Naming Jack the Ripper: The Biggest Forensic Breakthrough Since 1888 (35 page)

BOOK: Naming Jack the Ripper: The Biggest Forensic Breakthrough Since 1888
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With this personal knowledge, I find myself caring even more about the unfortunates, the women whose sad lifestyle made them prey for the man we have always called Jack the Ripper.

That name will never go away. But now, thanks to the shawl, the scientific brilliance of Jari Louhelainen, and my determination, persistence and refusal to be sidetracked, we have his real name.
He is no longer just a suspect. We can hold him, finally, to account for his terrible deeds. My search is over:

Aaron Kosminski is Jack the Ripper.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

I would never have reached the end of this special journey without the help of so many people, most of whom have shown me kindness, support and understanding over the
years.

I initially wish to thank the experts and historians whose passion for the Ripper story gave me the grounding and information that helped me gain my first true understanding of the mystery. They
are Paul Begg, Martin Fido, Stewart Evans and Donald Rumbelow.

Without Dr Jari Louhelainen’s dedicated and painstaking forensic work on the shawl, my story wouldn’t be where it is today. I wish to acknowledge his professionalism, support,
understanding and kindness, and his utmost patience with me, a non-scientist. To Karen Miller and ‘M’, without whose contributions we wouldn’t have had the DNA vital for the
testing.

Andy and Sue Parlour, for the many years in which they have given me the will to keep going: their support has been tremendous. To my literary agent, Robert Smith, my sounding board, to whom I
would turn at any time of frustration, anxiety and elation. He has always been there for me. My special thanks to my publisher, Ingrid Connell at Sidgwick & Jackson, who took a chance on me
when I was halfway through my story.

To Jean Ritchie and John Bennett, who have provided me the
friendliest and most nurturing help in order to understand my life, Alan McCormack and Paul Bickley at the
Black Museum in Scotland Yard, David Melville-Hayes, Chris Phillips, Pat Marshall, Robert House, Diane Thalman and Darren Nicholhurst.

To the institutions who were so helpful and informative: the National Archives in Kew, the London and Metropolitan Archives in Farringdon, the Public Record Office, the London Hospital Museum in
Whitechapel, Cambridge University Library, Sotheby’s, Christie’s, the Huguenot Society, the Victoria & Albert Museum, Encyclopaedia Britannica and Lacy Scott & Knight
Auctioneers.

 

 

PICTURE ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

All images © Evans Skinner archive excluding:

 

Section One

 

Section Two

 

Integrated

 

Appendix

APPENDIX
INDEX

Note: all street names are in London unless otherwise stated.

 

Abberline, Inspector Frederick
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8
,
ref9
,
ref10

Aberconway, Lady Christobel
ref1

Acton, Suffolk
ref1

Abrahams, Aaron,
see
Aaron Kosminski

Albert Victor, Prince
ref1

Aldgate
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5

Aldgate High Street
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Alexander II, Tsar of Russia
ref1

Anderson, Assistant Commissioner Dr (later Sir) Robert
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8
,
ref9

Christian faith of
ref1

Angel Alley
ref1

Angel, Miriam
ref1

Annals of Human Genetics
journal
ref1

‘Annie Sivey’,
see
Annie Chapman

anti-Semitism
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5

Arabella Vincent Fine Art
ref1

Arnold, Superintendent Thomas
ref1
,
ref2

Ashcroft Road, Bow
ref1

Ashworth, Dawn
ref1

ASP Historical Research
ref1

Atlantic Productions television company
ref1

Autumn of Terror
book
ref1

Aylmer, Alfred
ref1

 

Backchurch Lane
ref1
,
ref2

Badham, Sergeant Edward
ref1

Baker’s Row
ref1
,
ref2

Barnes, Ian, Professor of Molecular Palaeobiology
ref1

Barrett, Mike
ref1

Barrett, PC Thomas
ref1
,
ref2

Barnett, Joseph
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Barrow Hill, Suffolk
ref1

Barton, Eric
ref1

Batty Street
ref1

Baxter, Wynne
ref1

Beck, Inspector Walter
ref1

Benelius, Nikaner
ref1

Bermondsey
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Bermondsey Workhouse
ref1

Berner Street
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7

Best, John
ref1

Bethnal Green
ref1
,
ref2

Bevis Marks
ref1

Billingsgate market
ref1

Birkenhead
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Bishopsgate
ref1

Bishopsgate Police Station
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6

Black Museum
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8
,
ref9
,
ref10
,

Black Museum: New Scotland Yard, The
, book
ref1

Black Museum, Australia
ref1

Black Swan pub
ref1

Blackfriars
ref1

Blackfriars Bridge
ref1

Blackwell, Dr Frederick
ref1

Blackwood’s Magazine
ref1

Blenkinsop, James
ref1

Bond, Dr Thomas
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

his profile of the Whitechapel murderer
ref1

Boot, Oliver
ref1

Booth, Charles
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Booth, William
ref1

‘Borough Poisoner’,
see
George Chapman

Bourton-on-the Water, Gloucestershire
ref1
,
ref2

Bowyer, Thomas
ref1

Brady Street
ref1

Bray, Simon
ref1
,
ref2

Brick Lane
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8
,
ref9

Bricklayers Arms pub
ref1

Bright’s disease
ref1

Britannia pub
ref1
,
ref2

Broad Street
ref1

Broadmoor
ref1

Bromley sick asylum
ref1

Brown, Dr Frederick Gordon
ref1

Brown’s Stable Yard
ref1

Brushfield Street
ref1
,
ref2

buccal cells
ref1

Buck’s Row
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Buckingham Palace
ref1
,
ref2

Buckland, Richard
ref1

Bundy, Elizabeth
ref1

Bundy, John
ref1

Bundy, Ted
ref1
,
ref2

Buki, Mrs
ref1

Bull, William
ref1

Burdett Road
ref1

Bury St Edmunds
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Burrell, Emily
ref1

Burridge, Mary
ref1

Burton, Harry
ref1

Butchers’ Row, Aldgate
ref1

Buxton Street, Mile End
ref1

Byfield, Sergeant James
ref1

 

Cable Street
ref1
,
ref2

Cadosch, Albert
ref1

Caine, Michael
ref1

Cambridge University Library
ref1

Cancer Research UK
ref1
,
ref2

‘Canonical five’ Ripper murders, the
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4

Carroll, Lewis
ref1

Carter Lane
ref1

Carthy, Mrs
ref1

Cassell’s Saturday Journal
magazine
ref1

Caunter, Sergeant Eli
ref1

Central News Agency
ref1
,
ref2

Chamber Street
ref1

Chandler, Inspector Joseph
ref1

Chapman, Annie
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7

inquest into the death of
ref1

Chapman, George
ref1
,
ref2

Chapman, John
ref1

Chapman, Mark
ref1

Chappell, Mary
ref1

Charing Cross railway station
ref1

Chase, Richard Trenton ‘the Vampire of Sacramento’
ref1

Cheapside
ref1

Cheltenham, Gloucestershire
ref1

Cheshunt, Hertfordshire
ref1

Chikatilo, Andrei ‘the Rostov Ripper’
ref1

Christ Church, Spitalfields
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Christie, John
ref1

Christie’s auctioneers
ref1
,
ref2

Church Passage
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4

Church Road, Hove
ref1

City of London Corporation
ref1

City Press
newspaper
ref1
,
ref2

Clacton-on-Sea, Essex
ref1
,
ref2

Clapp, George
ref1

Clarendon Villas, Hove
ref1

Clewer, Berkshire
ref1

Clugston, Jennifer
ref1

Cohen, David
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Cohen, Jacob
ref1

Coldstream Guards
ref1

Coles, Frances
ref1
,
ref2

Collard, Inspector Edward
ref1

Collins, PC Edward
ref1

Colney Hatch Asylum
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8

Commercial Road
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8
,
ref9
,
ref10

Commercial Street
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7

Commercial Street Police Station
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5

common lodging houses
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8
,
ref9
,
ref10

Conan Doyle, Arthur
ref1
,
ref2

Connelly, Mary Ann
ref1

Conway, Alfred
ref1

Conway, Annie
ref1
,
ref2

Conway, Thomas
ref1

Cooney’s lodging house
ref1

Cooper, Eliza
ref1

Corbett’s Court
ref1

Cornwell, Patricia
ref1

Cox, Detective Harry
ref1

Cox, Mary Ann
ref1

Crippen, Dr
ref1

Cripples’ Home, The
ref1

Crook, Annie
ref1

Cross, Charles
ref1
,
ref2

Crossingham’s dosshouse
ref1

Crossman’s lodging house
ref1

Crow, Alfred
ref1

Crowndale Road, St Pancras
ref1

Cutbush, Thomas
ref1
,
ref2

Cullen, Tom
ref1

Cunningham, James Gilbert
ref1

 

Daily Mirror
newspaper
ref1

Daily News
newspaper
ref1

‘Dark Annie’,
see
Annie Chapman

Davies, Dr Christopher
ref1

Davis, John
ref1
,
ref2

Dawkes, S. W.
ref1

Deeming, Frederick
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4

Depp, Johnny
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Devonshire Street
ref1

Diary of Jack the Ripper
book
ref1

Dickens, Charles (son of the author of the same name)
ref1

Diemschutz, Louis
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

diphtheria
ref1

disease, prevalence of in the East End
ref1

DNA testing
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8
,
ref9
,
ref10
,
ref11

difference between genomic and mitochondrial DNA
ref1

nucleotide components of DNA
ref1

Donovan, Tim
ref1

Dorset Street
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5

dosshouses,
see
common lodging houses

Dowler, John and Janice
ref1
,
ref2

Druitt, Montague John
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4

Drury Lane
ref1

Duke Street
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4

Duke’s Place
ref1

Dutfield’s Yard
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

‘Dynamitards’
ref1

 

Eagle, Morris
ref1
,
ref2

East Ham Cemetery
ref1
,
ref2

East London Advertiser
newspaper
ref1

East London Observer
newspaper
ref1
,
ref2

Eastern Orthodox Church
ref1
,
ref2

Eddowes, Catherine
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8
,
ref9
,
ref10
,
ref11
,
ref12
,
ref13
,
ref14
,
ref15
,
ref16
,
ref17
,
ref18
,
ref19
,
ref20
,
ref21
,
ref22
,
ref23
,
ref24
,
ref25
,
ref26
,
ref27
,
ref28
,
ref29
,
ref30
,
ref31
,
ref32
,
ref33

inventory of her possessions at the time of her death
ref1

funeral procession of
ref1

descendants of
ref1

Eddowes, George
ref1

Eddy, Prince see Prince Albert Victor

Ellis, Ruth
ref1

Emin, Tracey
ref1

Enderby murders
ref1

enzyme method reaction test (the KM method)
ref1

Epistem
ref1
,
ref2

epithelial cells
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5

Essex Wharf
ref1

Evans, Stewart
ref1

 

Farson, Daniel
ref1
,
ref2

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