back?
He does.
Okay.
He was forced to return back to London from Paris, where he had traveled to be
closer during his doctor-mantaded holiday.
And he literally landed in Paris
the night of the double event.
Oh shit.
So they were like, you need to come home
and he was like, oh fuck.
So the home secretary told him,
I hold you solely responsible for solving these murders.
And he was like, he like, yeah, yeah, just got back.
I was like, my mental health break. Hey guys, was like, yeah, yeah, just got back to my mental health.
Hey, guys, he said, and I quote,
I hold myself responsible to take all legitimate means
to find him.
So he was like, I will do my best.
But I will do my best.
And in response to this, because now he's feeling a lot of pressure
and he's feeling a lot of like, oh shit.
Anderson suggested that any sex worker found outside
after midnight should be arrested,
or they should be told that they will not be protected
by police if they remain outside.
Okay.
Which I was like, oh no.
Luckily everyone was like, dude.
Yeah.
Chill.
I said just to be clear, I was like, okay.
Okay.
There I was like, okay.
Yeah, great.
Good idea. No, everybody was like, I think you need to go back on I was like, okay. Okay. I was like, okay. Yeah, great. Good idea.
No, everybody was like, I think you need to go back on vacation, like, calm down.
You look, why are we punishing the sex workers for getting murdered?
For getting murdered.
Like, are you joking right now?
But just to eat and get a roof open.
They're like, maybe we could create some jobs for them.
But that didn't happen.
They were like, no, let's not do that.
No, never.
Um, so this is what brings us to, and this is where we'll end up kind of ending it on this episode.
I don't think it's long enough.
I know, I know.
I think you should just keep going.
Oh, I could go further.
The letters.
I'm going to briefly touch upon them in this part, and then we will talk about them more
in the next one.
For some reason, ever since I've known about Jack the Ripper, which obviously you introduced me to this case,
I have always found the letters
to be one of the most fascinating parts of the case.
They are. They're fascinating.
I mean, like from hell, that's come on.
Like, okay, ask me.
Yeah, exactly. You tried.
Now, even back in the 1800s,
people were writing hoax letters
and being dicks in the middle of a murder investigation.
It was, we are, people are always gonna people
unfortunately. The trolls are always gonna troll.
The trolls of fact then, but there are some letters
very few that seem like they have, they could be real.
So one that I think might be the real deal
is the deer boss letter.
Yes.
Now this was sent right before the double event,
right before it was sent to me.
It was post-mount before it.
It was sent to the Central News Agency in London
on September 28th, 1888.
So this was day before.
Day before.
Or one day, excuse me.
Or one day before.
One day, one day.
One day before, this is like drunk history.
It was dated on the letter, September 25th,
like he had written it on September 25th.
And the details make me think it could be real. It was given to police by a reporter Thomas
John Bulling. So this is what it says. Dear boss, I keep on hearing the police have caught me,
but they won't fix me just yet. I have laughed when they look so clever and talk about being on the
right track. That joke about leather apron gave me real fits.
I'm down on whores and I shant quit ripping them till I do get buckled.
Grand work the last job was, I gave the lady no time to squeal.
How can they catch me now?
I love my work and want to start again.
You will soon hear of me with the funny little games.
I saved some of the proper red stuff in a ginger beer bottle over the last job
to write with, but it went thick like glue and I can't use it. Red ink is fit enough, I hope.
Ha ha. The next job, and then this is where like I was like, whoa, the next job I do, I shall clip
the ladies ears off and send them to police officers just for jolly wouldn't you. Keep this letter
till I do a bit more work than give it out straight.
My knife is nice and sharp.
I want to get to work right away if I get a chance.
Good luck, yours truly, Jack the Ripper.
Don't mind me giving the trade name,
wasn't good enough to post this
before I got all the red ink off my hands, Cursed.
No luck yet, they say I am a doctor now.
Ha ha.
Hmm, he said, I shall clip the ladies ears off.
And he clipped the ladies ear off.
He didn't, he didn't send them,
but I don't know if it's because he,
maybe he couldn't find them.
They were stuck in, and here's another thing.
They were stuck in her clothing.
And she didn't find them until they fell out of her clothes
when they were searching for them
and couldn't find them.
And it's her people and had to get out of there before he could grab it.
But it's weird to me that he cut her ear off.
Yeah. And this was written before that happened.
I think this one is definitely real.
Very weird.
And this letter was posted in the media
because the police were desperate at the time.
I think it would have been a lot better
to hold this one close to the chest
and see if another communication came in
without the press involved.
But hey, I'm not part of the Metropolitan Police Force in 1888.
Proudly spoken.
Sir Charles Warren was.
He thought that this should be put in the press.
I just don't agree.
Now, another communication was sent posted October 1st, 1888.
So it was meant to seem like it was written right after the double event, like literally
within 12 hours.
It was a postcard that looked like the original letter, but had what appeared to be blood smeared
all over it.
This one said, I was not cauding deer boss when I gave you the tip.
You'll hear about saucy jacks work tomorrow, double event this time.
Number one squealed a bit,
couldn't finish straight off. Had not time to get ears for police. Thanks for keeping last letter
back till I got to work again. Jack the Ripper. What do you think about this one? That one,
if it is truly sent the day after the event, then I don't really know because they was posted in the media
what this, like some of the details.
Right.
So they could have, I think this one's like,
ee, saucy jack, I don't know about that one.
Do you believe that?
He's like a silly guy when it comes to saucy.
He's pretty saucy.
He's pretty saucy.
Yeah, he's saucy.
But like, I don't know if you would refer to himself
as saucy jack.
I don't know.
He's not well bit. That one, I don't know if you would refer to himself as saucy Jack. I don't know.
Well, that one I don't feel interesting, but I don't feel completely attached to it.
And it's the kind of thing where it's like, I don't know because the event, it was already put out there.
So it was hard to say.
It's really hard to say that one.
I could see it being him and I could also see why it wouldn't be him.
Exactly.
That one I feel like I'm like very in the middle of.
I'm on the fence with that one.
The deer boss one, I feel pretty,
it's pretty compelling.
The deer boss one, I have always been like that, Jack.
I'm like a Dema deer boss, truth there, I think.
I like I feel pretty, I feel pretty right on that one.
Right on that one.
And the letter that still captivates those who read this case
is definitely the from hell letter.
Yep.
It was a letter not received by the central news agency.
Instead, this one was sent to the head
of the White Chapel Vigilance Committee, George Lusk.
The letter was sent from hell,
and it contained part of a kidney.
I think that one was real.
That one I'm gonna go with was real,
and we are gonna talk about it in part three.
Part four, part four, part 65.
Whichever one we are on,
we hope we're gonna cover it.
Yeah, we're gonna cover it on the next one.
And I think we'll be done after the next part.
I'm pretty sure.
I am not so sure I'm gonna go check.
Get me out of my chapel.
I know.
Let me out here.
All right folks, we hope that you're keep listening, and we hope you keep it weird.
But that's the way that you do an episode of Jack the Ripper that lasts two hundred and
eighteen things, two at hours and eighteen minutes.
Sorry.
I said two hundred and eighteen things.
You sure did.
You sure did.
Wow, wow, wow. 218. You sure did. You sure did. La la la. Hey, Prime Members! You can listen to Morvid, Early, and Add Free on Amazon Music. Download
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