Jack The Ripper – The Diary of James Maybrick

December 9, 2020
Jack The Ripper – The Diary of James Maybrick

This is a convoluted theory which I first became aware of in t1993 when I went to a book launch at the Alma Pub in Spellman Street,  just off of Hanbury Street where Annie Chapman was murdered.

 

The book told the story of James Maybrick, a cotton broker from Liverpool who lived in Battlecrease House with his American wife Fanny. The couple had met on a voyage from Britain to America. James was wealthy but a lot older than Fanny. They married and eventually settled down to live in Battlecrease House.

 

However, all was not well as James was addicted to arsenic which he called his powders, a man continually in fear for his health. I must state here that everyone believes that arsenic will kill you straight away but if it is taken in small doses it will not, but it will mount up in the body as it cannot be expelled and eventually it will amount to a fatal dose. This is what apparently happen to James Maybrick in 1889.

 

Unfortunately for Fanny, being an American she was not popular with the staff at Battlecrease House and after James died they informed the authorities of their suspicions (most likely unfounded) that Fanny had poisoned James. His body was duly exhumed and a post-mortem carried out and when they found traces of arsenic and other drugs Fanny was charged with his murder. She was the first American woman to be tried and convicted (on the flimsiest of evidence) and sentenced to hang, but her sentence was commuted to life imprisonment 25 years by Queen Victoria. When she was released she returned to live in the backwoods in America, a solitary existence for the remainder of her life.

 

But was James Maybrick, as he claims in the diary Jack the Ripper? Did he take a deliberate overdose as he was in fear of being exposed as the Ripper?

 

When the book first came out like all Ripper theories it caused no end of a stir and many of us really thought that the Ripper had been revealed at last. But doubts crept in as Michael Barret, the man in possession of this diary kept changing his story about how he came to have it. His original story was that a friend had given it to him in a pub after discovering it in the attic of Battlecrease House, when working there as an electrician. Later his wife claimed that it had been in her family for years and then Michael claimed that she had written it in a Victorian scrapbook and ripped out the used pages (there were a number missing) leaving a genuine Victorian empty scrapbook on which to write a diary. At one stage Michael went into his solicitors and refuted his story on oath.

 

 A book about the murder of James Maybrick was available in any library “The Life and Times of Fanny Maybrick”, and the date he died not long after the murders could have inspired a book like the diary to be written.

 

The most interesting thing about this theory happened in 1993 to my mind when Albert Johnson a semi-retired security officer, on reading about the diary and suspicions about James Maybrick being Jack the Ripper, came forward to show a watch that he had bought from a jewellers, in Wallasey Cheshire. The jeweller had apparently had it in his shop for five years before he sold it. Inside the case was scratched the name James Maybrick (similar to his signature on his wedding photo) and the initials of five of the victims of Jack the Ripper: MN (Mary Nichols; Polly), AC (Annie Chapman), ES (Elizabeth Stride), CE (Catherine Eddowes), and MK (Mary Kelly). The problem is that even after examination by experts they cannot say for certain that the scratches date back to the Victorian era or if they have been added at a much later date, so the mystery goes on I am afraid to say.

 

How Exmouth Market Got its Name

November 16, 2020

If youve ever had lunch in one of the excellent restaurants or the interesting street food stalls in Exmouth Market, you might wonder how the street got its name. After all, the Islington street is a lot nearer Sadler’s Wells Theatre than it is the little Devon seaside town of Exmouth. The answer involves a daring raid to rescue 3,000 people from slavery in 1816.

 

Viscount Exmouth was born as Edward Pellew in 1757 and he joined the Royal Navy at the age of 13. Due to his bravery fighting ...


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Walter Sickert

November 13, 2020

According to the book Portrait of a Killer, Jack The Ripper Case Closed by Patricia Cornwell, Walter Sickert was Jack the Ripper, the murderer who stalked the streets of Whitechapel in 1888.

 

Patricia Cornwell went to a great deal of trouble and expense trying to prove her theory. She even spent about £1million in the attempt. She bought Sickert’s desk and cut some of his paintings out of their frames, desperately searching for DNA from blood/skin shreds she hoped to find on the edges of th...


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Lime Street’s Brief Moment of Catholicism

November 5, 2020

Lime Street does not have much of historical interest today. It is dominated by two pieces of well-known modern architecture: the Lloyd’s Building, designed by Richard Rogers, and the Willis Building by Foster and Partners. Otherwise, it is undistinguished. In the late seventeenth century, however, this small City lane briefly became the site of religious controversy.


Here in 1686 for the first time since the reign of Queen Mary a Catholic place of worship was opened in England. The new chap...


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The Sad Past of Danson House

October 28, 2020

Today Danson House in the London Borough of Bexley is home to a rather wonderful tea room and provides a stunning venue for weddings, but it was built on the proceeds of human misery and was not a happy place for its owner Sir John Boyd.

 

John Boyd’s father Augustus left Donegal in 1700 to run a sugar plantation on the island of St Kitts that had belonged to his uncle. The plantation was worked by African people brought as slaves from Sierra Leone. Augustus bought more plantations but gradua...


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British Museum: The False Door of Ptahshepses

October 7, 2020

Like all displays of objects from Ancient Egypt, the British Museum’s collection is biased towards funerary objects, as these are what have survived best. This is partly due to an early preference on the part of Egyptians to be buried in the desert, where the arid conditions have been conducive to preservation. Amongst the largest and most detailed of the objects on display is the False Door of Ptahshepses which dates to around 2440 BC - part of the Old Kingdom, which ran from around 2,686 ...


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