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Jack the Ripper
This paper describes the mystery surrounding Jack the Ripper. -- 4,252 words; APA

Jack the Ripper
A brief account of the story of Jack the Ripper. -- 1,204 words; MLA

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A discussion on how the psychoanalytic theory and social disorganization principles contributed to understanding "Jack the Ripper's" killing spree. -- 1,952 words; MLA

Jack the Ripper
An analysis of the investigation around the Jack the Ripper case. -- 1,350 words;

"The Diary of Jack the Ripper"
The following essay is an account of the court's case against James Maybrick, or as the world came to know him, Jack the Ripper. -- 1,130 words; APA

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JACK THE RIPPER

Jack the Ripper was a murderous madman who terrorized prostitutes in the late 1880's. Time
has not diminished the gruesomeness of the killings. All the victims' throats were cut;
some victims were disemboweled; and the killer took organs from some of his victims. When
fear of the Ripper peaked, the killings stopped, and a century of speculation ensued
(jack 1). Many authors have tried to sift through the evidence and have arrived at their
own theories as to the identity of the killer. Still there has never been conclusive
proof of who the murderer was and what were his motives. To understand the difficulty of
solving the murder it is necessary to look at the historical circumstances, the Ripper's
victims, and the suspects involved.
The crimes took place during a period of English history known as the Victorian
period. This era was named after Queen Victoria who became Queen in 1837 (Stitson 1). She
ruled Great Britan until 1901. This was a time when industrialization grew and people
flooded into the city to find work. It was also a time when the British Empire was
expanding and many foreign workers traveled to London and competed with the locals for
jobs.
The class system, a sharp division between rich and poor kept the two groups
isolated from each other as much as possible (stitson 1). Wealthy Victorians lived a life
of ease and comfort and took little interest in the lives of the poor. The Victorians
lived with many strict moral restraints. They were supposed to keep their emotions and
desires in check. Men considered women to be virgins or whores. They felt that their
wives and girlfriends were pure and that they had to turn to prostitutes to satisfy their
desires. Prostitutes in this era were primarily from the lower classes. Many were to be
found in the East End. "Gentlemen" usually visited the poor East End only when drinking
with male friends or when looking for a prostitute. The East End, Whitechapple, in the
1880's was a small area of London crowded with ninety thousand people (Sugden 3). There
was little or no plumbing or sanitation and disease and pollution were a constant
problem. There was also a large population of European Jews who were not well accepted by
their English neighbors. The English feared that the immigrants would take their jobs and
compete for the overcrowded housing available.
The police in London at this time had to control and protect the poorer class
members of society. At the same time they had to answer to the members of the 
prosperous English society and protect the royalty. Two years before the Whitechapel
murders by Jack the Ripper, riots broke out in the area because people were camping in
the streets due to mass unemployment. General Charles Warren, a professional soldier was
appointed as Chief Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police to handle the confrontation.
He was later knighted for controlling the riots, but the local people never forgot the
fact that he used force and many arrests to stop the riots on "Bloody Sunday" (Abrahamsen
21). This affected the cooperation level he would later receive. He was to face his
biggest challenge when trying to solve the Ripper murders.
The first murder in Whitechapel definitely attributed to Jack the Ripper happened
on August 31, 1888. The victim was a forty-two year old prostitute named Mary Nichols,
nicknamed Polly. A friend last saw her at 2:30 in the morning. She was very drunk and
said she was going to earn the price of a room for the night. A workman discovered her
body at 3:40 that same morning. Her throat was slashed all the way to her vertebrae. She
had several rough incisions in her abdomen. No one heard her scream; the examining doctor
felt that she might have been strangled first. Her former husband identified the body the
next day. She was the mother of five children.
The police had no clue who could have murdered Mary Nichols. Later writers have suggested
that she was murdered by a group of three men and dumped along Buck's Row (Knight 126).
Forensic evidence and the doctor's testimony suggest that she was killed where she was
found, and that one man carried out the murder. Since she was a pauper, robbery was not
the motive and police feared that perhaps they were searching for a maniac who could
strike again.
On Saturday, September 8, 1888 the police found the next victim. Her name was
Annie Chapman, known as "Dark Annie". She was a forty-seven year old prostitute. Like
Mary Nichols, she lost her husband and three children because she was an alcoholic. Annie
was killed in the backyard of a heavily populated rooming house. The murderer was not
interrupted this time and his savagery was evident. She was strangled and then her throat
was cut. She was eviscerated and her partially attached organs were displayed next to her
body. Some of her organs were missing. The examining doctor felt that only someone with
anatomical knowledge could have performed so precise a surgery in the short period of
time before the body was discovered.
The next two murders happened on one night. The first occurred just after
midnight on September 30, 1888. Elizabeth Stride was murdered in a passageway just
outside a Socialist club whose members were Russian and Polish Jews (Howell 224). Despite
the comings and goings of the members, no one heard or saw anything. Her throat was cut
and she bled to death. Soon after this, a second grisly murder took place in Mitre
Square. In less than fifteen minutes time, the murderer brought his victim into Mitre
Square, killed her, mutilated her body and escaped, taking her kidney and womb with him.
The victim was known as Kate Conway but her real name was Catharine Eddowes. Both victims
were in their mid-forties, liked to drink and resorted to at least occasional
prostitution to support themselves.
The most horrific murder was yet to come. On November 10, 1888, a young Irish
prostitute named Mary Kelly was found by her landlord. She was lying in her bed, dead
and dismembered in such a disgusting manner that anyone who saw her vowed that they
would never forget the savagery. Perhaps because the murderer had the privacy of a room,
he performed the most mutilations on this victim (Ryder 1). He cut her throat, cut out
her heart and other organs and flayed her legs to the bone. A reward was set up after
this murder to pay any informant who could reveal the identity of Jack the Ripper, but
nobody came forward. The police never found the murder weapon or a clue that could help
to positively identify the killer. They did have a number of leads and suspects. Writers
are continuing to add to that list of suspects even today.
Numerous witnesses came forward to describe companions of the various victims
the nights that they were killed. One of the first suspects was a man known to the locals
as " Leather Apron" (Sugden 73). He was a Jewish slipper maker who allegedly threatened
prostitutes and tried to get them to pay him money, like a modern pimp would do. He
denied that he did this but was known to carry a sharp knife. He was released because he
had convincing alibis for the dates of the murders.
Charles Ludwig, a German hairdresser was also a suspect because of his bizarre
behavior and he also carried razor knives. But he was later exonerated because he was in
jail when some of the murders occurred. Oswald Puckridge, who was called the "mad
butcher", also had to be removed from the suspect list because he was confined in an
asylum when the later murders took place (Begg 56).
Many local people felt that a Jew was responsible for the killings. They feared that the
murders were some kind of ritualistic religious sacrifice. Ignorance of Jewish culture
made them an easy scapegoat (Knight 123). On the night of the double murder, a piece cut
from the apron worn by the victim of the Mitre Street mutilation was found by a policeman
in Whitechapel. It was beneath a sign drawn in chalk, which said, " The Jews are the men
that will not be blamed for nothing." (Ryder 1). Chief Inspector Warren had the writing
washed off the wall before dawn the next day. Even though it was a valuable piece of
evidence, he feared that this could incite a riot against the Jews in the area.
The press followed every new development in the cases. When the police were not always
forthcoming with information, the press would elaborate by interviewing witnesses and
publishing rumors. Soon, letters claiming to be from the murderer started arriving. The
first two that were taken seriously were written by the same man and sent to the Central
News Agency (Ryder 1). "Jack the Ripper" signed them. This was the first time the name
was used. Because of their content and knowledge of detail, many people believed these
letters to be written by the murderer. Another letter was written to Mr. Lusk, the
chairman of the vigilantes who helped patrol the neighborhood. The letter was
bloodstained and arrived with part of a human kidney in a box. The kidney was proven to
be human and very likely from Catherine Eddowes. Therefore, this was definitely
considered to be legitimate (Stitson 1). However, all efforts to find out who sent the
letters failed.
The list of suspects continued to grow, but no one suspect could be
conclusively proven to have committed the crimes. When the murders ceased, many
officials felt that the killer had committed suicide or had been locked up in an asylum.
Modern profiles of serial killers suggest that this is unlikely (Abrahamsen 36). One of
the suspects did kill him self shortly after the last murder. His name was Montague John
Druitt. He was a doctor and a lawyer and had a family history of mental illness. No
conclusive proof has been discovered that he was Jack the Ripper but he is generally
accepted to be the prime suspect.
Even today, more suspects are being suggested because Scotland Yard documents
that has been sealed for a hundred years are now becoming available. The question
remains. Why was Jack the Ripper never caught? Many in the East End felt that the police
were providing a cover-up for some suspect from the distinguished upper classes. In fact,
some have even suggested that the crowned prince Albert Victor should have been regarded
as a suspect. His motive has been suggested to be that he had contracted syphilis from a
whore (Howells 173). This is still believed despite the fact that he had alibis for the
dates of the murders.
The real reason that Jack the Ripper has never been caught seems to be primarily
due to the fact that the investigative techniques employed in the 1880's were not up to
the
task of finding a serial murderer. Investigations of murders were geared to the motive
and
the background of the killer and victim. To catch a very cunning murderer with no
apparent motive was very difficult in that era. Without a weapon, finger print analysis
and forensic evidence, it was virtually impossible at the time for the police to find the
right suspect (Abrahamsen 47). The high crime rate and overpopulation of Whitechapel and
the large foreign population complicated the police efforts and allowed the murderer to
slip away unpunished. In all this psychopath only killed five people but the murders were
so grisly they will always be remembered.
WORKS CONSULTED
Abrahamsen, David, M.D. Murder and Madness. New York: Donald I. Fine, 1992.
Begg, Paul. Jack the Ripper the Uncensored Facts. Great Britain: Robson Books Ltd, 
1988.
Jack. Enter The Sinister World of Jack the Ripper. 1997, 
http://accomodata.co.uk/jack.htm.
Stitson, Jessica. Jack the Ripper. March18,1998.
http://Simmons.edu/~stitson/index1.html
Howells, Martin and Keith Skinner. The Ripper Legacy. Middlesex: Sidgewick &
Jackson, 1987.
Knight, Stephen. Jack the Ripper: the Final Solution. Chicago: Academy Chicago, 1986.
Ryder, Stephen and Piper, John. Casebook: Jack the Ripper. 1998
http://www.casecook.org/casebook.html
Sugden, Philip. The Complete History of Jack the Ripper. New York: Carroll & 
Graf, 1995.

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