So what’s in your coat pocket? And
are you, like me, also hauling around a shoulder bag that feels like it’s full
of rocks?
When a person is found murdered
there can be few things more eloquent than the possessions found on them. This
was especially true of the women killed by Saucy Jack in Whitechapel in 1888.
They all lodged in doss houses and whatever they possessed in the world they
either pawned for a bit of cash to tide them over or carried with them at all
times.
Polly Nichols |
I’ll begin with Mary Ann ‘Polly’
Nichols, officially the first of the Ripper’s victims. I believe there’s a
strong case for making Martha Tabram his first victim but as I’ve been unable
to find a police record of her possessions I’ll say no more about her in this
post.
It was a late August night when
Polly Nichols was killed, thundery and not particularly cool. Nevertheless she
was wearing an ulster overcoat, a dress, two petticoats, stays, a pair of
flannel drawers, a bonnet and spring-sided boots. In her pocket she had just
three items: a comb, a handkerchief and a piece of mirror. Where Polly had been
lodging, at the White House on Flower and Dean Street, a piece of mirror would
have been a prized possession.
Her clothing was similar to Polly’s
- a coat, a skirt, two bodices, two
petticoats, wool stockings, a neckerchief and a pair of lace-up boots. Multiple petticoats were the norm. They kept
you warm while you trudged the streets and anyway, where else would you keep
them when you never knew where you’d be sleeping from one night to the next?
The contents of Annie’s pockets were even more wretched: a scrap of muslin, two
combs and two unidentified pills screwed up in a piece of old envelope. The
post mortem revealed that Annie suffered from advanced tuberculosis for which,
of course, there was then no remedy. The pills could have been anything. Hooper’s
Female Pills, Dr Bateman’s Pectoral Drops, it’s anyone’s guess.
Lizzie Stride |
Three weeks later the Ripper
struck again. September 30th, the night of what has become known as
The Double Event. First, Lizzie Stride, out drinking and looking for trade. She
was wearing a fur-trimmed jacket, a skirt, two petticoats, a bodice, a chemise,
stockings and boots, and a bonnet. Sometime
between leaving the lodging house and meeting her killer she had also acquired
a nosegay which was found pinned to her jacket. Did Jack give it to her? We can
never know. In her pockets: two
handkerchiefs, a thimble, a scrap of
muslin, a length of wool wound onto a card, a small key, a stub of pencil, two
combs, a spoon, and a few buttons.
Kate Eddowes |
And then Kate Eddowes, killed
the same night, on Mitre Square. She is for me perhaps the most vivid of all
the Ripper’s victims with the varying fortunes of her life and her relentless
decline. The list of her clothes and personal effects makes for the saddest of
inventories. A cloth jacket, a skirt,
three petticoats, a man’s vest, a bodice, a chemise, stockings, boots, a
neckerchief, a bonnet, and three tie-on aprons or pockets as they were then
called. In the pockets: two clay pipes, one small tin containing tea, one small tin containing
sugar, various pieces of fabric with pins and needles, six scraps of soap, a
comb, a teaspoon, a length of string, a button, a thimble, a pair of
spectacles, one mitten, and an old mustard tin containing two pawn
tickets.
The worldly goods of a forty
six year old woman who had worked every day of her adult life. Imagine.
The Night in Question by Laurie Graham is published by Quercus.
I agree, there's something very sad about the contents of these women's pockets. It tells you a bit about what their lives must have been like. And the Ripper took away even that little!
ReplyDeleteSo sad - these bare lists say so much!
ReplyDelete