Jack the Ripper's Victims | Their Lives, Deaths & Poverty in 19th Century

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • Jack the Ripper is arguably the most famous serial killer in British history and the mystery surrounding his identity endures. In this video though Kevin Hicks' focus is on the Ripper's victims, their lives, their deaths, the poverty in 19th Century London, and how they died for the want of just fourpence.
    It's broadly agreed by historians the Ripper killed five women during his reign of terror during the autumn of 1888, although it's been argued there may have been more, we've concentrated on what's known as the canonical five. This topic was voted for by our Patreon members.
    #JacktheRipper #Ripper #theRipper #SerialKiller #WhitechapelMurders #Whitechapel #RipperVictims #JacktheRipperVictims #MaryAnneNichols #AnnieChapman #Elizabeth Stride #CatherineEddowes #MaryJaneKelly
    To become a part of the community, support the channel and interact with Kevin Hicks, head over to Patreon. / thehistorysquad
    OTHER LINKS:
    Website: historysquad.ca
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    Twitter: / history_hicks
    Pawnbroker Sign CC BY-SA 4.0 upload.wikimed...
    The Complete Jack the Ripper by Donald Rumbelow - www.amazon.ca/...
    Mary Jane Kelly Crime Scene Photo - commons.wikime...

Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @debbielb2325
    @debbielb2325 Год назад +422

    Thank you for returning these poor women’s humanity to them. It’s so easy to forget these poor souls were real people with families and their own stories and struggles.

    • @Live0nnn
      @Live0nnn 9 месяцев назад +18

      Read a great book recently, called 'The Five' (Hallie Rubenhold). It's entirely the stories of the lives of the five women, with little to mention of the Ripper. Really interesting, and as you say, it returns a good deal of humanity to these women.

    • @heathernikki5734
      @heathernikki5734 5 месяцев назад

      @@Live0nnnI’ll check it out! Thank you

  • @timburr4453
    @timburr4453 Год назад +7

    Brilliant video. And it really shows the kind of conditions that existed back then...terrifying and brutal times

  • @briancross7835
    @briancross7835 Год назад +3

    Fantastic stuff as ever!
    I've been a (self-proclaimed) "Ripperologist" ever since I watched the 1988 made for TV film "Jack the Ripper" starring Michael Caine when I was 12 years old. I've been fascinated with this horrid tale ever since. Although, every thing I've watched or read focused on the law enforcement aspects or societal effects of the murders. Precious little attention was ever paid to the Canonical Five.
    Thank you for telling their stories, Kevin.
    Polly, Annie, Liz, Kate & Mary Jane, may you find the peace you never knew in your lives.
    Goodnight, ladies.

  • @RavenGent
    @RavenGent Год назад +4

    Magnificently done. 👏👏🎩. Jack the Ripper is one of my favorite Victorian stories and murder cases. The lithograph of each of the murder victims are like what I've seen in documentaries. But the one showing Mary Jane Kelly how she would have been attacked is when I've never seen before. But the song that she sang the night she was killed is something that haunts me and perhaps on any Whitechapel Street. 🎩

  • @m.c3593
    @m.c3593 Год назад +3

    You did a great job.
    I always felt pity for the ladies for what happened,
    Poverty caused it.
    Very sad.

  • @eilsmile8732
    @eilsmile8732 11 месяцев назад

    Really interesting and informative, you’re a great storyteller, poor poor women, poor times as well, we don’t know what hunger and cold thankfully like it was for those destitute folks

  • @bosssired6673
    @bosssired6673 Год назад

    new subscriber here from the Philippines. i love how you tell the stories. you sound so knowledgeable and invested in the way you are sharing these stories.

    • @thehistorysquad
      @thehistorysquad  Год назад +1

      Thanks and welcome, I really do love history, so that helps 👍🏻

  • @bjh7924
    @bjh7924 7 месяцев назад

    Great narration & story telling. I enjoyed this video very much. Thankyou. New subscriber 👍🔔

  • @angeladetrizio9522
    @angeladetrizio9522 Год назад

    Thank you for a very informative and interesting video. Love your channel ❤

  • @theboyisnotright6312
    @theboyisnotright6312 Год назад +4

    What i take is the very horrible conditions the poor lived in. While the British empire was at its peak. I doubt im the only one to see a correlation to 21st century USA. Eat thw rich!

  • @catandrobbyflores
    @catandrobbyflores 3 месяца назад

    I remember seeing the photo of the last poor woman. I was doing a report or something on the crime and saw it. You can't even call it a body anymore.

  • @klackon1
    @klackon1 11 месяцев назад

    There is a blue plaque commemorating Catherine Eddowes in Merridale Street, Wolverhampton.

  • @karphin1
    @karphin1 Год назад +117

    I live in Canada, and my grandmother was from East London. Emigrated to Canada as a young woman, am guessing around late1800’s. Her uncle was a policeman in the force in Whitechapel. He discovered the body of Catherine Eddowes. His name was Watkins, it is in the articles on the murders.
    It is so heartbreaking that people could be on the street just to survive. An existence, not a life.

    • @thehistorysquad
      @thehistorysquad  Год назад +20

      Gosh, that's interesting 👍🏻

    • @blazbratovic2724
      @blazbratovic2724 8 месяцев назад +7

      And the guy who Watkins & company have been searching for was Charles Allen Lechmere (also Charles Cross at the inquest). :) QC James Scobie agrees the case against him is strong enough to go to the modern murder trial.

    • @A_Stereotypical_Heretic
      @A_Stereotypical_Heretic 8 месяцев назад +4

      Great grandmother you mean?

    • @jhoughjr1
      @jhoughjr1 4 месяца назад +1

      Those times have alreadt returned.

    • @kaprivenom5316
      @kaprivenom5316 3 месяца назад +2

      Nice to hear.

  • @Fireclaws10
    @Fireclaws10 Год назад +873

    Thanks for this film. Everyone seems to focus on the disgusting killers, it’s good to see insight into the victims and poverty that lead them into these circumstances.

    • @babbybailey
      @babbybailey Год назад +32

      All because in the cases of not having the four pence, very sad indeed.

    • @panicmerchants
      @panicmerchants Год назад +13

      Indeed

    • @gb3007
      @gb3007 Год назад +20

      It's all linked, you have to look at the social circumstances that not only led to these women's unfortunate demise but also created such a person as the Ripper.

    • @Screwball70
      @Screwball70 Год назад +16

      You have worn some hats in your journey through life young sir, a soldier a police man, a historian at Warwick castle and now a film maker/historian. You are an impressive man Kevin and I doff my hat to you sir.

    • @Dr.HooWho
      @Dr.HooWho Год назад +10

      I mean they wanna know the ripper well since he barely has any identity but there isnt really much to learn after that considering it would just be theories honestly

  • @CindyLouWho77
    @CindyLouWho77 Год назад +74

    Beautifully stated. There are tears in my eyes because Mr. Hicks spoke of each victim with dignity. He cannot give them their lives back, but he gave them their identities beyond victims.
    Mr. Hicks doesn’t speak of their injuries in a sensationalized manner; he describes the horror these women went through only after speaking about who they were and reminding us that they were real people who were once someone’s child, a mother, a human being.
    Thank you, Mr. Hicks. You are a true gentleman.

    • @thehistorysquad
      @thehistorysquad  Год назад +7

      That's very kind, thank you too. 👍🏻

    • @1C3CR34M
      @1C3CR34M 4 месяца назад +1

      @@thehistorysquadHello Mr. Hicks, I’m not sure you may see this, as you get quite a few comments on your videos. But you have created in my opinion, one the most entertaining yet informative channels on RUclips. I find myself watching tonnes of your videos in the background at work, and it’s honestly amazing to try to imagine the diorama or model you’re describing, then look down at my phone to see how close my imagination was. Thank you sir!

    • @thehistorysquad
      @thehistorysquad  4 месяца назад

      @@1C3CR34M Hello and thank you for your kind words, I'm glad you've been enjoying the videos and appreciate you watching 👍🏻

  • @Katherine_The_Okay
    @Katherine_The_Okay Год назад +375

    Thank you for a video that humanizes the victims of these crimes so thoroughly. People tend to focus more on murderers than on the men and women whose lives have been cut short by them, and there's a really disgusting habit of completely dismissing those lives when the victims were homeless or "just prostitutes," as if the rest of us couldn't find ourselves in the same situation if our luck had been worse. So this video was really a breath of fresh air compared to a lot of true crime content. It really is much appreciated.

    • @thehistorysquad
      @thehistorysquad  Год назад +25

      Thanks Kat 👍🏻

    • @Katherine_The_Okay
      @Katherine_The_Okay Год назад +19

      @@thehistorysquad And thank you for your compassionate and thorough approach. When I have time later in the week, I'm looking forward to checking out some of your channel's other offerings. I love finding new history-tubers who treat people from the past like actual people instead of othering them.

    • @Algorithm_work_your_magic
      @Algorithm_work_your_magic Год назад +4

      Weird, I was just thinking about The ripper crimes just 2 days ago, never typed anything in, never mentioned it to anyone and now thks pops into my suggestion list

    • @maryfreebed9886
      @maryfreebed9886 11 месяцев назад

      This stupid, horrible stuff still happens. The police still barely care. Robert Pickton did similar stuff and got away with it for years. Eventually they got hold of him, yes, but only after many more unnecessary murders.

    • @A_Stereotypical_Heretic
      @A_Stereotypical_Heretic 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@Algorithm_work_your_magicwell your name says it all

  • @MudlarksAlmanac
    @MudlarksAlmanac Год назад +71

    It must have been terrifying knowing that a vicious murderer was walking the streets. My Mother's parents were both born in the East End of London around the time of those murders. Mum told me about the terrible poverty she saw in the East End when she was a child in the 1920s. I feel that history is closer than we sometimes realise.

    • @heathernikki5734
      @heathernikki5734 5 месяцев назад

      Yes these women were alive when my great great grandmother was 3 and she lived until 1985. It seems like such a long time ago but it really wasn’t

  • @shellshell942
    @shellshell942 Год назад +232

    I have a family member whose friend was murdered, she told me what happened. Sadly the girl's father found her in her apartment and he has never been the same. He was a retired detective but he was so distraught he was medicated heavily for months. At the funeral everyone was suspicious of her ex and some blamed him on the spot. They found her killer a few months later, it was a stranger that just thought she was pretty so followed her home. She lost her life just because someone found her attractive...

    • @thehistorysquad
      @thehistorysquad  Год назад +51

      Sadly a common story. Thanks for sharing that 👍🏻

    • @paulredinger5830
      @paulredinger5830 Год назад +26

      How terrible. I’m sorry for your families friend.

    • @sueaddison9958
      @sueaddison9958 Год назад +8

      😧😔😔😔😪😪🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹

    • @the_rover1
      @the_rover1 Год назад +28

      dreadful. was the stranger from abroad origin, like near or middle east?
      here in central europe, quite a lot (certainly not all of them!) of capital crimes and [the bad r-word that rhymes on grape] happen by asylum seeking persons who are invited by irresponsible EU politicians.

    • @unclebounce1495
      @unclebounce1495 Год назад +17

      @@the_rover1 but but but you're not allowed to speak the truth. that's offensive!

  • @tdoran616
    @tdoran616 11 месяцев назад +51

    The thing which amazes me the most about the Jack The Ripper case is, the children of the victims were alive as late as the early 1970s. It makes the Jack the Ripper case feel so much closer to us.

    • @cindys.9688
      @cindys.9688 6 месяцев назад +3

      Never thought of that 🤔

    • @Emma-mk8jv
      @Emma-mk8jv 5 месяцев назад +3

      Holy crap!

  • @Tampa7
    @Tampa7 Год назад +136

    Kevin, your story telling abilities are fantastic. This was a tragic tale that was hard to listen to, but executed perfectly.

  • @gustavomarrero4826
    @gustavomarrero4826 Год назад +97

    I love the respect with which you have treated the victims. It is the most respectful video I have seen about the case. We cannot forget that they were human beings. Congratulations :)

  • @auntievenom9619
    @auntievenom9619 Год назад +237

    Excellent video. I’m a new watcher from across the pond. I used to be a human remains detection dog handler who worked all over. I appreciate your background and your ability to bring the past alive while maintaining the dignity of the victims. Thank you so much for the wonderful history lessons.

    • @kaylagray7935
      @kaylagray7935 Год назад +21

      Wow, that's a unique specialty! I'm sure you have some stories to tell!

    • @auntievenom9619
      @auntievenom9619 Год назад +14

      @@kaylagray7935 for sure! I spent three years in Iraq.

    • @thehistorysquad
      @thehistorysquad  Год назад +20

      That's kind Lyn, thanks for watching & welcome to the channel 👍🏻

    • @rizmark5522
      @rizmark5522 Год назад +7

      Your American Serial killer H H Homes was in Whitechapel at the same time as the murders. His name was recorded in a ships log that docked from New York! A women called Elizabeth Long last saw Annie Chapman talking to an adult male on Hanbury street and I think he resembled your H H Homes. He was dark. She described him as wearing a brown deer-stalker hat, and she thought he had on a dark coat, but was not quite certain of that. She could not say what the age of the man was, but he looked to be over 40, and appeared to be a little taller than deceased. He appeared to be a foreigner, and had a 'shabby genteel' appearance. Witness could hear them talking loudly, and she overheard him say to the woman, "Will you?" to which she replied, "Yes." Another witness described the suspect as having mustache just like A A Homes.

    • @chrisdooley1184
      @chrisdooley1184 Год назад +5

      Wow I bet you have some interesting stories!

  • @doggolovescheese1310
    @doggolovescheese1310 Год назад +32

    Thank you for shining a light on these poor women, they deserve to be seen as people who lived and breathed....not as tabloid gruesome victims

  • @nealmcgloin2984
    @nealmcgloin2984 Год назад +126

    I read a book on the 'five canonical victims', they all had very sad lives . The one that really stood out and actually made me tearful was Katherine Eddowes . She sadly didn't have much of a settled life and came from Wolverhampton and at one time lived in Bilston Street before her return to London. They were not just 'prostitutes'. What a truthful way of telling these ladies stories . Thank you so much. And cheers .👍🍻

    • @thehistorysquad
      @thehistorysquad  Год назад +13

      Oh yes, it's a reproduction for sure. I don't have the budget, or the heart, to test on an original 😜

    • @edp3202
      @edp3202 Год назад +15

      Like the Gilgo Beach victims in NY. Those women mattered.

    • @Elly3981
      @Elly3981 Год назад +7

      Catherine Eddows actually did have a normal job as a housekeeper for a wealthy family but was fired for her excessive drinking.

    • @keithbate9405
      @keithbate9405 Год назад +8

      Katherine Eddowes was born in Merridale Street only a quarter of a mile from where I currently live. There is now a Caribbean church where the house stood in the Graisley area of Wolverhampton .
      There is a blue plaque on the outside of the church building stating that the site was the birthplace of Katherine E.

    • @edp3202
      @edp3202 Год назад +11

      @@keithbate9405 you wonder why the monster ripped these women apart. Where the rage came from.

  • @birdlawyer4885
    @birdlawyer4885 Год назад +48

    Really love how you did the Gin history before this. It sets to the tone how dire everything was during that time. I would imagine living in poverty looking for an easy escape from sleeping shoulder to shoulder with strangers would drive a lot of folks to alcohol.

    • @tomservo5347
      @tomservo5347 Год назад +7

      I couldn't imagine living hand to mouth at every moment. Illness, injury and any number of misfortunes would upset this meager scratching by. I've read the workhouses were dreaded places used only by the desperate and hopeless. The workhouse was the very bottom so I can imagine why prostitution was preferable to where these unfortunate ladies had some way independence. Booze was the only escape from this squalid surviving-not living. From what I've read Mary Kelly was actually quite pretty and used to be an 'upper echelon' lady of the night with gentlemen and wealthy clients. But her drinking made her volatile and it was beginning to take a toll on her looks so in streets of Whitechapel began her downward slide. We'll never know what she looked like because the killer went absolutely beyond anything we can imagine in his bloodlust. I hope God grants these women eternal peace.

  • @julierobertson148
    @julierobertson148 Год назад +74

    I've read, heard and watched innumerable historical accounts of the Ripper over the years. This is the first real investigation I've seen into the lives and circumstances of era. Your description of life in White Chapel at the time was simultaneously educational, shocking, revealing, and heartbreaking. Thanks for making the horrific events more three dimensional.

  • @matthewjacobs5507
    @matthewjacobs5507 10 месяцев назад +21

    Thank you for giving a bit of life to the victims of these horrific crimes. So much focus is placed upon the deeds and doer that I think that people forget that the victims were actual human beings not just the sum of the offenses committed upon them.

  • @markrunnalls7215
    @markrunnalls7215 Год назад +30

    Oh good grief Kev, I knew of the Jack the ripper killings but you telling the story has really just highlighted just how unfortunate those poor girls were, absolutely terrible...
    Feel so sorry for them.

  • @stevenfoster5217
    @stevenfoster5217 Год назад +31

    Even as morbid as the story was, I found it intriguing. You are a true oral wordsmith.

  • @Robin_Goodfellow
    @Robin_Goodfellow 7 месяцев назад +7

    The story of Jack the Ripper is such a pure distillation of the worst of Victorian England. Violence, murder, poverty, drunkenness, injustice, and government apathy, all in one.

  • @vincentlavery2568
    @vincentlavery2568 Год назад +37

    Thanks Kevin. I have always been fascinated by the Irish immigrants. The poorest of the poor who struggled through poverty and discrimination.

    • @thehistorysquad
      @thehistorysquad  Год назад +14

      It's such a tragedy because you had the poorest of the poor in Ireland moving in with the poorest of the poor in London, a recipe to make every even more poor. It really was awful. 👍🏻

    • @ainekearney9041
      @ainekearney9041 11 месяцев назад +10

      The Irish where made poor on purpose by policy of the british government. Only for america we would have been wiped off the face of the earth. It was not long after the Great famine. Once they had more to travel futher they did or the english landlords paid a bit more to clear them off the land in Ireland. No Irish person wanted to go to England. The sorrow visited on Ireland by the British Empire was horrendous no wonder James Joyce said the alantic ocean was made from the tears of the Irish.

    • @MsBoujeevalentía
      @MsBoujeevalentía 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@thehistorysquadThat's why Glasgow , is known as Glasgow Irish.

    • @MsBoujeevalentía
      @MsBoujeevalentía 11 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@ainekearney9041 Yup Genocide by the British. They say famine " nope it was Genocide.

    • @theseeker4642
      @theseeker4642 11 месяцев назад

      ​​​@@ainekearney9041The wealthy were no less cruel to the poor & impoverished of Britain, who used to be transported to the " new world " as a way of solving the poor problem, whenever the rich thought there were too many poor about. The Irish certainly suffered, but no more than their British counterparts. My own lawless Scottish Lowland Clan, was amongst the many who were rounded up & transported to the " new world ", the Scottish Border Reivers Clans & the English Reiver Families. The men were renowned light horsemen & sent to Belgium to fight for a King they didn't recognise, sent to die in the bogs of Ireland, sent to work the plantations or other work as indentured slaves to the " new world. " Their lands were taken by the rich & those that remained, were made indentured slaves to that rich family & put to work on what had been their own land ! Many were simply hung ! The Border Reivers on both sides, did not recognise the Scottish or the English Kings, their allegiance was to their Clan or Family. The wealthy, looked upon those who weren't as sub human !

  • @Cloudberry46
    @Cloudberry46 Год назад +28

    An excellent book on the lives of the victims, The Five, by Hallie Rubenhold, is a very interesting read. The author has done some incredible detective work.....Another great video, Kev.

    • @katzzcradle
      @katzzcradle Год назад +14

      This book is very interesting, for instance it puts forward the idea that Polly Nichol's husband cheated on her (and set up home with their neighbour) and so she had to leave the family home, and it was he who said the relationship broke down because of her drinking. The author says there isn't conclusive evidence that Polly was a prostitute, and that her husband reported her for taking up with another man because then he would not have to pay money to her as maintenance. She just formed another relationship after they had separated. It was too expensive for working class people to divorce. Men could separate if a women was seen as an adulterer, and would no longer have to pay to support her, but a woman could not claim adultery as a basis of divorce so there was a double standard. Women who were down and out were automatically assumed to be fallen women morally and women living on the streets were assumed to be prostitutes at any man's disposal, whether or not they were. The five women were all betrayed by people in their lives one way or another, they all strike me as interesting characters who did not fit in with the confines of their social situation as working class women, and were made vulnerable to a repulsive predator because of this, and some of the unfair assumptions persist about them today. When Polly Nichol's husband identified her body, he reportedly said "I forgive you on account of all you have been to me". Which I find encapsulates this idea about how these women were viewed, and which the book redresses.

    • @dancingdingo
      @dancingdingo Месяц назад

      Yeah, that book is excellent! I had an audible version and after listening to it I just had to buy a hardback.

  • @sharonkaczorowski8690
    @sharonkaczorowski8690 Год назад +17

    Thank you for this. Serial killers have been romanticized, which is a disturbing comment in and of itself, and their victims largely ignored. They tend to prey upon vulnerable populations society doesn’t care about (prostitutes, runaways, various ethnic groups, addicts, gay men, etc) and avoid capture for many years. There’s often a lot of rage and hated directed at the victims by the murderers and its ubderlying in socuety itself. As part of my study of oppression, I looked at the history of the origins of policing the poor and other outsider groups across a number of Western nations. The original purpose was to protect the upper classes from the great unwashed. Ugly stuff, though I also found examples of caring officers who were deeply frustrated by the way things worked and sought reform.

    • @thehistorysquad
      @thehistorysquad  Год назад +7

      Poverty during those times really makes my blood boil, the disparity and injustice of it all. My wife Julie's grandmother was born in one of those workhouses. She was eventually brought up in a convent (school we think) and became a nurse so was lucky to escape the poverty. Jack London's book People of the Abyss is a sobering read. 👍🏻

    • @sharonkaczorowski8690
      @sharonkaczorowski8690 Год назад +4

      @@thehistorysquad I read that when was quite young. There's poverty in my heritage as well. My great grandmother lost her husband to TB which she also contracted. At that times she and her children lived on an East Texas farm. Everyone thinks it’s warm until they experience what’s called a blue norther, basically an ice storm.. She crawled from the farnhouse to a creek and broke ice to get water for herself and her children. They had very little food. Somehow they survived. I come from a lot of tough women.

  • @tinasavage674
    @tinasavage674 Год назад +6

    What a sad existence for these women they never stood a chance 😔

  • @haggis525
    @haggis525 Год назад +13

    Yup... many people were invisible due to poverty in Victorian England. My grandparents escaped grinding poverty and a stint in the workhouse in Manchester... came to Canada and founded a family (and descendants that now are over 100 strong)
    It's sad that many didn't escape being invisible.

  • @Michelle-tr5sq
    @Michelle-tr5sq Год назад +4

    These poor women. Doing what they could to survive.four pennies was a lot of money. Im surprised anyone survived victorian London 😢

  • @joolzwebbA1
    @joolzwebbA1 Год назад +11

    Thanks for that Kev, it makes a refreshing change to hear about the lives of the victims instead of concentrating on the unknown perpetrator. Hard times indeed for those who had to live at this level in society (and it didn't improve much for a long while).

  • @margaretmccullough1752
    @margaretmccullough1752 Год назад +12

    Kevin, thank you for opening the stories of these women in such a compassionate way.They were brave for just making it through another night and then day. I will always think of them first before I think of their tragic ends.lThank you for opening my mind. and heart to the plight of these ladies. More brave than I could ever imagine. But for the grace of God, go any of us.❤

  • @OoxB505
    @OoxB505 Год назад +9

    If you’re interested in learning more about the lives of the JtR victims and what led them to London, you should read ‘The Five: The Untold Lives of the Women Killed by Jack the Ripper’ by Hallie Rubenhold - it’s non fiction and gives incredibly detailed information on the women’s lives. Well researched and informative.

  • @debrajohnston3450
    @debrajohnston3450 Год назад +10

    You breathed life into these ladies. They loved and were loved by someone.

  • @Kristine-h2y
    @Kristine-h2y Год назад +3

    Today, London is suffering the same bs. People are having to decide between food & energy. I cant tell u just how disgusted I am by the state of the Nation u folks live in. Prepaid electricity? Absolutely asinine! Kinda like what u just described with a penny for a bench. That u cant sleep on! Its Ridiculous! 😢

  • @TheSeptemberRose
    @TheSeptemberRose Год назад +11

    I have a family connection! My Great Great Maternal Grandfather was a police constable in White Chapel and he apparently investigated at least one of the White Chapel murders. I was given up for adoption as a baby, so my name isn't in the family tree, but I am related to Herbert Elliston biologically. Thank you for giving more info on these horrible murders!

  • @terri200
    @terri200 Год назад +10

    Thank you for sharing all of this information about these poor women and their lives. Seems that drinking and being poor is the common factor of all of their deaths. But it's the insanity of the mutilation on them that has always been concerning. Thank you again!

  • @MsSteelphoenix
    @MsSteelphoenix Год назад +10

    It's really sad how alcohol and poverty are still so intertwined. Great doco, looking at the lives of the victims and how they lived, as well as how they died.

  • @hilldwler420
    @hilldwler420 Год назад +8

    Jack London dressed as a laborer and walked the streets of white chapel and found it extraordinary disturbing and wreaking with poverty.

    • @thehistorysquad
      @thehistorysquad  Год назад +7

      Yes, it's on my bookshelf now, the People of the Abyss, what an eye opener to the poverty experienced back then 👍🏻

  • @lucindahumphries4702
    @lucindahumphries4702 Год назад +14

    Thank you for this documentary, for all the little details you included that made these ladies and their lives more real. And thank you for treating these women with more respect and empathy than most.

  • @AnitaAnneLloyd
    @AnitaAnneLloyd Год назад +7

    Excellent! Thank you! And in a small way, we give these victims some honour. May God have mercy on their souls.

  • @mapatterson173
    @mapatterson173 Год назад +10

    Thank you for giving these victims names and background. I’ll admit, I’ve never really studied the Jack the Ripper murders. Sadly, the women are viewed as nameless street walkers, the dregs of society. Though I’ve never judged poor women forced into those circumstances, it’s easy for society to dismiss them. However, the animal that murdered them was given notoriety-something every serial killer and mass murderer craves. I wonder what modern day profilers have to say about this serial killer? I also wonder if the Police Commissioner was an appointed office, as so many these days are. So many questions. And the most important one you answered today: who were the victims? They deserve our prayers. (Not sure if it was intentional, but the red kerchief was quite effective.)

    • @rizmark5522
      @rizmark5522 Год назад

      He was a top mason. You can read Warrens attempt to find the Arch of the Covenant in Israel. He knew more about the Ripper than anyone else but kept it quiet.

  • @ehowiehowie7850
    @ehowiehowie7850 Год назад +3

    Strange how so many similarities * between the 2 first ones...drinking , prostuition , vulnerable , split from hubby & allowance, impoverished ...fallen from grace ..

  • @melbournegirl7
    @melbournegirl7 Год назад +12

    It was wonderful to have the victims presented as real people. I’ve never seen this done before. I really enjoyed your video. It brought the “victims” to life.

  • @christineholbrook1107
    @christineholbrook1107 Год назад +8

    Thank you for this insightful video . Also I like your sympathetic narrative, regarding these poor woman . You point out that they were real people, not just victims.

  • @Tsumami__
    @Tsumami__ Год назад +3

    I don’t think the Goulston Street graffito *was* a major piece of evidence. I think the graffiti was already on the wall before the apron piece was dropped, and it just so happened to be dropped in that spot as the murderer tried to walk away from the scene. I don’t think this person would have stopped to chalk some graffiti onto the wall next to the spot they left the piece of apron they ripped off to wipe their knife clean of blood and fecal matter, while they’re trying to get away from the scene of a crime.
    There was already enough antisemitism boiling in whitechapel at that time, and removing it was the right decision.

  • @anemoia2661
    @anemoia2661 Год назад +12

    The very cobble stones that the first victim Mary Ann Nichols was found laying dead on, that her blood ran over, that Jack The Ripper himself knelt down on to carry out his barbaric act, are still in place today on Durward Street, behind Whitechapel Tube station and on top of the bridge that spans over the tube stations tracks and platform. I've walked past that spot so many times, a few times in the early hours walking home from the pub, and I always get a chill knowing what happened right there on that very spot. Out of all the murder sites, it is the only one left intact where the actual site still exists as it was back in 1888, albeit the original terraced houses are no longer there.

    • @mucked11
      @mucked11 Год назад

      Is this the one between the Sainsbury's and Whitechapel gym.

    • @kariannstickle2708
      @kariannstickle2708 11 месяцев назад

      I must visit that spot. To me that feels like going to Danvers (Salem) Massachusetts. Pilgrimage to honor the women and add in LGBTQIA and other minorities cut down in hatred.
      I’m not a spiritual person but it feels like liminal space sacred ground.

    • @daniellewills6465
      @daniellewills6465 4 месяца назад

      @@kariannstickle2708what does the IA mean ? Or stand for?

  • @hughwalker5628
    @hughwalker5628 Год назад +7

    It's weird to think that all this happened in my Grandfather's time. OK, he was very young but, even so, a strange thought. It makes me realise, when we see how shocking conditions could be for ordinary people at the time, just how privileged he was.

  • @fredsimmons2793
    @fredsimmons2793 Год назад +12

    These incidents must have fueled generations of people to become bobby's, and law enforcement!Quite a respectful summary Kevin, you do the case honor and ensure it's worth!

  • @vickywitton1008
    @vickywitton1008 Год назад +3

    So sad that drink still ruins lives and marriages, as I know of one recently

  • @janetbowersox83
    @janetbowersox83 Год назад +6

    Wow! I heard more details about the murders than I had never heard before!
    So sad that alcohol was the common denominator.....still so prevalent today.
    Thank you for such an imteresting story

  • @meghanphillips3495
    @meghanphillips3495 11 месяцев назад +16

    Thank you for putting the focus where it belongs; on the lives cut so horribly short. These women had tough lives and deserve to be remembered.

  • @hugosophy
    @hugosophy Год назад +2

    Wasn’t Francis tumblty known to have a collection of uteruses of women “of all classes” that he would show off to his guests? And wasn’t tumblty in whitechapel during the hours of the murders?

  • @darrkinney1787
    @darrkinney1787 Год назад +5

    Thank you for this video! I learned about those poor victims. Well done!

  • @clioflano421
    @clioflano421 Год назад +6

    In my 49 yrs Ive heard Jacks victims being referred to two times in in my life.
    1st time was in the last five years, and the second time needless to say was when I came across this video.
    RIP Ladies. So sorry your life's were cut short.

  • @brendaholliday6866
    @brendaholliday6866 Год назад +8

    I really appreciated this video in which you told us about the five women that Jack the Ripper horrifically murdered. I liked the way you explained about each of the women everything from where they were born until they were last seen alive, period! Great investigating, presentation and backstory, as well. Take care 🪴

  • @rebeccablakey2637
    @rebeccablakey2637 Год назад +7

    Hearing the history of London at this time leaves you to feel sad for the people who lived in such awful poverty. This kind of situation was a prime opportunity for Jack the Ripper to thrive and find innocent victims. Rip to all the ladies who passed and may they know that they aren't forgotten. So many people cramped into such a small area isn't safe and humane . No wonder crime was so rampant and the actual killer wasn't caught at the time. The people living in the white chapel area were treated as less than equal to others in London at the time.

  • @prettygirlzful
    @prettygirlzful Год назад +7

    Such a sensitive and compassionate view of these desperate women. I commend you, making them real people and explaining these murders to us.

  • @als3022
    @als3022 Год назад +12

    The problem with serial killers has always been that because of the aberration of the killer themselves, they are the ones who get all the attention. The victims, real people who would be left to the vagaries of time, are forgotten other than as a counter for the evil of the person who killed them. Good to see someone giving them the time they deserve. As they were real people. Of those victims of Saucy Jack, and other serial killers.

    • @WinterInTheForest
      @WinterInTheForest Год назад +3

      If they were not so brutally and sadistically murdered they would have been long since forgotten.

    • @cg2bx264
      @cg2bx264 Год назад +1

      Whether we like it or not, people find something fascinating about killers themselves as they deviate from normal behaviour ‘we’ are intrigued by the Why?, How?, their upbringing, their current circumstance and their psychology, ultimately we want to know how could someone bring themselves to do it. I think it’s human nature. If not, why would crime dramas be so popular?!!!

    • @cg2bx264
      @cg2bx264 Год назад

      Whether we like it or not, people find something fascinating about killers themselves as they deviate from normal behaviour ‘we’ are intrigued by the Why?, How?, their upbringing, their current circumstance and their psychology, ultimately we want to know how could someone bring themselves to do it. I think it’s human nature. If not, why would crime dramas be so popular?!!!

  • @keepitsimple4629
    @keepitsimple4629 Год назад +6

    Seeing how those people lived saddens me, but mostly infuriates me. It didn't have to be that way. It's the same now, as the rich get richer and poor get poorer. Human nature will never change. You had old Queen Victoria sitting on her 'throne' with her 50" waistline, while half of the poor children died before age 5, from malnutrition and literally starvation. It disgusts me. Another great video from the champ!

    • @thehistorysquad
      @thehistorysquad  Год назад +1

      Thank you so much for that comment, it's so true and so sad. It's one of the reasons I wanted to cover it, especially the poverty angle. We could put the world to rights over a pint 👍🏻

    • @CanadianMonarchist
      @CanadianMonarchist 11 месяцев назад

      Unfortunately wealth and poverty still coexist today. 😢

    • @00loudog
      @00loudog 4 месяца назад

      Yes they do and things are only getting worse

    • @natashajones3206
      @natashajones3206 4 месяца назад

      And this at a time when Britain was the richest country in the world.

  • @calamityjenn
    @calamityjenn Год назад +26

    I'm thankful for this video. It's the lives of these women that I've always been most interested in, rather than speculating over who committed the murders. Rest their souls.

  • @dianeknight4839
    @dianeknight4839 11 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you for this respectful insight into the 'Ripper Murders'. I also thank you for forewarning parents that this is perhaps not a suitable subject for children.
    Poor Mary Jane, yes she had a drink problem and yes she earned a living as a prostitute but she did not deserve to die the way she did.

  • @pxrays547
    @pxrays547 Год назад +8

    Thank you for the video. The attention to detail about the victims in a nonjudgmental and straightforward manner is very well done.

  • @davidmartin2957
    @davidmartin2957 Год назад +2

    And the Victorian’s had the cheek to say the sun never set over the empire.

  • @AbbyV1820
    @AbbyV1820 Год назад +6

    Thank you for sharing the victims' stories. All victims deserve to have their story told. There was more to them than just being prostitutes. With the way the case was handled, perhaps the commissioner did it intentionally

  • @dyansis
    @dyansis Год назад +5

    Haillee Reubenhold has a great book on the five victims The Five. The untold loves of the Ripper victims and a podcast called Bad Women about these ladies and those accused of the murders. Her research called into doubt or rejects the idea that all of these women were sex workers and that police in that time didnt care with accurate reporting. Really interesting read.

  • @A.Hutler
    @A.Hutler Год назад +2

    The letter from the killer had good handwriting and not a single mistake crossed out. Good grammar and punctuation too. He must have been middle class, not dirt poor and half illiterate like the people living in Whitechapel. It was happy surprise to hear that you were a police officer yourself once. I looked at the link to the crime scene photo and that was probably the most gruesome thing I have ever laid eyes upon. Poor woman, God rest her soul.

  • @donnapascual2665
    @donnapascual2665 Год назад +7

    My heart breaks for these women and people.
    Tears continue for each victim.
    At the very least they’re at peace now🙏
    Thank you for your research and the making of this “movie”.

  • @Lulusnotreadyforthis
    @Lulusnotreadyforthis 11 месяцев назад +2

    Very sensitively done. It's too easy to condemn these women, but it does us all good to remember that there but for the grace of God, go I.

  • @vintagetone22
    @vintagetone22 Год назад +6

    What makes me sad is the poor people cant even find food and home.yet the queen lived a high life with wealth and jewels and jubilee and she watch poor people dying.hmmm nice time to live in.😡😡😡😡😡😡

    • @GradKat
      @GradKat 11 месяцев назад

      In just about every society there are those with plenty and those with little. If you don’t know that you must be very naive.

  • @LadyGreyBlack
    @LadyGreyBlack Год назад +2

    I remember being asked what my decription of Hell would be, and Whitechapel during this time period was my answer. Your storytelling has given my answer more evidence.

  • @purplepeace2188
    @purplepeace2188 Год назад +6

    My grandmother grew up in London, Westminster etc. One of her sister's was murdered as a young girl. My mum said the police thought that she was murdered by Jack the Ripper but they then said she wasn't one of his victims. The thing is the last victim of Jack the Ripper was about 15 years before the death of my grandmother's sister.

  • @GeminiMoon926
    @GeminiMoon926 Год назад +9

    Nice to see a video on the victims and their lives before their untimely death, had no idea how well off the first two victims were at a point in their life.
    Videos on this subject are always on the Ripper himself and/or how low the victims were in the social ladder, never looking into their past or seeing them more than victim.
    Thanks for seeing them as a person and more than a victims. Keep up the good work Kev 👍

  • @honeyfungus4774
    @honeyfungus4774 Год назад +3

    All that white privilege.

  • @knowyourrights9793
    @knowyourrights9793 Год назад +2

    For the Love of all that is Holy *DO NOT CLICK ON THE LINK TO THE CRIME SCENE PHOTOS!!!!*

  • @hungryhobbitt6191
    @hungryhobbitt6191 Год назад +24

    Another fantastic video (to be expected). It's so tragic how these people lived, the stresses they endured. Thank you for telling their stories!

  • @harshanid3636
    @harshanid3636 Год назад +3

    There were many suspects. One seemed to be the likely culprit. He was a Jewish immigrant who lived with his brother's family.
    On one occasion at the time of the murders, the brother of the suspect notified the police that he threatened to stab his wife.
    People had commented that this was his indirect way of informing the police his brother was Jack the Ripper.
    Twice he had been treated for syphilis. He had been infected again and had already reached the point of insanity for which he was placed in an asylum. He died not long after, and while committed - the murders stopped.

  • @joseluisherreralepron9987
    @joseluisherreralepron9987 Год назад +4

    Cracking good stuff...thanks so much for this video! I've always love the lore and this helps. It's amazing that, 135 years ago, we still don't know exactly what happened and who was responsible.

  • @Ksknight100
    @Ksknight100 11 месяцев назад +4

    What an excellent dive into the victims' lives and background. Like most retired old "Bobbies" I have always had a fascination with these murders. I've also policed all around the areas where "Jack" struck and there is still an air of discomfort and "unfinished business."
    Expertly told with accuracy and empathy. Top video, my blue brother. New subscriber.

  • @sharonwhiteley6510
    @sharonwhiteley6510 Год назад +4

    It's important to remember these women had families, friends and a life regardless of the situation they found themselves. Each should be remembered not just as victims of Jack the Ripper.
    Thanks Kevin for your research. Thanks for remembering the person.
    May GOD bless

  • @sklauda1
    @sklauda1 10 месяцев назад +2

    "If you've got children present, either move them or warn them". *My childhood self getting closer to the TV* Go ooooooonnnn...

  • @JagerLange
    @JagerLange Год назад +4

    Thanks as always for the video, and thanks also for going into more detail (for the uninitiated) on the conditions and the women themselves. Half of my History GCSE 20 years ago was on Jack The Ripper, and people don't usually believe me when I say that sincei t's not "real" history and so much is conjecture and speculation etc. - but I took it seriously and read up on the backgrounds that were available at the time of the women (more was published since, thankfully) and what it was like in the East End in 1888. I'm a Londoner with family connections to that area, so it was a little more relevant I guess, but it was a grim place to have found yourself for man or woman.

  • @thomasray9830
    @thomasray9830 Год назад +2

    Of course I had to see the pictures of Miss Kelly..... My goodness that poor woman, it both shocks you and angers you, for one that people are capable of such evil doings, and that Miss Kelly didn't deserve to go out like that, I hope it was over quickly is the only thought going through my mind while looking at the photos, so sad.....

  • @sueaddison9958
    @sueaddison9958 Год назад +4

    Thank you so much🙏🌹it's a terrible tragedy. So many people homeless and hungry😧😔 and all this time later, there are still such instances😪 it's great to hear the human side of these victims. I think alcohol is poison, I'm not a 'wowser', but alcohol causes so much pain and horror but these poor women would have to dull their senses to sell themselves. Can you imagine the terror and anguish, having to lay with all sorts of creeps in order to eat and feed their children😧😔😔😶🌏🪐🍀🌕🙏🇦🇺🌸👣🦋🦉🏡🌴❤️

  • @melissawhitehead363
    @melissawhitehead363 Год назад +7

    I thoroughly enjoyed this film. I thought I was reasonably educated in Ripperology but you shared things I didn’t know. Quite detailed and totally respectful of both the participants in this story and those of us who are watching. So refreshing! Consider me a fan 🙂.

  • @sweepingtime
    @sweepingtime Год назад +6

    I took a peek at the photo at Kelly's crime scene photo and instantly regretted it. Truly the stuff of nightmares. And no matter how much I love horror movies the real thing shall always be traumatic for me.

    • @MedicMain9
      @MedicMain9 11 месяцев назад

      Saw it too, still one of the most gruesome pics ever taken.

    • @thegreencat9947
      @thegreencat9947 8 месяцев назад

      @@MedicMain9 I saw it also. So difficult to distinguish what I was looking at. Her face....horrific..and so sad.

  • @kariannstickle2708
    @kariannstickle2708 Год назад +4

    Thank you.
    You’ve made your women/femme followers feel seen and valid.
    You made these women feel like a fond, distant acquaintance instead of a gruesome number. I didn’t know these women beyond brief names and numbers. I can picture them in my head beyond the way the monster left them. I didn’t know how badly they were mutilated and you approach it with matter-of-fact respect. Thank you for giving the much greater concept.
    You make their stories feel like I’m hearing about a murder streak a town over. They’re even more relatable. I feel like I can grieve for and respect these women better because I know the frank, brutal details instead of palatable descriptions AND their actual lives.

    • @thehistorysquad
      @thehistorysquad  Год назад +2

      Thank you for your kind words, these women had lives, they mattered., I'm glad that came through 👍🏻

  • @megs4193
    @megs4193 Год назад +3

    Thank you so much for not showing the photograph 🥴🙏 . Someone is bound to be related. Probably other people that have no idea. It's definitely the most frustrating moment in time is not knowing why, who this psychopath was, and why were these lives were so brutally taken 🥺 could Someone so deranged pass for normal, did no one know him personally, did someone know exactly who he was and said nothing, or just took care of him themselves and that's why it stopped, I'd like to believe the latter. If NDEs are to be believed then I hope these women found the warmth and love they hadn't known in their short horrendous lives, bless them, and bless you 🥲🤍🦘🇦🇺🦘🙏.

  • @vicsar
    @vicsar Год назад +4

    Hi Kevin. Can you believe a guy in Costa Rica would some day hear those stories as told by you? Exiting times mate. Your work has reached far and wide. I have seen many of your videos... Outstanding. Thanks for your effort and hard work.

    • @thehistorysquad
      @thehistorysquad  Год назад +3

      Wow, thanks Victor. Hi, how lovely to hear from you - glad you like the videos 👍🏻

  • @hendrikmoons8218
    @hendrikmoons8218 Год назад +2

    The ‘new rookeries ‘, so that is where the Brexeteers are heading. With a new J the Ripper.
    Those who do not learn the lessons of the past, are doomed to repeat them.
    Lets hope not…

  • @Jason-ts1rx
    @Jason-ts1rx Год назад +4

    I just discovered this channel a couple days ago, an I love it. What a story teller. Very informative and entertaining.

  • @zed4225
    @zed4225 Год назад +2

    Love the way you present our history. I lived in the UK for 30 yrs, born there. In Welwyn Garden City. Now in South West Australia.
    Broadstairs, Ramsgate and Margate were my stomping ground as an adult. Haynes in Bedfordshire as a small child, blissful. I loved Haynes very much. Loved Broadstairs in Kent too. Two opposites, the countryside and the seaside. Both beautiful in their own ways.
    History is a passion of mine as is Geology. Love the history of the UK, although not all pleasant that's for sure.
    Subscribed.
    Long may the victims rest in peace. Evil endures doesn't it, but it's choice for the most part. Choose the light. Give 4 pennies.

  • @Loki_Morningstar666
    @Loki_Morningstar666 Год назад +4

    Excellent video as always. I love how you focused on the victims lives and the conditions they lived in.

  • @alanwareham7391
    @alanwareham7391 Год назад +2

    If anyone’s interested there is a hardback book written by Hallie Rubenhold published by penguin books called “ The Five “ that goes into the history of the lives of the Rippers victims rather than the actual crimes that were committed against them