eddessaknight's Blog

Jack the Ripper's identity 'revealed' by newly discovered medical records

Hyam Hyams
Hyam Hyams, photographed at Colney Hatch Lunatic Asylum in 1899, has been named as a key suspect in the Jack the Ripper murders - London Metropolitan Archives

A former police volunteer claims to have discovered the identity of the figure behind some of the most shocking crimes in British history, unmasking the 19th-century murderer who terrorised the nation as Jack the Ripper.

Sarah Bax Horton – whose great-great-grandfather was a policeman at the heart of the Ripper investigation – has unearthed compelling evidence that matches witness descriptions of the man seen with female victims shortly before they were stabbed to death in 1888 in the East End of London.

Her detective work has led her to Hyam Hyams, who lived in an area at the centre of the murders and who, as a cigar-maker, knew how to use a knife. He was an epileptic and an alcoholic who was in and out of mental asylums, his condition worsening after he was injured in an accident and unable to work. He repeatedly assaulted his wife, paranoid that she was cheating on him, and was eventually arrested after he attacked her and his mother with “a chopper”.

Significantly, Ms Bax Horton gained access to his medical records and discovered dramatic details. She told The Telegraph: “For the first time in history, Jack the Ripper can be identified as Hyam Hyams using distinctive physical characteristics.”

Sarah Bax Horton
Sarah Bax Horton has researched medical records in her quest to find Jack the Ripper - HENRY HARRISON

Witnesses described a man in his mid-thirties with a stiff arm and an irregular gait with bent knees, and Ms Bax Horton discovered that the medical notes of Hyams – who was 35 in 1888 – recorded an injury that left him unable to “bend or extend” his left arm as well as an irregular gait and an inability to straighten his knees, with asymmetric foot dragging. He also had the most severe form of epilepsy, with regular seizures.

The victims were prostitutes or destitute. Their throats were cut and their bodies butchered in frenzied attacks with the authorities received taunting anonymous notes from someone calling himself Jack the Ripper. They are some of the most infamous unsolved crimes.

At least six women Martha Tabram, Polly Nichols, Annie Chapman, Elisabeth Stride, Kate Eddowes and Mary Jane Kelly – were killed in or near Whitechapel between August and November 1888.

Hyams’ medical notes, taken from various infirmaries and asylums, reveal that his mental and physical decline coincided with the Ripper’s killing period, escalating between his breaking his left arm in February 1888 and his permanent committal in September 1889.

“That escalation path matched the increasing violence of the murders,” said Ms Bax Horton. “He was particularly violent after his severe epileptic fits, which explains the periodicity of the murders.”

She added: “In the files, it said what the eyewitnesses said – that he had a peculiar gait. He was weak at the knees and wasn’t fully extending his legs. When he walked, he had a kind of shuffling gait, which was probably a side-effect of some brain damage as a result of his epilepsy.”

An 1888 Illustrated Police News front page reports on the murders
An 1888 Illustrated Police News front page reports on the murders - alamy

Witness accounts of the man’s height and weight were similar to the details in Hyams’ medical files, Ms Bax Horton discovered.

“They saw a man of medium height and build, between 5ft 5in. and 5ft 8in. Tall, stout and broad-shouldered. Hyams was 5 foot 7 and a half inches, and weighed 10 stone 7 lbs… His photograph demonstrates that he was noticeably broad-shouldered,” she said.

She has concluded that Hyams’ physical and mental decline – exacerbated by his alcoholism – triggered him to kill. The murders stopped at the end of 1888, around the time Hyams was picked up by the police as “a wandering lunatic”. In 1889, he was incarcerated in the Colney Hatch Lunatic Asylum, north London, until his death in 1913. Jack the Ripper never struck again.

Various suspects have previously been suggested as the man behind the killings, including the artist Walter Sickert, who painted gruesome pictures of a murdered prostitute.

Hyams had been on a “long list” of around 100 culprits, but Ms Bax Horton said he had been discounted because he had been misidentified. “When I was trying to identify the correct Hyam Hyams, I found about five. It took quite a lot of work to identify his correct biographical data. Hyam Hyams has never before been fully explored as a Ripper suspect. To protect the confidentiality of living individuals, two of the Colney Hatch Asylum files on patients, including Hyams, were closed to public view until 2013 and 2015.”

What makes her research particularly extraordinary is that it was prompted by her chance discovery in 2017 that her own great-great-grandfather, Harry Garrett, had been a Metropolitan Police sergeant at Leman Street Police Station, headquarters of the Ripper investigation. He was posted there from January 1888 – the murders’ fateful year – until 1896.

Sergeant Harry Garrett, who worked on theJack the Ripper case
Sergeant Harry Garrett, who worked on theJack the Ripper case

Ms Bax Horton, who read English and modern languages at Oxford University, is a retired civil servant who volunteered with the City of London Police for almost two decades until 2020. She had no idea of her ancestor’s history until she began researching her family and found herself studying the Ripper case.

She will now present her extensive evidence in a forthcoming book, titled One-Armed Jack: Uncovering the Real Jack the Ripper, to be published by Michael O’Mara Books next month.

It is written in tribute to her ancestor and his police colleagues.

Paul Begg, a leading Ripper authority, has endorsed it. “This is a well-researched, well-written, and long-needed book-length examination of a likely suspect. If you have an idea of the sort of man Jack the Ripper might have been, Hyam Hyams could be it,” he said.

Entry #1,853

ONE MAN VALIANTLY BATTLES CHINA FOR FREEDOM

by 

John Stossel

THIS WEEK, while we celebrate the work of America’s founders, I honor a living freedom fighter: billionaire businessman Jimmy Lai.

When Communist China crushed freedom in Hong Kong, Lai could have gone anywhere in the world and lived a life of luxury. But he chose to stay in Hong Kong and go to jail.

A new documentary, “The Hong Konger,” tells his story.

Lai grew up in poverty in China.

“My mother was (imprisoned) in a labor camp,” he recalls. “We were just 5 or 6 and managing ourselves without an adult in the household. When I was 8 and 9, I worked in the railway station carrying people’s baggage.”

There he learned about a little British-controlled island near China called Hong Kong, where people were less poor. So he went there “in the bottom of a fishing junk, together with maybe 100, maybe 80, people, and everybody vomiting.”

Once in Hong Kong, he was amazed at how plentiful food was. “I never saw so many things for breakfast. I was so moved. I was crying.”

He got a job in a sweatshop. “We had to wake up before 7 and worked until 10 p.m. But it was a very happy time ... a time that I know I had a future.”

The chance to have a future makes such a difference.

At the time, Hong Kong was an unusually free country. Police enforced law and order, but otherwise, the British rulers left people alone. That allowed people to prosper.

“The British gave us the institutions of freedom,” says Lai. “Rule of law, free speech, the free market ... That created the best in the world. That was very enlightening for me.”

Lai eventually saved enough money to start a clothing business. “I started a very small factory. Eventually we became one of the biggest sweater factories in Hong Kong.” Gradually, his clothing business, Giordano, made him rich.

Lai assumed that the Communist Chinese, seeing the prosperity in Hong Kong, would leave the island alone. After all, even the Communists were embracing some capitalism.

“I thought China is going to be changed,” says Lai. “China is going to be like Western country that I’ve been to. I was very excited.”

But then came the Tiananmen Square massacre. That inspired Lai to start a media company. Media are important, he said, because they deliver information, “which is choice, and choice is freedom.”

Lai’s media business thrived. He covered Chinese government abuses when other Hong Kong media wouldn’t. “Everybody was so chickened out, so scared. They went into self-censorship to avoid offending the Communists.”

Even foreign investors kept quiet to protect their investments in China.

Then, in 2020, China passed a “national security” law that declared it illegal for Hong Kongers to criticize the Chinese government.

“It became impossible for media to survive!” complained Lai. “Whatever we say can be sedition.”

A conviction for sedition would mean jail time, three years to life.

But Lai kept his paper open.

“If we just surrender,” he said, “We will lose the rule of law. Lose the freedom. We will lose everything.”

Hong Kong did lose its freedom, but Lai still refused to leave. “I came here without anything. ... I owe freedom my life. ... Don’t think about the consequences. Do what is right.”

For publishing the truth about the Communist government, Lai was arrested and sentenced to five years in jail. Chinese officials say they may add more years.

Still, Lai says he doesn’t regret his decision to stay.

“It would be so boring just being a businessman. I want to make my life more meaningful and interesting. That’s why I got into the trouble I got into today. And I’m happy to have it.”

Happy?

Jimmy Lai is a remarkable man, and a hero of freedom.

Entry #1,852

Supreme Court holds that race based admission @ Harvard & North Carolina Violate Equal Protectio

Supreme Court holds that race based admission @ Harvard & North Carolina Violate the Constitution Equal Production Clause 

Private

Published: July 3, 2023, 7:39 pm

Updated: July 3, 2023, 7:47 pm

todays lesson: racism

Q: Judging someone NOT by the content of the character but strictly by color of their skin is called;

AFIRMA TIVE ACTION.

~Michael Ramirez

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Entry #1,848

Comments

Avatareddessaknight-Jul 3, 2023, 7:57 pm
#1
Aren't many  problems correctable, but first only they are acknowledged and addressed. It's much easier to fix problems if we can catch them eartl y ?
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Entry #1,849

BETTER GAME PLAN...

Manifesting abundance isn't always about wishing things into existence....

"Let us not be content and wait and see what will happen but rather give us the determination to make the right things happen.

~Thomas Mann

Entry #1,847

Remains of WWII airman identified nearly 80 years after his death 20

Remains of WWII airman identified nearly 80 years after his death

Aliza Chasan
Sun, May 28, 2023 at 1:28 PM PDT

An Army Air Force member from Illinois has been accounted for almost eight decades after he was killed during World War II, officials said.

Tech. Sgt. James Howie is set to be buried in his hometown of Chester on June 3, just days after Memorial Day, the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPPA) said Thursday.

Howie, who was assigned to the 345th Bombardment Squadron, was in a B-24 Liberator bomber on Aug. 1, 1943 when it was hit by enemy anti-aircraft fire during Operation TIDAL WAVE, officials said. The plane crashed north of Bucharest, Romania.

Howie's remains were not identified after the war ended, authorities said. His remains, alongside those of other unidentified soldiers, were buried as unknowns in the Hero Section of the Civilian and Military Cemetery of Bolovan, Ploiesti, Prahova, Romania.

The American Graves Registration Command (AGRC) disinterred all American remains from the cemetery after the war, the DPPA said. However, the AGRC was unable to identify more than 80 people, including Howie. They were subsequently interred at cemeteries in Belgium.

The Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency announced that U.S. Army Air Forces Tech. Sgt. James M. Howie, 24, of Chester, Illinois, killed during World War II, was accounted for. / Credit: Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency
The Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency announced that U.S. Army Air Forces Tech. Sgt. James M. Howie, 24, of Chester, Illinois, killed during World War II, was accounted for. / Credit: Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency

In 2017, the DPAA started exhuming the unidentified remains and sending them to a Nebraska Air Force base lab for identification, officials said. There, scientists used dental and anthropological analysis, as well as circumstantial evidence and DNA testing, to identify Howie.

Howie's name is recorded on the Tablets of the Missing at Florence American Cemetery, an American Battle Monuments Commission site in Impruneta, Italy. A rosette will be placed next to his name to indicate that he has been accounted for.

Entry #1,842

5 things to know about Memorial Day

5 things to know about Memorial Day

Memorial Day is supposed to be about sacred mourning the nation’s fallen service members, but it’s come to anchor the unofficial start of summer and a long weekend of discounts on anything from mattresses to lawnmowers business

 

1. WHAT IS THE OFFICIAL PURPOSE OF MEMORIAL DAY?

It’s a day of reflection and remembrance of those who died while serving in the U.S. military, according to the Congressional Research Service. The holiday is observed in part by the National Moment of Remembrance, which encourages all Americans to pause at 3 p.m. for a moment of silence.

Entry #1,841

Memorial Ceremony Honors Our Fallen Men and Women

National Sacred Holiday is much more than leisure, barbecue and business sales>>>>

On tomorrow Memorial Day the Nation  will solemnly join together in remembrance of our American men and women who have given their lives for our country - it is humbling. The peace  and security we  usually take for granted was only made possible because of the selfless sacrifice of so many . Including their spouses, children , parents and extended families and neighbors left behind have carried the a painful burden. To all in that group we give a he heartful expression of united appreciation.

Requiem en pace

One nation under God and one flag, 

 

File:American flag.jpg - Wikimedia Commons

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Entry #1,840

Second Attempt to hail our American Aviator Heros +

Charles A. Lindberg landed his magnificent 'Spirit Of Saint Louis' nonoplane  near Paris, France to thousands of welcoming fans, completing the first ever dangerous  solo airplane flight from Long Island across the great ~~~`Atlantic Ocean miraculously ib only 33 hours.

Charles Lindbergh - World Famous Aviator

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Amelia Earhart on same day,1832  became the first courageous  woman to fly braely solo across the Great Atlantic waves ~~~~~as she landed  in Northern Ireland in about 15 hours after leaving  Newfoundland.

Tantalizing Theories About the Earhart Disappearance - History in the Headlines

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 mean time our Clara Barton, having bravely served in the bloody Civil War, founded the American Red Cross 

Nurse Barton was honored in portrait on a US 3 cent stamp

Red Cross Logo - ClipArt Best

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Requiem en pace

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