Naming Jack the Ripper: The Biggest Forensic Breakthrough Since 1888 (16 page)

BOOK: Naming Jack the Ripper: The Biggest Forensic Breakthrough Since 1888
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I cannot recall the
exact
conversation, but paraphrased, it went something like this:

 

RE:

 

I wonder if you can tell me any information you have regarding the Jack the Ripper shawl that was taken from Catherine Eddowes’ body on the night of the
murder?

AM:

 

Well it was never proven to be linked to the case because we’ve never done any DNA testing on it. In fact, we had it over the years as part of our training
museum. Most people call this the Black Museum, but it isn’t. It’s the Scotland Yard training museum.

RE:

 

Would you say it is genuine?

AM:

 

I can’t say one way or the other; it was on loan to us from the descendant of one of our policemen at the time of the murders. If it was ever shown to the
public, it would have to say that it was
alleged
so there would be no comeback.

RE:

 

OK, what if I was to say I had found something about the pattern on the shawl which relates significantly to the dates of three of the murders?

AM:

 

Well that would be fresh news that we haven’t got and we would be very interested.

RE:

 

When I knew that the shawl was up for sale, I had a look on the internet and saw that the
East London Observer
printed on Saturday, 6 October 1888, that the
victim was wearing a dark green chintz dress with Michaelmas daisies, with a golden lily pattern. I noticed that many newspapers had printed the same, so I concentrated on the pattern
and tried to find a clue in the significance of the pattern.

AM:

 

Did you find anything?

I told him about the relevance of the celebration dates of Michaelmas to the murders of Elizabeth Stride, Catherine Eddowes and Mary Kelly and he said: We never knew that,
that’s new.’

I felt really pleased: it was the first confirmation I’d had that I was onto something from someone who knew about the case. Now I
knew
I had to buy the shawl.

But before I had long to savour my success, Alan threw something else of vital importance into the ring. He said he
could not understand why people still continued to
talk about who the Ripper was, because – he claimed – Scotland Yard had always known who he was, and that they had documentation to prove it. I asked if he minded telling me the
name:

 

AM:

 

Well I can tell you the name but you have to go and do the work. Considering you’ve told me the first bit of news that I didn’t know in years, I’ll
tell you: the murderer was and always has been Aaron Kosminski.

RE:

 

Really? He’s always been one of the three publicized suspects.

AM:

 

Yes, but they make too much money on programmes and books to actually give the real culprit!

RE:

 

What do you think about the shawl now?

AM:

 

Well, I don’t know now, it is very old. I know Sotheby’s examined it and found it could be very early twentieth century, but it could be older. If you feel
you want to buy it let me know how you get on. You never know, it could be real after all.

RE:

 

I will keep you posted. So Aaron Kosminski was Jack the Ripper?

AM:

 

Yes, we’ve got all the information right here, but the museum isn’t open to the public. Tell you what, if you buy the shawl, we would be interested in
having it back. I’ll let you come and see the documents if you ever write a book on it and give me a signed copy.

RE:

 

That would be amazing. Thank you ever so much, I’ll let you know how I get on.

So now, in an astonishing couple of days, I had found out the significance of the shawl and, incredibly, the true identity
of Jack the Ripper – at
least according to Alan McCormack’s understanding of the police evidence.

And that is how I came to be at the auction in Bury St Edmunds in March 2007 and a couple of days later agreed to buy the shawl.

When I got it home I spread it across a large footstool covered in pale cream velvet in our drawing room to look at it properly. It was surprisingly large and existed in two
sections, the bigger one being 73.5 inches in length and 25.5 inches wide. The smaller piece had been cut more and was 24 inches long and 19 inches wide. The predominant colour was dark brown, with
a more golden brown on the reverse. At both ends were blue sections measuring about 2 foot long, patterned with a design of Michaelmas daisies and golden lilies in hues of red, ochre and gold. This
pattern also ran along the edges of the main brown central section in the form of a border. Pieces had been cut from the shawl at some time, leaving jagged edges at one end of each piece. The other
edges of both sections had a fringe of small tassels.

There were a number of stains on both sections; on the larger, a multitude of small dots could be seen near the fringe and a larger dark stain slightly further in. In the middle brown section,
similar dark stains were present as well as some smaller white dots where the colour had leached out. The smaller piece had some minor dark stains and again, near the fringe, more little markings.
I was fascinated by the stains. I could clearly see what looked as if it was blood, but I was surprised there wasn’t more blood, and I dismissed the white marks as probably nothing more
significant than the ageing process. Another pale stain I thought had been caused by bleach. Little did I know.

I stored the shawl in an antique glass-fronted cabinet I bought specifically for the purpose at an antiques shop in The Lanes in Brighton, then carefully concealed the
shawl beneath a display of silver which Sally and I also chose: I thought that if we were burgled, the burglars would get away with the silver and would not bother with a couple of old pieces of
cardboard and some tatty fabric that were lining the bottom of the cabinet. Storing the shawl there also kept it out of sunlight and contamination.

I read and re-read the letter of provenance from the previous owner:

To Whom it May Concern

I would confirm that I David Melville-Hayes am the Great Great Nephew of Acting Sergeant Amos Simpson who became the owner of the said Catherine Eddowes shawl after it was taken from her
body.

The shawl was then given to my Great Grandmother who was Mary Simpson who died about 1927. The ownership of the Shawl then passed to my Grandmother Eliza Mary Smith (1875 to 1966). On
her death the shawl was left to my Mother Eliza Elise (Mills) later Hayes (1902 to 1997). The shawl was given to me at the time my Mother went to live in Australia in 1986. However my Mother
returned to England in about 1989. Full information on this background is available on my Family Tree, which I will make available to, these details cover approx. Seventeen Pages of
Foolscap.

For further information I would suggest contacting Andrew Parlour on (telephone number) who has much information on the Metropolitan Police Records.

I am, Yours faithfully,

David Melville-Hayes.

The letter included his address and phone number.

I had already met Andy Parlour at the auction, and I knew from that encounter that he and Sue knew more about the history of the shawl than anyone else. They only had one copy of their book at
the auction, and, besides, I had not wanted to show my hand by being too eager for it at the time. But now I had their telephone number, and within a couple of days I gave them a ring, told them I
had the shawl, and arranged for them to come to my house.

Andy and Sue have been helpful and kind friends throughout this journey of mine. They have not betrayed to others who owns the shawl, and they have acted as a buffer between me and various
people wanting access to it: lots of people assume it is in their possession. I am, and have always been, very grateful to them.

It was from them, and their book, that I discovered the full history of the shawl.

In December 1993, the curator of the Crime Museum at the time, Bill Waddell, published
The Black Museum: New Scotland Yard
, in which he wrote:

Recently I acquired a silk screen printed shawl. It had been in the donor’s possession for many years and a large section had been cut out by his mother, because she
did not like the blood stains on it. I am told that it was the shawl worn by Catherine Eddowes when she was killed. Who knows what will come to light next?

Waddell was not the first person to mention the existence of the shawl in print. That honour went to Paul Harrison in his 1991 book
Jack the Ripper: The Mystery Solved
in which he set out
his case for Mary Kelly’s former lover, Joseph Barnett, being the Ripper. During his research for the book, Harrison, who at that time was a
serving sergeant in the Nottinghamshire Constabulary, received a telephone call out of the blue from London-based Chief Inspector Mick Wyatt, who had heard of Harrison’s Ripper research and
felt that he would like to know about a possible genuine artefact from the murders. Harrison was fully expecting the item to be a knife and was surprised when Wyatt said that it was a shawl
belonging to one of the Ripper’s victims, though he could not be sure which one. He gave Harrison the address, in Clacton-on-Sea in Essex, where the shawl was kept.

In late November 1989, about a year after he spoke to Wyatt, Harrison followed up this lead, and found that the address given to him was a video shop owned by John and Janice Dowler. Eventually,
Harrison met the Dowlers at their shop in St Osyth Road and found them very helpful, but also very cynical about the genuineness of the shawl, which by then they had returned to its original owner.
The story the Dowlers had been told was that the shawl had been taken from the body of Catherine Eddowes. Either the shawl had been acquired at the scene, or
en route
to the mortuary. A
friend in the antiques business offered it to the Dowlers a few years earlier, knowing they were from London and thinking that they might be interested in a piece of London history.

The alleged background to the shawl made them feel a little uncomfortable, but they accepted the gift. They were told that the missing section had been removed because of bloodstains, but there
were still stains visible on the remaining fabric, which disturbed them enough to ask their friend to take it back. They were presented instead with two cuttings from
the
shawl which had been placed in a mount and framed, and which they displayed in their shop. On the back of the frame was the inscription:

Two silk samples, taken from Catherine Eddowes’ shawl at the time of the discovery of her body by Amos SIMPSON in 1888. (End of September). Victim of Jack the
Ripper.

Arabella Vincent (Fine Art)

Hand-made Illustrated Mounts

UK Studio, Tel. Clacton —

Surface printed silk

Circa 1886

Framed 100 years to the day.

(A. Vincent)

The friend in question was David Melville-Hayes who actually worked for Arabella Vincent Fine Art and who specialized in hand-colouring prints. It is a family tradition: both
David’s father and grandfather were colourists, and he believes the line of colourists goes back to 1764. David himself has done work for the Queen Mother. He is the great-great-nephew of the
police officer Amos Simpson who had acquired the shawl, and the history of the shawl had been passed down over generations. What follows is what David had learnt from his family, and what he, in
turn, passed on to me. It is important to put this specific version of events across, as the story of the origins of the shawl has been muddied with the passing of time:

Simpson, being on ‘special duties’ at the time of the double murder, had gone to Mitre Square with several other officers from both the City and Metropolitan forces, and with another
policeman accompanied the body of Catherine Eddowes as it was wheeled to the City mortuary in Golden Lane. Seeing the shawl, he asked one of the senior officers if it was
fine to take it, as he thought his wife Jane might find the silk useful for dressmaking. David believes that it was his rank, Acting Sergeant, that allowed him to have the shawl. When Simpson
showed the bloodstained shawl to Jane, she understandably wanted nothing to do with it. Regardless of Jane’s opinions, it was not disposed of: and that’s one of the first and most
important pieces of luck in this sequence of events. Some time prior to his death in 1917, Simpson passed the shawl to his sister, Mary Simpson, David Melville-Hayes’ great-grandmother, and
on her death in 1927 it was given to her daughter Eliza Mary Smith. When she in turn died in 1966, the year I was born, the shawl once again moved down a generation to her daughter, Eliza Elise
Hayes, David Melville-Hayes’ mother. At the age of eighty-four, in 1986, Eliza Elise moved to Australia and before leaving offered the shawl to David’s two brothers. Again, the shawl
had a lucky escape, as the brothers, with little interest in its story, intended to burn it, which prompted David to take it off their hands and rescue what he felt was an important piece of
history.

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