This volume puts forward conclusive evidence as to the true identity of the 'Ripper'.
The Complete Jack the Ripper lays out all the evidence in the most comprehensive summary ever written about the Ripper.
The story's shocking twists and turns, augmented with real, sinister period photos, will make this dazzling, #1 New York Times bestselling debut from author Kerri Maniscalco impossible to forget!
The police had actually arrested and charged an American with the Ripper murders, but he escaped and disappeared in America. The Ripper murders ceased. The book reveals for the first time the identity of Jack the Ripper.
Miscast in the media for nearly 130 years, the victims of Jack the Ripper finally get their full stories told in this eye-opening and chilling reminder that life for middle-class women in Victorian London could be full of social pitfalls ...
Isenschmid was a butcher, he was insane,and George Tyler, his landlord,had told them thathe absented himself from his lodgings at nocturnal hours. Detective Inspector Styles, nevertheless, was bound to investigate.
... East End murder rapidly spread throughout the capital, across the land and beyond British shores. No immediate suspect of any merit came to light although Kelly's recent live-in lover, Joseph Barnett, was closely questioned by ...
In 1888 he married Isabel Majendie Hill, the daughter of a step-cousin of Colonel Sir Vivian Majendie's. Druitt, Isabel Majendie, née Hill (1856–1925) Her marriage to Montague's cousin Charles linked the Druitts with the du Boulay, Hill ...
CHAPTER 36 May 1892 – Frederick Bailey Deeming Most of the infamous murderers of the lateVictorian period after the Whitechapel Murders have been linkedwith “Jack theRipper.” They include MaryEleanor Pearcey (1890), Frederick Bailey ...
I picked up a banker's draft from a branch of my bank in Bury St Edmunds, and walked to the auction house, ... On the card was the name and profession of the previous owner, David Melville-Hayes, along with the inscription: 'Shawl in ...
When the trial opened to a packed courtroom, many in the public gallery were wondering if the man standing in the dock was none other than Jack the Ripper himself.