Having previously visited sites connected to Jack the Ripper and his victims, I decided to undertake a further visit, this time to the graves of the five canonical victims, who are buried across four London cemeteries. The sites of their graves have long since been re-used, but each cemetery has a memorial to the respective victim.
My first port of call was the City of London Cemetery, Manor Park, a ten minute walk from Manor Park Station on the Elizabeth Line. This is where Mary Nichols and Catherine Eddowes, the first and fourth victims of the Ripper respectively, were buried. Open since 1856, the City of London Cemetery and Crematorium is a Grade I listed two-hundred-acre site.
Making my way through the main gate, I headed for the Traditional Crematorium building with its red tiled roof, and on the other side, turned right to walk through the Memorial Gardens. Here a short distance up, flat on the grass on the right, I found the memorial plaque to Mary Ann Nichols.
Nichols’ funeral took place on the 6th September 1888, and a report about it appeared in the next day’s South Wales Echo:-
“The
funeral of Mary Ann Nichols, who was murdered in Buck’s Row, early on Friday
morning, took place yesterday. The time at which the cortège was to start was
kept secret, and a ruse was resorted to in order to get the body out of the
mortuary, where it has lain since the day of the murder. A pair-horsed closed
hearse was observed making its way down Hanbury-street, and the crowds, which
numbered some thousands, made way for it to go along Old Montague Street; but
instead of so doing it passed on into Whitechapel Road, and doubling back it
reached the mortuary by the back gate, which is situated in Chapman’s Court. No
person was near, other than the undertaker and his men, when the coffin, which
bore a plate with the inscription, “Mary Ann Nichols, aged 42. Died August 31,
1888″, was removed to the hearse and driven off to Hanbury Street, there to
await the mourners. Meantime the news had spread that the body was in the
hearse, and people flocked round to see the coffin.
At length the cortège started towards Ilford. The mourners were Mr Edward Walker, the father of the deceased, and his grandson, together with two of the deceased’s children. The procession proceeded along Baker’s Row, and past the corner of Buck’s Row, into the main road, where policemen were stationed every few yards. The houses in the neighbourhood had the blinds drawn, and much sympathy was expressed for the relatives.”
Continuing along the path, after a short distance, flat on the grass on the left side of the path, I found the memorial plaque to Catherine Eddowes.
Eddowes’ funeral took place on the afternoon of Monday 8th October 1888. That evening The Nottingham Evening Post carried a brief report on the events of the day:-
“The funeral of Catherine Eddowes, the victim of the Mitre-square murder, took place this afternoon at Ilford, Essex, where the City of London Cemetery is situated.
The expenses of the funeral were borne entirely by a private citizen. The corpse, decently laid in a plain coffin, with the name and age of deceased engraved thereon, was removed at half-past one from the Golden-lane Mortuary. Thousands of people lined the streets in the vicinity of the cemetery, evincing much sympathy. The remains were borne in an open hearse, followed by two carriages. Several wreaths were on the coffin. The crowds in the streets of the East End were so dense that a force of police had to direct the traffic.”
The following weekend, The Warminster and Westbury Journal, and Wilts County Advertiser, carried a report about the funeral in its edition of Saturday 13th of October 1888, which went into more detail about the behaviour of the crowd:-
“The funeral of Catherine Eddowes, the victim of the Mitre Square murder, took place on Monday afternoon. The body was removed from the City mortuary in Golden Lane at a quarter past one o’clock for interment in the City of London cemetery, at Ilford.
There were dense crowds in the vicinity of Golden Lane, and at the junctions of Osborn and Commercial streets the people were so numerous that a large force of police had to direct the traffic. The body was conveyed in an open hearse, a wreath being placed on either side of the coffin. Following the remains were two mourning coaches, and in the rear of these was a large wagon crowded with women, the majority of whom were attired in a style not at all befitting the occasion.”
Retracing my steps to Manor Park Station, I went down a side-road just before it, and five minutes later was at Manor Park Cemetery, where Annie Chapman (born Eliza Ann Smith), the second canonical victim of the Ripper, was buried. Manor Park Cemetery and Crematorium was founded in 1874.
Entering the Cemetery, noticing an information board highlighting graves of historical interest (including Chapman’s), I immediately turned left down a grass path that started between two trees and, as the modern graves gave way to an older area of graves on the left, I reached the memorial plaque to Annie Chapman.
Chapman was buried shortly after 9am on 14th September 1888 in a service paid for by her family. She was laid to rest in a communal grave within the Cemetery. At the request of Chapman's family, the funeral was not publicised, with no mourning coaches used throughout the service, and only the undertaker, police, and her relatives knowing of these arrangements. Consequently, relatives were the only people to attend the service.
A hearse supplied by Hanbury Street undertaker Henry Smith travelled to the Whitechapel Mortuary in Montague Street to collect Chapman's body at 7am. Her body was placed in an elm coffin draped in black and was then driven to Spitalfields undertaker Harry Hawes, who arranged the funeral. Chapman's relatives met the hearse outside the cemetery. Her coffin plate bore the words "Annie Chapman, died Sept. 8, 1888, aged 48 years."
Returning to Manor Park Station, I caught the Overground to Stratford, then the Central Line to Leyton. A short walk brought me to St Patrick’s Roman Catholic Cemetery, Leytonstone, where Mary Kelly, widely believed by scholars to have been the final victim of the Ripper, was buried.. It was opened in 1868 in response to the growing demand arising from population growth for consecrated burial space by the Catholic community in East London, and is one of only two Roman Catholic cemeteries in London (the other being a sister cemetery in West London - St Mary's Catholic Cemetery, Kensal Green).
Going through the cemetery gates, a short distance down the path was the grave of the McCarthy family, with a large standing angel on top of it. Amongst those buried here is John McCarthy, who was Mary Kelly’s landlord.
Following the main path as it bent right, I was soon at the grave of Mary Kelly.
Kelly's obituary ran as follows:
“The
funeral of the murdered woman Kelly has once more been postponed. Deceased was
a Catholic, and the man Barnett, with whom she lived, and her landlord, Mr. M.
Carthy, desired to see her remains interred with the ritual of her Church. The
funeral will, therefore, take place tomorrow [19 Nov] in the Roman Catholic
Cemetery at Leytonstone. The hearse will leave the Shoreditch mortuary at
half-past twelve.
The remains of Mary Janet [sic] Kelly, who was murdered on 9 Nov in Miller's Court, Dorset Street, Spitalfields, were brought yesterday morning from Shoreditch mortuary to the cemetery at Leytonstone, where they were interred. No family member could be found to attend the funeral”
Making my way back towards Leyton Station, I caught a #69 bus from the bus stop just before the station, alighting at Grove Road, Plaistow, just opposite the gates of the East London Cemetery, where Elizabeth Stride, whom most authors and researchers consider Stride to be the third of the Ripper's canonical five victims, was buried. The cemetery was founded in 1871 and laid out in 1872 to meet the increasing demand from the City and surrounding areas of East London. The cemetery covers approximately 33 acres and has two 19th century chapels.
Stride was buried on Saturday 6th October 1888 in the East London Cemetery, located within the east London district of Plaistow. Her funeral was attended by a small number of mourners, and the costs were provided at the expense of the parish by the undertaker, a Mr Hawkes.
Catching a #69 back to Plaistow Station, I caught the District Line to West Ham, then the Jubilee Line to Waterloo, from which I could catch a train home.