Aaron
Kosminski

Dr.
Pedachenko

Dr. T. Neill Cream

Francis Thompson

Francis Tumblety

Frederick Deeming

George Hutchinson

James Kelly

James Kenneth Stephen

James Maybrick

Jill the Ripper

Joseph Barnett

Lewis Carroll

Michael Ostrog

Montague John Druitt

Prince Albert Victor

R. D'Onston Stephenson

S everin Klosowski
(George Chapman)

The Lodger

The Royal
Conspiracy

Walter
Sickert

W.H. Bury
 
Jack the Ripper: Suspects
  The slaughter of 5 prostitutes in the space of 10 weeks, all within a mile of each other spread fear and anger throughout
Whitechapel. Police and vigilantes filled the streets and angry mobs attacked “likely suspects”. The murderer was never found,
despite the investigations of Inspector Abberline and his detectives from the Metropolitan Police. So who could have been Jack
the Ripper? Over the years there has been much speculation about his identity. Some of the “favorite” suspects have included:

George Chapman who was hanged in 1903 for poisoning 3 wives.

John Pizer the shoemaker, nicknamed “Leather Apron”, who was supposed to have been seen arguing with Annie Chapman in
Hanbury Street.

Aaron Kosminski, a Polish immigrant living in Whitechapel, who was known to hate women, particularly prostitutes. He was
incarcerated in a lunatic asylum in 1889.

American Dr. Francis Tumblety, who was arrested but escaped and fled back to the US where a series of “Ripper-like” murders
were committed.

James Maybrick, a Liverpool merchant with digs in Whitechapel, the alleged author of the Diary of Jack the Ripper.

Other theories even suggest that it could have been Prince Albert Victor, the Duke of Clarence or even Sir William Gull, the
Queen’s doctor. Whatever the truth, we shall probably never know, but more than a century later, researchers are still
uncovering more ‘evidence’ and trying to identify with certainty, the mysterious killer of Whitechapel.


Jill the Ripper
The notion that Jack the Ripper might not in fact be a man at all, but rather a woman, was one postulated by Inspector Abberline
himself at the time of the killings. According to Donald McCormick, author of The Identity of Jack the Ripper published in 1959,
Abberline raised the theory in a conversation with his mentor, Dr. Thomas Dutton after the murder of Mary Kelly. Testimony
given by Caroline Maxwell, who lived in the area, was central to the argument.
The time of death for Mary Kelly was estimated to be between 3:30 and 4:00 A.M. on the morning of Friday, November 9th
1888. This time seems fit not only due to medical evidence such as temperature of the body and stiffness of the joints, but
correlates as well with the majority of the testimony given by those who claim to have either seen or heard her the night of her
death. Majority, however, does not include the testimony of Mrs. Caroline Maxwell.
Mrs. Maxwell testified to have seen Mary Kelly not once but twice several hours after doctors believe she had died. The first
occassion was between 8:00 and 8:30 A.M. in front of Miller's Court, looking, in Mrs. Maxwell's opinion, to be quite ill. Mrs.
Maxwell stated that she was sure of the time because her husband returned from work around 8:00 each morning. The second
time was an hour later when Mrs. Maxwell claims she saw Kelly speaking with a man outside the Britannia public house.
Mrs. Maxwell vividly described the clothes she saw on the woman she believed to be Kelly that morning as "a dark shirt, velvet
bodice and a maroon-coloured shawl." When asked if she had ever seen Kelly in this outfit, she replied that she definitely
remembered her wearing the shawl.
Abberline had no reason to distrust this witness, and she continued to adamantly adhere to the times and descriptions she had
given. The problem perplexed him, and he later approached Dutton about it, asking, "Do you think it coukld be a case not of Jack
the Ripper but Jill the Ripper?" Abberline based the brunt of the argument on the fact that it was possible that the killer dressed
up in Kelly's clothes in order to disguise herself, therefore accounting for Mrs. Maxwell's sighting of her the next day.
Dutton answered that he believed it was doubtful, but that if it were a woman committing the crimes, the only kind capable of
doing so would be a midwife.
Thus begins the theory of Jill the Ripper -- sometimes labeled the mad midwife. As ludicrous as it may sound initially, there are
several points which add credibility to the theory. First, the fact that all of London was looking for Jack the Ripper (i.e. a man)
would allow a female murderer to walk the streets of Whitechapel with considerably less fear of capture or discovery. Second, a
midwife would be perfectly common to be seen at all hours of the night. Third, any presence of blood on her clothing would be
immediately discarded as a result of her work. Finally, based on the evidence pointing to an anatomically educated murderer, a
midwife would have the anatomical knowledge some believed the murderer possessed.
William Stewart was one of the first to write about the possibility of Jill the Ripper in his book Jack the Ripper: A New Theory,
published in 1939. In it, he attempted to narrow down not the identity of the killer but the class of person he might have been by
asking four pertinant questions:
1. What sort of person was it that could move about at night without arousing the suspicions of his own household or of other
people that he might have met.
2. Who could walk through the streets in blood stained clothing without arousing too much comment.
3. Who would have had the elementary knowledge and skill to have committed the mutilations.
4. Who could have been found by the body and yet given a satisfactory alibi for being there.
Stewart's prime candidate, in following with the conversation between Abberline and Dutton over fifty years before, was that the
killer had been a midwife -- possibly an abortionist. He postulates that "she might have been betrayed by a married woman
whom she had tried to help, and sent to prison -- as a result, this was her way of recenging herself on her own sex."
Stewart mentioned the aforementioned amenities of the theory (anatomic knowledge, reason to be bloodstained, et alia) in order
to back up the assertion.
Specifically, Stewart seems to have been focused on the fact that a midwife would have been able to "almost instantly produce
unconsciousness, particularly in persons given to drink, by a method frequently used on patients in those days by midwives who
practised among the extremely poor." In other words it is suggested that midwives found it common practise to knock out their
patients by exerting pressure on the pressure points.
Mainly, however, Stewart banks on the fact that Mary Kelly was three months pregnant at the time of her death. She could barely
afford her lodgings, let alone a baby, so, according to Stewart, she decided to terminate her pregnancy. He claims that the
murderer was called in to abort the baby and killed Kelly once she was admitted into the room, later burning her bloodsoaked
clothing in the grate and escaping wearing Kelly's clothing.
This is important, because it explains the sighting by Mrs. Maxwell at 8:00 the next morning -- she could possibly have seen
the midwife/abortionist in Kelly's garb: the shawl of which she remembered to have been worn by Kelly.
Stewart provides other points which suggest that the murderer was a woman. First he claims that Nichols' bonnet, which she had
mentioned in her now famous line to her landlord: "I'll soon get my doss money, see what a jolly bonnet I've got now," was given
to her by the mad midwife as a gift. He claims that if a man had given it to her, she would have boasted of the fact.
Also, Stewart asserts that Chapman's pockets were turned inside out because inside was held incriminating evidence which
could have identified her as the murderer. After the contents were disarranged at the victim's feet, the midwife decided to
arrange them cryptically in order to throw off the police.
In answer to the question of why the midwife would remove organs from her victims, Stewart claimed that she would have the
sufficient anatomical knowledge to do so and that it was an obvious ploy to direct attention away from her. He noted, "the
particular mutilations practised by the killer held a psychological fascination and horror for all women, and as a result
physiological reactions took place among women and in places remote from the scenes of the murders."
Stewart also believes his theory explains the reason why Mary Kelly was unclothed and her clothes were neatly folded on a
nearby chair -- the prostitute had stripped for a routine medical abortion from the midwife she had contracted. Hence, the
midwife struck upon her unsuspecting victim.
Having thus set the stage for the character of his killer, Stewart continued his assertions by suggesting that the modus
operandi between his mad midwife and a Mrs. Mary Pearcey were similar. She had stabbed her lover's wife and child to death and
cut their throats, later wheeling the bodies into a secluded street. These crimes were committed in October of 1890.
Stewart claimed there were two striking similarities -- first, the "savage throat-cutting," and second the m.o. of killing in private
and then dumping the body in a public place (which would explain why there were no witnesses who heard any Ripper victims
scream.)
Mary Pearcey was described by Sir Melville Macnaghten. He wrote, "I have never seen a woman of stronger physique.... her
nerves were as ironcast as her body." She was executed at the scaffold on December 23rd, 1890 -- but before the execution,
she arranged to place an advertisement in the Madrid newspapers which read, "M.E.C.P. last wish of M.E.W. Have not betrayed."
Another interesting point -- Stewart disregarded Elizabeth Stride as a victim, claiming the press jumped hastily to that
conclusion due to the murder of Eddowes on the same night. He cites the fact that her throat was cut from left to right, whereas
the other victims' throats were slashed from right to left. Following his lead, this leaves four victims and four strikingly
interesting dates:
31 August, Friday. Polly Nichols.
8 September, Saturday. Annie Chapman.
30 September, Sunday. Catharine Eddowes.
9 Novemeber, Friday. Mary Kelly.
The pattern was noted even during the time of the murders, and many linked it with the arrival of cattle boats on the Thames on
Thursdays and their departure on Mondays. Stewart, however, believes there must be another explanation.
All in all, the Jill the Ripper theory is an interesting one, but many consider it to be extremely weak. Many cite the fact that
Stewart placed too much emphasis on the killer being blood-stained by the murders -- in fact, if the murderer strangled his
victims as is commonly believed, the blood circulation would no longer be sufficient to cause large amounts of blood to be
splatted during the mutilations. Also, many criticize his conclusion due to the fact that no victim other than Kelly was known to
be pregnant and, in fact, due to many of them being alcoholics, the possibility of them being pregnant is quite slim.
Tom Cullen, author of Autumn of Terror, believed that Stewart had overlooked a much more plausible theory along similar lines.
He believed that Joseph Barnett, the male companion of Mary Kelly, had dropped hints which revealed that Kelly had definite
lesbian tendencies. Eventually, Barnett was thrown out of Kelly's housing and replaced with Maria Harvey, the suspected
lesbian lover of Mary Kelly. Perhaps the possibility of a vengeful female would have been more worthy.
One final note of interest -- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, creator of Sherlock Holmes, believed that Jack the Ripper disguised himself
as a woman in order to avoid capture and become more readily accesible to other women.