Born on August 26, 1845 in London England, Mary Ann Walker was raised by locksmith Edward Walker and his wife Caroline. She married William Nichols, a printer’s machinist, in 1864; however, the couple divorced due to Mary’s drinking habits and prostitution allegations. Mary, now Mary Anne Nichols, continued practicing prostitution and was known for moving between workhouses and boarding houses, and living off charitable donations.
Prostitutes in Europe were regarded with mixed feelings in the nineteenth century. An awareness for the vulnerability of women prostitutes was fairly low and they were treated with curiosity as well as disgust. They had few economic options for making their way in the world and the women themselves were generally born into poverty and had little education or work skills. London prostitutes, especially those who operated on the streets, regularly picked the pockets of the men they preyed on. They kept an eye out for drunkards, from whom they could steal without the risk of being caught. However, this wasn’t the case with Mary as she herself spent most of her waking hours under the influence. Prostitution was very much frowned upon in London, and the women engaging in the profession were seen as the lowest of the low. It wasn’t unusual for men to beat and kill a prostitute after a ‘session,’ so when Mary Ann was found dead with her skirt lifted above her stomach, it was nothing out of the ordinary.1
The night in question was August 30, 1888. A heavy rain was falling on London during one of the coldest and wettest summers on record. Mary Ann was last seen walking down Whitechapel Road, and more than likely she was there soliciting her trade. Prostitution was a very dangerous profession one hundred thirty years ago. With no proper policing and the women themselves looked upon as animals, people would do with them as they pleased. No wonder the infamous ‘Jack the Ripper’s’ victims were all prostitutes.2 They were easy targets, and he was able to get away with murder.
Nichols was often found in the lodging house on 18 Thrawl Street; however, on this specific night she was knocked back due to a lack of money.3 Mary wasn’t fazed by this though, and was on her way back to her ‘office,’ the streets. At 2:30 am she ran into Emily Holland, another worker, who described Mary to be drunk and staggered against a wall. She told Emily that she was off to find another ‘punter’ in an attempt to get her ‘doss’ money in order to rest her head that night.4 One can’t help but think that Mary was selected by Jack because of her drunkenness and through no fault of her own she was destined to a brutal ending because she was such an easy victim. Emily Holland was the last known person to interact with Mary, and only one hour later, at 3:40 am, the latter was found cold and lifeless on the side of Bucks Row, a mere ten minutes walk from where the interaction took place.5
Constable Thain and Sergeant Kerby both passed down Bucks Row at 3:15, but reported nothing out of the ordinary. One must wonder what Nichols was doing from 2:30 to 3:40. She was only ten minutes away from Bucks Row, yet was found dead there seventy minutes later. Another thought would be: what was Jack the Ripper doing during that time. 6
Nichols’ body was initially found by two workmen, who both decided to leave her lying, as they didn’t want to be late for work. However, they let a police officer know her whereabouts on their way. Major bruising was found on Mary’s body and five of her teeth were missing. Investigators put this down to the struggle. Nevertheless, there were several deep cuts along her abdomen, which shows that her attacker enjoyed closeness with his victim, whom he supposedly raped and then mutilated. One can only speculate on why these cuts were made as they were, in no pattern, and didn’t relate to anything. As the first kill, maybe Jack was experimenting with Mary, and she was some sort of sick puppet in which his fantasies could be played out.7
Mary was buried on Thursday, September 6 of that year in the City of London’s Cemetery.8 Two days later, another of Jack’s victims, Annie Chapman, was found in the back garden of a London flat.9 Her womb had been removed and her body left horrifically mutilated. Jack the Ripper had indeed struck a second time. He wasted no time in preparing his second victim, yet this time it was more brutal than the first. One may wonder if Jack had attempted to remove Mary’s womb, but was perhaps disturbed and fled the scene before he could complete the operation.10 Jack the Ripper’s third victim was Elizabeth Stride. She was found at 1:00 am in Dutfield’s Yard, London. The fact that her throat had been cut, but the rest of her body had not been touched, led to speculation that her killer had been interrupted. This links with Mary Ann’s case because it is believed that Jack was also interrupted while working on her. One may believe that Jack liked the excitement of being caught, as he seemed to carry out his kills in the middle of streets. The fourth victim was found in Mitre Square in the City of London at 1:45 am. Catherine Eddowes was savagely mutilated by The Ripper, as her face was torn off and her uterus was missing along with her kidney. Clearly, Jack had not been interrupted this time. On November 9, the body of Mary Kelly was found in her room in Miller’s Court at 10:45 am. She had been virtually skinned to the bone and many experts believed that she was Jack the Ripper’s final victim. This was a fitting finale for the sick monster, as he chose a private area in order to carry out his most disturbing kill of all.11
For well over one hundred years since the time of the murder of Mary Ann and the rest of Jack’s victims, the identity of the killer has been regularly questioned, with nearly one hundred suspects having been named in the process. While many theories exist, none of them have proven to be indisputably convincing. Many think the Ripper was a commoner, possibly a butcher or other tradesman, who lived locally and was employed during the week, explaining why the murders occurred on or near the weekend. A lot of experts also agree that the Ripper was a local to Whitechapel. One of the most compelling suspects was Thomas Hayne Cutbush, who was a violent youth diagnosed insane at the time of the murders in 1888, and was believed to be wandering the streets of London throughout the time of the killings. Subsequently, the murders then stopped after Cutbush was locked up. Disappointingly, this information, along with more evidence, did not prove that Cutbush and Jack the Ripper were the same man; but there was enough evidence to keep Cutbush on the suspect list.12
The finger of suspicion was first pointed at Cutbush in 1894, by The Sun newspaper.13 The article claimed that despite the popular theory of the Ripper being dead, he was in fact a mental patient. The Sun’s detailed description clearly resembled that of Cutbush. The suspicion was that the Metropolitan Police covered up his guilt to avoid the embarrassing outcry that would have followed if the country’s most feared serial killer was found to be Superintendent Henry Cutbush’s nephew. Henry was a high ranked officer, whose reputation could have been seriously damaged if his relative was found to be Jack the Ripper. This is another reason why Thomas Cutbush was actively considered as a suspect.
Some named Cutbush as the No 1 Ripper suspect, but others have strongly denied this theory. Its main weakness is that the last known Ripper victim died in November 1888, at the end of the eleven week killing spree. If Cutbush was the killer, it seems odd that he would commit five murders over such short a period of time, stop for more than two years, and then commit one more assault, in which his victim survived. But there is almost no chance that the case will ever be solved. Thomas Hayne Cutbush remains top of the suspect list.14
It’s an eerie thought that this case will never be solved and even if it is, there is no one to suffer the consequences. It’s even scarier to think that there may currently still be serial killers on the run now that will also never be found and charged for their crimes. There will never be any justice for Jack the Rippers victims, but they can be certain they will never be forgotten.
- Mary Spongberg, The Body of the Female Prostitute in the Nineteenth-Century (New York, NY: New York University Press, 1997), 83-85. ↵
- Encyclopaedia Britannica, July 1998, s.v, “Jack the Ripper, English Murderer,” by John Phillip Jenkins. ↵
- Knocked back means dismissed. ↵
- A punter is a client. Doss is rent. ↵
- Stephen P. Ryder, “Casebook Jack the Ripper,” Victims: Last Addresses, August 14, 2009, 2, www.casebook.org/victims/polly.html. ↵
- Stephen P. Ryder, “Casebook Jack the Ripper.” Victims: Last Addresses, August 14, 2009, 2, www.casebook.org/victims/polly.html. ↵
- Salem Press Encyclopedia, January 2016, s.v. “Jack the Ripper,” by Cait Caffrey. ↵
- Death Certificate: no.370. 25 September, 1888. http://www.casebook.org/victims/polly.html ↵
- A back garden is a backyard. ↵
- William D. Rubenstien, “The Hunt For Jack the Ripper,” Ripper Diaries, (May 2000): 1-3. ↵
- Richard Jones, “Jack The Ripper 1888,” Victims (13 March 2016): 3. ↵
- Andy McSmith, “Madman’s notes throw new light on Ripper case,” The Independent article London, (19 November 2008). ↵
- A tabloid newspaper published in the United Kingdom and Ireland. ↵
- Richard Wheatsone, “Ripping Discovery,” The Sun (16 September 2017). ↵
211 comments
Noah Bolhuis
There’s always a strange curiosity towards serial killers, their practices and their victims. However, I believe that Jack the Ripper may have the most fascinations about him for the 130 years since he started. It is probably due to the fact that his identity is not, and will never be known. I found it interesting that he was willing to commit these murders in the open, justifying the theory that he was a mental patient. It is sad to see that he preyed on the weakest people of all, ones that no one knew or cared about. This is most definitely the reason he was so successful in his killings.
Engelbert Madrid
Jack the Ripper was a vicious human being. It is really horrifying on how he brutally murdered people without feeling any remorse for what he has done. The writer of this article puts to detail on Jack the Ripper’s inhumane acts on innocent people. While reading the article, the choice of words of this article illustrates me the brutal crimes that Jack the Ripper committed.
Tessa Bodukoglu
I have always heard about jack the ripper throughout my life and through a lot of horror movies. its scary to think about how brutal some people can be and how they loose their basic morals while committing these crimes. the author did an amazing job of keeping me engaged in the article and kept me wanting to read more. this is by far an excellent article and I am very glad I read the article.
Alexandra Rodriguez
While the most commonly associated act of getting justice for victims of a crime is arresting the guilty offender, what about the research and influence those victims bring? I think that while catching Jack the Ripper and giving him a jail sentence, these horrific crimes shouldn’t be all about the perpetrator. The victims can get justice from the awareness their tragedy can bring. These murders brought more awareness to the other women on the streets at that hour, it allows for improvement in the system to try and prevent another criminal as horrific as Jack the Ripper. Isn’t that justice as well? Knowing something is going to be done in light of these losses?
John Berka
Jack the ripper is a story that is both fascinating and disturbing at the same time. With the police force lacking any actual forensic investigative practices Jack was able to get away with all of these murders. Of course he loved the thrill of being nearly caught because catching him in the act is the only way they would be able to link him to the murders of multiple prostitutes that nobody really cared about anyway.
John Berka
Jack the Ripper is a story that is both disturbing and fascinating at the same time. During this time period there was a distinct lack of forensic investigative abilities available to the police, and so as long as Jack wasn’t there at the scene then there was no way they could link him to a handful of random prostitutes that were seen as garbage anyways. The theory that he loved the thrill of being discovered makes sense because obviously he was a sick and twisted person. I imagine he felt like an evil mastermind always staying one step ahead of the police.
Jabnel Ibarra
The story of Jack the Ripper is as horrifying as it is disgusting. It’s difficult to believe that anyone who wasn’t mentally disturbed could’ve possibly done things like that. It is also unforgivable that the killer was never officially identified and it chills me to think that he could have possibly lived a normal life after brutally murdering five women.
Maggie Amador
I’ve noticed that a lot of serial killers that are never caught seem to be the ones that always come close to being caught. It’s interesting to me how Jack the Ripper was very public with the location of his murders. It also seems as though Jack the Ripper’s first two murders may not have been connected because of the difference in style in which the women were murdered. I think the fact that these women were prostitutes is a reason Jack the Ripper may have been able to get away due to the lack of importance of the women because of their status in society.
Lorenzo Rivera
Jack the Ripper was truly a terrifying individual. The heinous acts he committed and his processes are unimaginable, this article did a terrific job at encapsulating his horrific crimes especially his first victim. It’s insanely sad that these families will most likely never receive justice. The fact that there are people in this world that would go to these measures is absolutely ridiculous but it is the world we live in today and sadly there isn’t really much that we can do other than educate the public on safety measures to combat these monsters.
Alexandra Lujan
I’ve always been into reading about Jack the Ripper and how he was never caugth is crazy and sad because no justice was brought for the victims. Hard to believe one man can commit such horrible crimes. The author did a great job talking about Jack the ripper and his first victim Mary Ann.