The bare facts are these. In the Autumn of 1888 a disputed number of women, all of them prostitutes, were murdered in the East End of London, by person or persons unknown. Because the killer was never caught, in itself the result of extraordinary luck on his part and ineptitude on the part of the police force of the time, a whole industry has grown up around the case, taking us further and further away from the truth.
The myth of the man who was Jack the Ripper began on 24 September 1888 when an anonymous letter was sent to Sir Charles Warren, Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police at Scotland Yard. Intriguingly, bearing in mind what we now know about the psychology of serial killers, its opening sentence is darkly real – ‘I do wish to give myself up I am in misery with nightmare …’1
It smacks of another serial offender, William Heirens, who, having stabbed and shot Frances Brown in Chicago in December 1945 scrawled with her lipstick on the wall above her body, ‘For heaven’s sake catch me before I kill more. I cannot control myself.’2
But in fact, the letter to Charles Warren was a hoax, as were nearly all the other 220 letters and postcards sent to the police and the Press in the months surrounding the Whitechapel murders.
It was the second letter, sent to the Central News Agency in New Bridge Street three days later that captured the public’s imagination and launched the phenomenon that shows no sign of abating today. ‘Dear Boss,’ it began, and gloated over the ‘grand job’, the ‘funny little games’ and apologized for having to write in red ink because ‘the proper red stuff’ had congealed. It gave a deadly motive for the crimes – ‘I am down on whores’ – but most importantly, it gave the ‘trade name’, ‘Yours truly, Jack the Ripper’.
Today, informed opinion follows senior police officers’ views at the time that this was a piece of journalistic mischief, posted to his own office by Thomas J Bulling of the Central News Agency. If this is so, then the ‘Dear Boss’ was a very ‘in’ joke, because the editor-in-chief who would have received it was John Moore, quite possibly in on the whole thing. Another possibility is that the author was John Best, a freelance who wrote for the Star, working with the connivance of its editor, T P O’Connor. In a sense, it does not matter who wrote the ‘Dear Boss’ letter. What is important is that as soon as it was published, a rash of ‘copy-cats’ followed and the infamous name stuck for ever. Right through to October 1896, missives in all sorts of handwriting and styles created the kernel of the myth.
One came from George of the High Rip Gang, one of the dozens of armed and dangerous low-life who terrorized the East End. Another was written by Jack the Cunquerer [sic]; a third by ‘Yours when caught, the Whore Killer’. They were not confined to London postmarks, proving how quickly the Ripper phenomenon became national and eventually international. One Jack was hiding in a quarry in Plymouth on 10 October 1888. Another one was enjoying a holiday in Leicester on the same day. ‘Mr Englishman’, rather annoyed that his work had been hijacked by the Ripper, wrote indignantly to complain from Colchester. ‘JR’ was busy by the middle of the month at the Leylands in Leeds and ‘HTB’, though writing from Portsmouth, threatened not only to murder several rich women in Clerkenwell, but Lady Warren, wife of the Police Commissioner.
A Frenchman, giving himself the gloriously exotic name ‘Isidore Vasyvair’ wrote to ‘Monsieur le Chef de la Police’ early in October, and on the same day the Ripper wrote from Dublin, but claimed to live in Calcutta. In an obvious pastiche of Bulling/Best, ‘Jack, o estripador’ wrote from Lisbon on 24 October. A scholarly letter from Philadelphia arrived later that month, taunting the ‘Scotland Yard boys’ and promising, once the writer has the ‘lay of the locality’ to rip and cull between twenty and forty more victims.
The hoaxers who began the Ripper industry throw a spotlight on the bizarre mindset of 1888. To my knowledge, no one has analyzed these letters in terms of psychology. Most of them exhibit gallows humour with bad drawings of knives, skulls, guns, coffins and dripping blood. They abound with ‘ha has’ and endless criticism of the police, for being unable to catch them. Some are barely literate – ‘Dear Sir, I drop a line to say hav sniped enother and send …so I’ll do me job furst he gon on catle bote or with muckers Yours truly JR. Rite gain in a weak.’ Some are highly literate – ‘I am writing to you this while in bed with a sore throat, but as soon as it is better I will set to work again’ – this one purported to be a policeman. One was in verse form:
The Miller’s Court murder a disgusting affair
Done by a Polish Knacker3 rather fair
The morn (of the murder) I went to the place –
Had a shine but left in haste.
I spoke to a policeman who saw the sight
And informed me it was done by a Knacker in the night …
Some letters were intensely personal – ‘old Charles Warren shall die’ Jack wrote on 4 October. And on the 15th, Mr Smith (possibly Major Henry Smith, acting commissioner of the City of London Police) read in his post, ‘A few line to you to let you know that you will soon meet your death. I have been watching you lately…’ By December, there was clearly a feud going on when Mrs Shirley of Upper Holloway was informed that her husband – ‘the carroty looking cur’, ‘the ginger looking swine’ was a target of Jack the Ripper. Mr Shirley’s crime? ‘If he is clever at nothing else, he is a pretty good hand at getting children.’
Individuals are mentioned who have no known links with the Whitechapel murders – Polly Wright was one; Luisa Whitring another; Mary Bateman a third. Some have odd political references. On 3 November an untidy hand scrawled a resolution passed by the council of midnight wanderers of Belfast, offering ‘hearty fraternal congratulations to “Jack the Ripper” on the grand success he has recently scored’. The 1880s was a dangerous decade for Anglo-Irish relations, with the Irish secretary murdered in Phoenix Park, Dublin and a Fenian bomb demolishing part of Scotland Yard.
There was also a fanatical, religious mania theme that crops up frequently – ‘Dear friend,’ began one forwarded by the News Agency to Chief Constable Adolphus Williamson at the Yard, ‘…If she [a corpse found in Whitehall and not Ripper-related] was an honest woman I will hunt down and destroy her murderer. If she was a whore God will bless the hand that slew her, for the women of Moab and Midian shall die and their blood mingle with the dust… Do as I do and the light of glory shall shine upon you.’
The most disturbing letters prove that if the Whitechapel murderer was one of the first of his kind, there was no shortage of psychopaths in Victorian England – ‘No animal like a nice woman – the fat are the best’; ‘I have been offered double money for her womb and lower part of the body… I do like to find them nice parts’; ‘you had better be careful! How you send those Bloodhounds about the streets because of the single females wearing stained napkins – women smell very strong when they are unwell.’4
Behind the bewildering variety of letters – which also offered the clearly helpless police equally useless advice on how to catch the killer – stalked the Victorian Press. The 1880s was perhaps the first decade that saw the convergence of two major improvements in society. One was the increase in literacy created by compulsory education for the first time (Mundella’s Act of 1881) and the other was the cheap manufacture of paper from wood pulp and the improvement of the speed of printing presses. This led to a new proliferation of newspapers and a readership hungry for news. What sold newspapers, then as now, were sex and ‘orrible murder’ and since sex was a taboo subject for polite society, vicious crime naturally stole the headlines. George Newnes, one of the advocates of the ‘New Journalism’ summed it all up admirably when he wrote to W T Stead of the Pall Mall Gazette:
There is one kind of journalism which makes and unmakes Cabinets, upsets Governments, builds navies and does many other great things. That is your journalism. There is another kind which has no such ambitions. That is my journalism. A journalism that pays.5
Today, police forces work closely with the Press, especially in major investigations like multiple murder. In 1888 the policy of the police – more so the Met than the City Force perhaps6 – was to give no information to journalists at all. They were even excluded where possible from murder sites and discouraged from attending coroners’ inquests. Consequently, reporters felt edged out and took out their spleen on police performance. It was not good, but a bitter Press made it seem worse, from national magazines like Punch to local papers such as the East London Advertiser. The more determined newshounds skulked around police stations like the one in Leman Street, Whitechapel to collar witnesses as they left. Israel Schwartz, a Hungarian Jew who saw Elizabeth Stride shortly before she was murdered was one of these; so was George Hutchinson who gave an extraordinarily detailed description of a man he saw talking to Mary Kelly on the night she died in Miller’s Court.
People who might be reticent about talking to the police7 could be persuaded for the price of a pint (three farthings in 1888) to chat for hours to a newspaperman and, as with Chinese whispers, the stories grew out of all proportion and created a whole forest of mythological trees which modern researchers have to chop down. When stories were not detailed or interesting enough, there was always pressure on harassed, deadline-haunted journalists to make them up. This is almost certainly where the legend of Fairy Fay began – the Ripper’s supposed first victim who never actually existed. The Daily Telegraph and Reynold’s News between them whipped up this tale from a mish-mash of other assault cases in an effort to keep the Ripper story alive in relatively quiet periods (there was, for example, no attack for the month of October 1888).
But if the Telegraph, Reynold’s News, The Times, the East London Observer, the Star and the Daily News got it wrong (which they all did from time to time)8 they are all models of journalistic rectitude by comparison with the Illustrated Police News. Founded in 1864, in clear imitation of the Illustrated London News, this paper had no links with the police whatsoever and its lurid tabloid drawings are what most people conjure up when discussing the Whitechapel murders today. For example, in reporting the ‘double event’ killing of Liz Stride and Kate Eddowes on 30 September, the cover showed a completely invented face purporting to be the ‘Berner St Victim’ (Stride) in life, a truly awful profile of Inspector Edmund Reid who was the investigating officer and a series of re-creations of the scene. In no sensible order: Liz Stride is shown ‘going to her doom’ talking with her killer; Constable Watkins summoning assistance with his whistle in Mitre Square (although he did not carry one); Louis Diemschutz (with no sign of the horse and cart we know he had on this occasion) finding the Berner Street victim; a mortuary scene at St George’s-in-the-East with the fifth victim under a shroud; her sister in profile; the crowd in Berner Street once news had got out; and Louis Diemschutz again (now with horse and cart) finding the body and a policeman throwing the light of his bulls-eye lantern on Kate Eddowes’ mutilated remains. ‘Two More Whitechapel Horrors’, the paper trumpeted. ‘When will the murderer be captured?’ The answer, we now know, was never.
As the years passed – the Ripper case was officially closed in 1892 – retired policemen, very aware of the huge furore the case had caused and perhaps to whitewash themselves or exaggerate their importance, added cryptic comments which are usually far from helpful. Sir Robert Anderson was appointed Head of the CID on 31 August 1888 – by coincidence the date of Mary Ann (Polly) Nichols’ murder – and did little more than place the competent Chief Inspector Donald Swanson in charge of the case before going to Switzerland (again, by coincidence on the day of Annie Chapman’s murder) on the advice of his doctor who believed the man to be overworked! Not until 6 October, by which time Stride and Eddowes had been added to Jack’s tally, did he actually take up his post. In 1907 he wrote Criminals and Crime and three years later The Lighter Side of My Official Life. This was first serialized in Blackwood’s Magazine and contains two statements which are not only unbelievably smug and complacent (he had, after all, failed to catch Jack) but have fuelled endless speculation and contributed to the Ripper legend:
I am almost tempted to disclose the identity of the murderer and of the pressman who wrote the [‘Dear Boss’] letter… But no public benefit would result from such a course [my italics] and the traditions of my old department would suffer. I will merely add that the only person who ever had a good view of the murderer unhesitatingly identified the suspect the instant he was confronted with him; but he refused to give evidence against him. In saying he was a Polish Jew I am merely stating a definitely ascertained fact.9
This is of course an appalling example of journalese and how easy it is to claim knowledge where there can be no comeback. The ‘he’ in the penultimate line could be either the witness or the killer and it is to the credit of modern researchers Paul Begg and Martin Fido that they were able to identify a possible ‘face’ that fits – Aaron Kosminski.
Melville Macnaghten became Assistant Chief Constable in June 1889. His memoirs Days of My Years appeared in 1914 and was not helpful but he did leave the tantalizing Memoranda, written in 1894 and given to researcher Daniel Farson by his daughter, Christabel, Lady Aberconway, seventy years later. Even more so than Anderson’s suspect and Anderson’s witness, Macnaghten’s Memoranda are minefields of dubious information. To begin with, there are three versions, which make them suspect in themselves. The Scotland Yard file version, discovered by researcher Donald Rumbelow in 1975, begins with the mantra we have heard so often now that it is difficult to think outside that particular box – ‘Now the Whitechapel Murderer had 5 victims – & 5 victims only’ – and he itemizes them; Mary Ann Nichols, Annie Chapman, Elizabeth Stride, Catherine Eddowes and Mary Jane Kelly. ‘No one ever saw the Whitechapel Murderer,’ he says in flat contradiction of Anderson, but he makes the reasonable point that the mentally ill Thomas Cutbush, put forward as a suspect by the Sun in February 1894, is less likely to be the killer than three others whom he lists. Thomas Hayne Cutbush was the nephew of a police superintendent and was admitted to the Lambeth Workhouse Infirmary as a lunatic on 5 March 1891. Having escaped from there, he stabbed two women, Florence Johnson and Isabelle Anderson, in the buttocks on 9 March. As Macnaghten says:
It seems highly improbable that the murderer would have suddenly stopped in November ’88 and been content to recommence operations by prodding a girl behind some 2 years & 4 months afterwards.
His three more likely suspects however – M J Druitt ‘said to be a doctor [sic] and of good family’; Kosminski, ‘a Polish Jew & resident of Whitechapel’; and Michael Ostrog, ‘a Russian doctor [sic] and a convict’ – have turned out to be three more red herrings, effectively cleared by modern research. We shall discuss them in more detail in a later chapter.
The problem with senior policemen’s memoirs, apart from the passage of time involved in all such works, is the frustrating awareness that they may have known more than we do by virtue of being on the spot. A great deal of hard evidence on the Ripper case has vanished, more by accident than design and who knows what gems the missing files might have contained? Anderson and Macnaghten may have been in possession of these lost facts.
Middle-ranking policemen like Inspector Frederick Abberline are equally guilty of muddying the waters. Originally from Dorset, Abberline had worked as an inspector in Whitechapel’s H Division of the Met for several years before his transfer to the Yard in 1887. Beloved of film-makers in our own time, Abberline was once believed to have written diaries claiming a royal and Masonic connection with the killer. These are known to be forgeries, but some of his attributed comments have started various hares among Ripperologists. When Severin Klosowski aka George Chapman was arrested for the murder of his wife in 1903, Abberline said to his old colleague, the arresting officer Inspector George Godley, ‘I see you’ve got the Ripper at last.’ In a subsequent article for the Pall Mall Gazette, Abberline admitted that Chapman’s behaviour and antecedents fitted well with ‘the man we struggled so hard to capture fifteen years ago’. He sailed into dangerous waters when he claimed that it was not inconsistent for a man to change his method of operations (Chapman was a poisoner) and indeed his motive (in Chapman’s case, greed) over time. Abberline was wrong on both counts.
Walter Dew was a detective constable who had been with H Division for a year when Jack struck. ‘Blue Serge’ as he was known for his famous (and probably, bearing in mind police pay, only) suit, he achieved a kind of immortality in 1910 when he chased H H Crippen and his mistress across the Atlantic with the aid of a fast ship and – a first – wireless communication. His 1935 book I Caught Crippen reminds us of the fact that he was one of the first policemen on the ghastly scene of Mary Kelly’s murder in Miller’s Court. Even police apologists however admit that the book is riddled with mistakes. Police memoirs are usually written years after the event, without access to original notes or official files and inevitably, errors creep in. Recently, researcher Andrew Rose has effectively demolished the case against Crippen by revealing that the supposed body of Belle Elmore (Mrs Crippen) found by police was, in fact, male. It remains to be seen what this does to the reputation of Walter Dew.
After a number of articles and pamphlets appeared in various papers as the century turned, the first full-blown book offering a solution to the murders was Hvem Var Jack the Ripper? (Who Was Jack the Ripper?) written by Carl Muusmann in 1908.10 Since this was a Danish author and work it is good evidence of the international interest in the Whitechapel murders simmering under the surface. Muusmann’s Jack was Alois Szemeredy, first mooted as a suspect in 1892 by the Daily Graphic. Born in 1844, Szemeredy claimed to be an American surgeon and later a sausage-maker. He almost certainly served in the Austrian army from which he deserted and fled to Buenos Aires before commitment to an asylum in 1885. In August 1889, he was at large in Vienna and possibly emigrated to America. On his return to Austria in 1892, he was arrested on suspicion of murder and committed suicide in prison before coming to trial. There is no reason to suppose he was ever in London, let alone during the ‘Autumn of Terror’ and he appears as merely the first in a long list of highly unlikely suspects. What is interesting is that the book also set the scene on the foreigner as perpetrator, a myth that has never gone away.
Tom Robinson’s The Whitechapel Horrors, Being an Authentic Account of the Jack the Ripper Murders failed to impress in 1924 but Leonard Matters’ The Mystery of Jack the Ripper four years later was regarded as a seminal work. Matters was a widely travelled and well-regarded journalist who was a boy in Australia when Jack struck. He was relying on largely second-hand sources and made mistakes, but the book is workmanlike, with useful and rational observations (especially the updated version of 1948).
By the time Matters wrote, ‘worse’ examples of serial killers had come out of Weimar Germany – the homosexual cannibal Fritz Haarmann and the indiscriminate sadist Peter Kurten, the ‘Monster of Dusseldorf’ – and a real attempt to explore motive was the order of the day. Matters’ suspect was the elusive ‘Dr Stanley’ and the plot involved the fact that Stanley’s son Herbert met Ripper victim Mary Kelly on Boat Race night 1886 and that she infected him with syphilis from which he died two years later. Heartbroken, Stanley took his knife first to Kelly’s friends then, most spectacularly, to Kelly herself before sailing to Buenos Aires where he died in 1918. All this hinged on death-bed confessions, a lurid revenge theory and preposterous plotting. ‘Stanley’ was clearly a cover for someone else, allegedly an aristocratic surgeon practising at the Charing Cross Hospital and living in Portman Square. As researcher John Eddlestone says, ‘The story has more holes than Swiss cheese’11 and crime writer Edmund Pearson claimed that the theory bore ‘about the same relation to the facts of criminology as the exploits of Peter Rabbit and Jerry Muskrat do to zoology’.12 What Matters’ book did was to establish the famous red herring of a murderous doctor, driven mad by whatever pressure, which continues to run through the Ripper story even today.
But if Leonard Matters was writing fiction in 1928, Mrs Belloc Lowndes did it better. Her book, The Lodger, written as a short story in 1913, is important because it is the first novel in English on the Whitechapel murders. Within forty years, despite the fact that some of those working on the case, as policemen and journalists, were still alive, Jack’s handiwork was now legitimately regarded as entertainment. The book also created the myth – rather like Muusmann’s foreigner and Matters’ doctor – that the killer was not ‘one of us’. He could not be a local, but a mysterious visitor to the area – a lodger with no past, no future and only a terrifying present. The book became a film tie-in and it took the story of the Whitechapel murders even further into la-la land.
The first movie about Jack appeared as early as 1915 when a country reeling from the effects of the First World War was invited to watch Farmer Spudd and His Missus Take a Trip to Town directed by J V L Leigh. No copies of this single-reeler survive, but the Spudds’ visit to London included Jack in the Chamber of Horrors at Madame Tussauds. The waxwork theme was taken up enthusiastically by Paul Leni in the brilliant tradition of Weimar expressionist film-making in the 1920s. Das Wachsfigurenkabinett (The Waxworks) appeared in 1924 and starred Werner Kraus13 as Jack. Interestingly, Jack is referred to as ‘Spring-heeled Jack’, a semi-fictitious ‘monster’ who terrified young women in London in the 1850s. The fictional Jack looked the epitome of a 1920s’ German ‘toff’ with long black coat, black homburg and flying white silk scarf.
Belloc Lowndes’ lodger would be played by singer/actor heart-throb Ivor Novello and the subtitle retained on Alfred Hitchcock’s film posters was ‘A Story of the London Fog’. What that did was to create the myth of the notorious London smogs or pea-soupers – ‘London particulars’ as they were called then – as an explanation of how the Ripper was able to pounce, kill and escape so silently and eerily. In fact, of course, there was no fog on any of the actual murder nights and this book contends that it was this very phenomenon – bad fogs – that helped prevent any killings in October 1888. Novello’s wide eyes were by no means as terrifying as those of Laird Cregar in the film’s far better remake.
Because Novello was a matinee idol, it was unthinkable that he could be a serial killer, so Mrs Lowndes’ original story, which had already been altered for her 1926 book, now underwent further changes for the silent film and still more for the ‘talkies’ remake of 1932 and the Cregar version of 1944. As Denis Meickle says in Jack the Ripper: The Murders and the Movies – ‘by this point, the story has moved a very long way from Jack the Ripper’. If Mrs Lowndes loosely based her original anti-hero on one of the East End’s oddities of 1888, G Wentworth Bell Smith, a Canadian lodging in Finsbury Square and who kept odd hours, creeping about in crepe-soled shoes, many of the elements now associated with Jack came from her written version and the film. Again, the elegantly dressed man and the shiny black bag are the most obvious examples.
The 1930s saw a proliferation of supposedly factual books on the Whitechapel murders with theories that went in any number of directions. Bearing in mind that no man was charged with the killings and perhaps because of the arrival of political equality for women (the vote for twenty-one-year-olds was achieved in 1928) ex-policeman Edwin Woodhall reasoned that the real killer was in fact ‘Jill the Ripper’. His 1938 When London Walked in Terror managed to conflate the female theory with yet another foreigner. His suspect was a Russian immigrant, Olga Tchkersoff, whose sister Vera had been inveigled into prostitution by Mary Kelly and who died from sepsis after an abortion. The whole thing was lurid in the extreme and it is unlikely that the Tchkersoffs ever existed.
The following year William Stewart went one better with Jack the Ripper, a New Theory and again dealt with abortion and focused on Kelly. He made the assumption that the Miller’s Court victim was pregnant and that the slaughterhouse was merely a diversion to disguise a bungled termination. Abortion was illegal in Britain in Jack’s day and there were certainly midwives who made a little cash on the side by performing the service. A bloodstained woman walking the Whitechapel streets would not attract the attention of the police. The ramification of this theory is that at least four other women were also pregnant and used the same midwife, who bungled four more times. Since all four women were probably menopausal at the time, the theory falls apart. The rediscovery in 1987 of Dr Thomas Bond’s post-mortem report on Kelly proves categorically that she was not pregnant.
In terms of veering from the truth however, one of the most unfortunate combinations in Ripper research was William Le Queux and Donald McCormick. Both men were involved in espionage and neither could be trusted not to embellish for the sake of a rattling good yarn. Le Queux was a journalist who covered the Ripper murders as they happened for The Globe and openly admitted that he and his colleagues vied with each other to produce ever more preposterous theories. His suspect was Dr Alexander Pedachenko, a member of the Russian Ochrana, the secret police, whose brief from the Tsarist government was to embarrass the Metropolitan police by committing crimes they could not solve. The reason? Because Britain willingly accepted Jewish Russian émigrés, some of whom at least were wanted by the Russian government. As if that were not farcical enough, Le Queux claimed to have discovered this from the papers of Grigori Rasputin, murdered by boyars in 1916 for his perceived pernicious hold over the government of Nicholas II. With phrases like ‘the greatest and boldest of all Russian criminal lunatics’ to describe Pedachenko, Le Queux’s rubbish should have died with him in 1927.
Unfortunately, in the 1930s the torch of silly theories was taken up by McCormick. A prolific writer on espionage, (he was a friend of James Bond’s creator, Ian Fleming), witchcraft and the occult, McCormick was a dazzling conversationalist and bon viveur. As the authors of the Jack the Ripper A-Z put it, ‘All the conventions of his generation led [him] to invent dialogue and eschew sources for many of his interesting discoveries and revelations.’ His The identity of Jack the Ripper in 1959 returned to Le Queux’s Pedachenko by way of another dubious theorist, Dr Thomas Dutton. Dutton died in 1935 but not before McCormick had taken notes from the doctor’s unpublished thesis Chronicles of Crime which has subsequently disappeared.
What emerges from both Le Queux and McCormick is the obsession with conspiracy that has haunted the Ripper case for far too long. Both writers pandered to the reading public’s enormous appetite for lurid, complicated and above all neat theories, each of which seems more implausible than the last.
The 1950s was the last complete decade in which the murder sites of Whitechapel were still standing. It was also the decade which saw the advent of television and the rise of the Hammer Studios at Bray, some of whose writers cornered the market in Ripper films. The Lodger theme was revisited in Room to Let (1950) and by a deeply psychotic Jack Palance three years later (The Man in the Attic). In this ‘Mr Slade’ is actually a matricide, reliving the experience by slaughtering street women. This is the stuff of modern research into serial-killer motivation so it comes across as authentic. Horror actor Boris Karloff played Jack twice – in The Grip of the Strangler and Corridors of Blood.
Perhaps one of the earliest attempts to recreate a genuine account was one episode of The Veil which Karloff hosted by a crackling log fire. Clifford Evans played Inspector James McWilliam, head of the City Force investigating the murder of Kate Eddowes. One line from him sums up the historicity of the piece – ‘Two women, murdered within an hour. One in a yard at the back of Berner Street; the other in an archway off Mitre Square. Both of them… hacked to pieces… every man available was on duty in the East End last night… And yet it happened…’
Allowing for the pardonable error over the mutilations – Stride in Berner Street was not ‘hacked to pieces’, this is really pretty accurate. The result? The series could not find a sponsor and it was never shown.
In the meantime, journalist Daniel Farson was off on a wild goose chase of his own, even though at the time, his research was deemed immaculate. While working on a series for television called Farson’s Guide to the British which featured a programme on the Ripper, the investigator was given a privately published pamphlet called The East End Murderer: I Knew Him written by a Lionel Druitt. His researcher also uncovered the Macnaghten Memoranda naming Montague Druitt as a possible suspect and for several years the barrister-cricketer-suicide led the field as the most likely Jack.
American journalist Tom Cullen also plumped for Druitt in Autumn of Terror (1963) but three years later Mid Century films working out of Shepperton Studios hit upon the clever idea of pitting the genius of Sherlock Holmes against the Whitechapel killer; they were, after all, contemporaries. In this version, the ‘toff’ has come of age. The Ripper is revealed as Lord Carfax (the name clearly stolen from the Abbey in the Bram Stoker Dracula story) and of course the fictional overlay of Holmes, Watson and Scotland Yard’s Inspector Lestrade add a new and totally unhelpful direction of their own. To illustrate how wrong the film-makers got it, twenty-nine-year-old Barbara Windsor, all blonde curls and big bust, played Annie Chapman, Jack’s Hanbury Street victim. Her red velvet dress and feathered hat would have represented over a year’s takings for the real Chapman.
Seven years earlier, Joseph E Levine’s Jack the Ripper had presented a similar ‘updated’ view. The film’s poster showed a voluptuous blonde, all of twenty years old lying semi-naked at the feet of a dark figure with cape and knife. ‘This lady of the night,’ said the poster, ‘has taken her last walk… The swinging purse… the painted lips… the languid pose against the lamppost…’ – all of it is light years away from reality. In most of these cinematic romps of the ’60s, dry ice would creep along the ‘streets’ of the studio set. A buxom tart would flaunt a feather boa at the camera, her cheeky smile turning to a mask of horror as she realizes that her next client will be her last. There is a shadow on the wall behind her – huge, top-hatted, caped. The shadow’s arm is raised. A knife flashes in the darkness and the credits – usually blood-red – roll. Every single thing about this scenario is wrong.
Does it matter? Emphatically, yes. Because today, in a time of decreasing literacy, the photographic image, the moving picture especially, is what creates our experience of the past. It is all part of the industry that is Jack the Ripper and it does historians and genuine researchers no good at all.
But it was the 1970s that saw a huge impetus in the Jack business. Ask anyone today who Jack the Ripper was and they will all tell you that he has some connection with the royal family – the toff writ large, the highest in the land. We shall look at these theories in detail later, but journalist Stephen Knight’s Jack the Ripper: The Final Solution not only bent history to fit his own preconceived pattern, it spawned a host of imitations which led researcher Philip Sugden to call the first chapter of his book14 ‘A Century of Final Solutions’ and the last twenty years have seen an escalation of tempo in theory-production and in nonsensical plot lines. Sugden dismisses Knight’s as a ‘cock-and-bull’ story and pours equal scorn on Ripperologist Melvyn Fairclough who relied on the highly dubious Abberline diaries.
A turning point was reached in the house that Jack built with the publication in 1993 of the Ripper diaries. These will be discussed elsewhere, but they essentially turned the Ripper industry nasty with accusations of fraud and counter-accusations flying backwards and forwards. Two armed camps had emerged by the 1990s. On the one hand were the genuine researchers and historians, among whom I would number Martin Fido, Paul Begg, Keith Skinner, Stewart Evans, Donald Rumbelow, Paul Gainey, John Eddlestone and Philip Sugden. These men – and it is perhaps odd that they are all men – have worked tirelessly over the years to drag Ripper studies back from the brink of lunacy and outright fiction to a level where accurate research, primary evidence and the historical method are paramount. As fictional cop Joe Friday used to say in American television’s Dragnet series in the 1950s, ‘Just the facts, Ma’am.’ On the other hand we have the Ripperologists – Melvyn Fairclough, Melvyn Harris, Shirley Harrison, Tony Williams, James Tully, Bruce Paley, Paul Feldman and Patricia Cornwell – who have got carried away with a particular pet theory. They are at least the acceptable face of Ripper studies; beyond them are bad writers and a whole army of the misinformed who believe the latest hype, buy the latest book and swallow any nonsense as long as it has the name ‘Jack’ in it somewhere.
The film world continued to play fast and loose with history. Murder by Decree (1979) combined the Holmes/Watson duo with Stephen Knight’s theory, throwing in the royal family en masse, authentically-named constables Long and Watkins and a distinctly un-Victorian anarchist detective played by David Hemmings. In the same year, Nicholas Meyer directed an even more bizarre piece called Time After Time in which Malcolm McDowell’s H G Wells hunts David Warner’s Jack across the time/space continuum by means of the scientist’s machine. The nonsense is certainly fun, but it bears no relation to reality. The one line that bears repetition because it is a sad commentary on crime today comes from a jaded David Warner who says ‘The world has caught up with me and surpassed me. Ninety years ago, I was a freak. Today, I’m an amateur.’15
Today, Google provides 187,000 sites on Jack the Ripper. Many of them advertize books and Ripper walks around Whitechapel. From time to time scientists, psychologists and criminologists around the world posit a new theory (which usually turns out to be an old one) and the vast army of Ripperologists out there surfing the super-highway howl their derision; there is no theory but theirs – theirs is the only true Jack.
One beacon shines in a naughty world. Where the Ripper’s name has been hijacked by film-makers, playwrights, rock artists and video gamers, only a tiny handful of historians struggle to keep the flame of genuine research alight. Central to this is the Jack the Ripper Casebook founded in 1996 to provide accurate, detailed information in a search for the truth. It carries articles, photographs, transcripts of official documents, maps and a blog and chat room which allows aficionados to discuss the most minute details. Some 5,451 newspaper articles from 298 countries are listed as I write, proving what an extraordinary job Tom Bulling did back in September 1888 in coining the name Jack the Ripper.
But in doing so he had help. Help from the one man that all this hype is really all about – the Whitechapel murderer. No one could catch him at the time. How can we hope to catch him now?