Annie Chapman (born Eliza Ann Smith; 25 September 1840 – 8 September 1888) was the second canonical victim of the unidentified serial killer known as "Jack the Ripper", who murdered and mutilated at least five women in the Whitechapel and Spitalfields districts of London between late August and early November 1888.
Although earlier murders attributed to the Ripper—then referred to as the "Whitechapel murderer"—had already attracted considerable press and public attention, Chapman's killing provoked widespread alarm in the East End,Norder, Ripper Notes: How the Newspapers Covered the Jack the Ripper Murders p. 47 and intensified pressure upon the police to apprehend the culprit.
Annie's parents were not married at the time of her birth, although they married on 22 February 1842 in Paddington. Following the birth of their second child in 1844, the family relocated to Knightsbridge, where George Smith became a valet.Wilson, Yardley, Lynes Serial Killers and the Phenomenon of Serial Murder: A Student Textbook, p. 73 They later moved to Berkshire in 1856.
According to her brother, Fountain, Annie had "first took a drink when she was quite young", quickly developing a weakness for alcohol. Although both he and two of her sisters had persuaded her to sign a promise to refrain from drinking, she "was temptation and fell" despite their "over and over" efforts to dissuade her.Begg, Jack the Ripper: The Facts, p. 68
Contemporary accounts describe Annie as an intelligent and sociable woman with a weakness for alcohol—particularly rum. An acquaintance told the inquest into her murder that she was "very civil and industrious when Sobriety", before adding, "I have often seen her the worse for drink."Amelia Farmer, quoted at the inquest by Wilson and Odell, p. 27 She was in height and had blue eyes and wavy, dark brown hair, leading acquaintances to give her the nickname "Dark Annie".Evans and Skinner, The Ultimate Jack the Ripper Sourcebook, pp. 50–51, 69
In the years following their marriage, the Chapmans lived at various addresses in West London. In the early 1870s, John obtained employment in the service of a Nobility in Bond Street.Begg, Jack the Ripper: The Facts, p. 66
Although Annie had struggled with alcoholism as an adult, she had reportedly weaned herself off drink by 1880. Her son's disability is believed to have contributed to her gradual return to alcohol dependency.Gray, London's Shadows: The Dark Side of the Victorian City, p. 163
In 1881, the Chapman family relocated from West London to Windsor, where John took a job as a coachman to a farm bailiff named Josiah Weeks, and the family lived in the attic rooms of St. Leonard Hill Farm Cottage. The Complete History of Jack the Ripper ch. 5 The following year, Emily Ruth died of meningitis on her brother's second birthday, at the age of twelve.
Following their daughter's death, both Annie and her husband turned to heavy drinking. Over the next several years, she was arrested on several occasions for public intoxication in both Clewer and Windsor, although no records exist of her ever being brought before a magistrates court for these arrests.
Two years later, in 1886, John resigned from his job due to his declining health and relocated to New Windsor. He died of Cirrhosis The News from Whitechapel: Jack the Ripper in the Daily Telegraph p. 43 and edema on 25 December, bringing an end to the weekly payments. Jack the Ripper: The Definitive History p. 188 Annie learned of her husband's death through her brother-in-law. Her surviving daughter, Annie Georgina (then aged thirteen), is believed either to have been placed in a French institution or to have joined a performing troupe that travelled with a circus in France. Census records from 1891 reveal both of Annie's surviving children were living with their grandmother in Knightsbridge.
Shortly after John's death, this sieve-maker left her—possibly due to the loss of her allowance—and relocated to Notting Hill. One of Annie's friends said she became depressed after this separation and appeared to lose her will to live.
Eight days before her death, Chapman fought with a fellow resident of Crossingham's Lodging House named Eliza Cooper. The two were reportedly rivals for the affections of a local hawker named Harry, although Cooper later claimed the dispute had begun when Chapman borrowed a bar of soap from her and, when asked to return it,Fido, p. 28 threw a halfpenny onto a kitchen table, saying, "Go get a halfpenny's worth of soap."Bell, Capturing Jack the Ripper: In the Boots of a Bobby in Victorian England, p. 114 A later confrontation between the two at the Britannia Public House ended with Cooper striking Chapman in the face and chest, leaving her with a black eye and a bruised breast. The News from Whitechapel: Jack the Ripper in the Daily Telegraph p. 67
On 7 September, Amelia Palmer encountered Chapman in Dorset Street. Palmer later told police that she appeared visibly Pallor, having been discharged from the casual ward of the Whitechapel Infirmary earlier that day. Chapman complained to Palmer that she felt "too ill to do anything".
After Chapman's death, the coroner who conducted her autopsy noted that her lungs and of her brain were in an advanced state of disease, which would have proved fatal within months.
A Mrs Elizabeth LongNewspaper reports also refer to her as Mrs Darrell, which caused authors such as Martin Fido to mistakenly think Darrell and Long were two different women (see Fido, pp. 30–31, 94). In the police records, however, she is identified as "Long Mrs. alias Durrell" (HO 144/221/A49301C f. 136, quoted in Evans and Rumbelow, p. 289). testified at the subsequent inquest that she had seen Chapman speaking with a man at 5:30 am. The pair were standing just beyond the back yard of 29 Hanbury Street, Spitalfields. Long described the man as over 40 years old, slightly taller than Chapman, with dark hair, and of a foreign, "shabby-Gentry" appearance. He wore a brown, low-crowned felt hat and possibly a dark coat.Begg, p. 153; Cook, p. 163; Evans and Skinner, The Ultimate Jack the Ripper Sourcebook, p. 98; Marriott, pp. 59–75 According to Long, the man asked Chapman, "Will you?" to which she replied, "Yes."Begg, Jack the Ripper: The Definitive History, p. 153
Long was certain of both Chapman's identity and the time of the sighting, having heard a nearby clock strike the half-hour just before she entered Hanbury Street. If her account was accurate, she was likely the last person to see Chapman alive, and in the company of her murderer.Tully, The Real Jack the Ripper: The Secret of Prisoner 1167, p. 369
At approximately 5:15 am, Albert Cadosch, a tenant of 27 Hanbury Street, entered his back yard to use the lavatory. He later told police he heard a woman say, "No, no!" followed by the sound of something—or someone—falling against the fence dividing the yards of numbers 27 and 29 Hanbury Street.Begg, p. 153; Evans and Skinner, The Ultimate Jack the Ripper Sourcebook, p. 100; Marriott, pp. 59–75 He did not investigate the noises. Jack the Ripper p. 37
Chapman's mutilated body was discovered shortly before 6:00 am by John Davis, an elderly resident of 29 Hanbury Street. Davis noticed that the front door was open, while the back door remained shut. Her body lay on the ground near the doorway to the back yard, with her head six inches (15 cm) from the steps to the property.Eddleston, Jack the Ripper: An Encyclopedia, p. 255 He alerted three men—James Green, James Kent, and Henry Holland—before all three ran down Commercial Street to find a policeman, while Davis reported the discovery at the nearest police station.
At the corner of Hanbury Street, Green, Kent, and Holland encountered Divisional Inspector Joseph Luniss Chandler and told him, "Another woman has been murdered!" Chandler followed the men to the scene before requesting the assistance of police surgeon Dr George Bagster Phillips and additional officers. Several policemen arrived within minutes and were instructed to clear the passageway to the yard to ensure Phillips had access. Phillips reached Hanbury Street at approximately 6:30 am.Bell, Capturing Jack the Ripper: In the Boots of a Bobby in Victorian England, p. 101
Dr Phillips quickly established a definite link between Chapman's murder and that of Mary Ann Nichols, which had occurred on 31 August.Evans and Rumbelow, pp. 51–55; Marriott, Trevor, p. 13 Nichols had also suffered two deep slash wounds to the throat, inflicted from the left to right, followed by abdominal mutilation, and a blade of similar size and design had been used in both murders. Phillips also noted six areas of blood spattering on the wall between the steps and wooden palings dividing 27 and 29 Hanbury Street. Some of these spatterings were 18 inches (45 cm) above the ground.Bell, Capturing Jack the Ripper: In the Boots of a Bobby in Victorian England, p. 102
Two pills, prescribed to Chapman, a torn piece of envelope, a small fragment of frayed coarse muslin, and a comb were recovered near her body. A leather apron, partially submerged in a dish of water near a tap, was also found close by.
Contemporary press reports claimed that two farthings were discovered in the yard near Chapman's body, although no reference to these coins appears in surviving police records. Edmund Reid, the local inspector of H Division Whitechapel, was reported to have mentioned the coins at an inquest in 1889, and Major Henry Smith, acting Commissioner of the City Police, also referred to them in his . Smith's memoirs, written more than twenty years after the Whitechapel murders, are generally regarded as unreliable and embellished for dramatic effect.Fido, pp. 50, 120
On 13 September, Dr George Bagster Phillips described the body as he observed it at 6:30 am in the back yard of 29 Hanbury Street:Bell, Capturing Jack the Ripper: In the Boots of a Bobby in Victorian England, p. 106
Chapman's throat had been cut from left to right with such force that striations were visible on the bones of her vertebral column,Cook, Jack the Ripper, p. 158 and she had been Disembowelment, with one section of abdominal flesh placed on her left shoulder and another section—together with part of her —placed above her right shoulder. The Murders of the Black Museum: 1870–1970 pp. 55–56 The post-mortem examination revealed that part of her uterus and bladder was missing. Chapman's protruding tongue and swollen face led Dr Phillips to believe she may have been asphyxiation with the handkerchief around her neck before her throat was cut,Evans and Rumbelow, p. 72; Fido, p. 34 and that her murderer had held her chin while inflicting the wound.Bell, Capturing Jack the Ripper: In the Boots of a Bobby in Victorian England, p. 109 As there was no blood trail leading into the yard, he was certain she had been killed where she was found.
Phillips concluded that Chapman suffered from a long-standing lung disease, that she was sober at the time of her death, and that she had not consumed alcohol for several hours beforehand.Phillips's inquest testimony quoted in Marriott, pp. 53–54 He believed the murderer must have possessed anatomical knowledge to remove her reproductive organs in a single movement with a blade about 6–8 inches (15–20 cm) long.Cook, p. 221; Evans and Rumbelow, pp. 71–72; Evans and Skinner, The Ultimate Jack the Ripper Sourcebook, pp. 67–68, 87; Marriott, pp. 26–29; Rumbelow, p. 42 Other medical experts dismissed the suggestion that the killer had surgical skill.Fido, p. 35; Marriott, pp. 77–79 As her body had not been examined extensively at the scene, it has also been suggested that the missing organ may have been removed by mortuary staff, who sometimes took advantage of bodies already opened to extract organs for sale as surgical specimens.Marriott, pp. 77–79 In his summing up, coroner Baxter raised the possibility that Chapman had been murdered deliberately to obtain the uterus, citing enquiries made by an American at a London medical school regarding the purchase of such organs.Evans and Rumbelow, p. 89; Evans and Skinner, The Ultimate Jack the Ripper Sourcebook, p. 106; Fido, p. 35; Marriott, p. 73 The Lancet rejected Baxter's theory, criticising its "certain improbabilities and absurdities", and calling it "a grave error of judgement". The Lancet, 29 September 1888, quoted in Evans and Rumbelow, pp. 89–90 The British Medical Journal was similarly dismissive, reporting that the physician who had requested the samples was a reputable doctor who had left the country eighteen months before the murder. British Medical Journal, 6 October 1888, quoted in Evans and Rumbelow, p. 92 and Fido, p. 36 Baxter subsequently abandoned the theory and never referred to it again.Evans and Rumbelow, p. 90; Fido, p. 36 The Chicago Tribune claimed the American doctor was from Philadelphia, Chicago Tribune, 7 October 1888, quoted in Evans and Rumbelow, p. 93 and author Philip Sugden later speculated that the man in question may have been Francis Tumblety.Evans and Rumbelow, p. 93
Regarding the time of death, Dr Phillips estimated that Chapman had died at or before 4:30 am, contradicting the testimony of Richardson, Long, and Cadosch, all of whom indicated the murder had occurred later. Victorian era methods of estimating the time of death, such as assessing body temperature, were imprecise by modern standards, and Phillips himself acknowledged at the inquest that Chapman's body may have cooled more rapidly than expected.Evans and Rumbelow, pp. 73–74
After a brief deliberation, the jury—having been instructed to consider precisely how, when, and by what means Chapman met her death—returned a verdict of wilful murder against a person or persons unknown.
Journalists, frustrated by the Criminal Investigation Department's reluctance to disclose details of their investigation to the public and eager to capitalise on growing public unrest, frequently resorted to reports of questionable accuracy.Begg, p. 214 Imaginative descriptions of "Leather Apron", often employing crude Jewish stereotypes, appeared in the press.e.g. Manchester Guardian, 10 September 1888, and Austin Statesman, 5 September 1888, quoted in Begg, pp. 98–99; The Star, 5 September 1888, quoted in Evans and Rumbelow, p. 80 The Manchester Guardian reported: "Whatever information may be in the possession of the police they deem it necessary to keep secret ... It is believed their attention is particularly directed to ... a notorious character known as 'Leather Apron'." Manchester Guardian, 6 September 1888, quoted in Begg, p. 98 Rival journalists dismissed such accounts as "a outgrowth of the reporter's fancy". Leytonstone Express and Independent, 8 September 1888, quoted in Begg, p. 99See also 'Daily News, 10 September 1888, quoted in Fido, p. 37
John Pizer, a 38-year-old Polish Jew who made footwear from leather, was known locally as "Leather Apron".e.g. Marriott, p. 251; Rumbelow, p. 49 He was reputed to have Intimidation local prostitutes at knifepoint,Marriott, p. 251 and had appeared before the Thames Magistrates' Court on 4 August 1888, charged with indecent assault. Pizer is also believed to have stabbed a man in the hand in 1887.Begg, Jack the Ripper: The Facts, pp. 92–93
Despite there being no direct evidence against him, Pizer was arrested on 10 September by Sergeant William Thicke.Eddleston, Jack the Ripper: An Encyclopedia, p. 32Report by Inspector Joseph Helson, CID 'J' Division, in the Metropolitan Police archive, MEPO 3/140 ff. 235–238, quoted in Begg, p. 99 and Evans and Skinner, The Ultimate Jack the Ripper Sourcebook, p. 24 Although Pizer denied the allegation, Thicke was aware of his local reputation, and his "Leather Apron" nickname.
Pizer was released from custody on 11 September after police verified his alibis for the nights of the murders of both Chapman and Nichols.Begg, p. 157; Cook, pp. 65–66; Evans and Skinner, The Ultimate Jack the Ripper Sourcebook, p. 29; Marriott, pp. 59–75; Rumbelow, pp. 49–50 He was called as a witness on the second day of the inquest into Chapman's murder to publicly clear his name and dispel public suspicion that he was the killer.Fido, p. 38 Pizer later obtained monetary compensation from at least one newspaper that had published several articles naming him as the prime suspect in the Whitechapel murders.O'Connor, T. P. (1929). Memoirs of an Old Parliamentarian. London: Ernest Benn. Vol. 2, p. 257, quoted in Begg, p. 166 and Cook, pp. 72–73
A Swiss butcher, Jacob Isenschmid, matched an eyewitness description given by a public house landlady, Mrs Fiddymont, who reported seeing a blood‑stained man acting suspiciously on the morning of Chapman's murder. Isenschmid had a distinctive appearance, including a large ginger moustache, and a known history of mental illness. He was arrested on 13 September on suspicion of the murder.Eddleston, Jack the Ripper: An Encyclopedia, p. 216
On 18 September, a 40-year-old German hairdresser named Charles Ludwig was arrested after attempting to stab a young man, Alexander Finlay, at a coffee stall while intoxicated. Ludwig was detained shortly afterwards in the company of a visibly distressed prostitute, who told a policeman, "Dear me! He frightened me very much when he pulled a big knife out." He was also wanted by the City of London Police for attempting to slash a woman's throat with a razor.
Both Isenschmid and Ludwig were ultimately cleared of suspicion after two further murders were committed on the same date while both men were in police custody. Isenschmid was later detained in a mental asylum.Evans and Rumbelow, pp. 86–88 Other individuals named in contemporary police records and newspapers as possible suspects included a local trader, Friedrich Schumacher; pedlar Edward McKenna; apothecary and mental patient Oswald Puckridge; and an insane medical student John Sanders. No evidence exists against any of these individuals.Evans and Rumbelow, pp. 80, 84, 88
Chapman was buried shortly after 9:00 am on 14 September 1888 in a service paid for by her family. She was laid to rest in a communal grave in Manor Park Cemetery, Forest Gate, east London. At the family's request, the funeral was not publicised; no mourning coaches were used, and only the undertaker, police, and her relatives were aware of the arrangements. As a result, only family members and a small number of friends attended the service. Ripper Notes: Death in London's East End p. 94
A hearse supplied by Hanbury Street undertaker Henry Smith travelled to the Whitechapel Mortuary in Montague Street at 7:00 am to collect Chapman's body. It was placed in an elm coffin draped in black and then taken to Spitalfields undertaker Harry Hawes, who arranged the funeral. By prior arrangement, Chapman's relatives and friends met the hearse outside the cemetery.Begg, Jack the Ripper: The Facts, p. 124 She was buried in communal grave 78, square 148. Her coffin plate bore the inscription "Annie Chapman, died Sept. 8, 1888, aged 48 years." The Daily Telegraph, 15 September 1888, p. 3
The precise location of Chapman's grave within Manor Park Cemetery is now unknown. A plaque placed by the cemetery authorities in 2008 reads, "Her remains are buried within this area." A headstone was later erected nearby.
Murder
Inquest
Character testimony
Medical testimony
Conclusion
Investigation
Leather Apron
Pawnbrokers
Edward Stanley
Further enquiries and arrests
Media moniker
Funeral
Media
Film
Television
Drama
See also
Notes
Bibliography
External links
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