Victoria 1837 - 1901
Elizabeth II 1952 -
She is now 'Long Liz.'
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How did YOU meet Jack?
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Back-from-the-dead-thread I see......
Who the hell has Jack the Ripper as a family tradition?
The Addams Family? The Munsters?
p
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Dan Farson newspaper serialisation followed by Dan Farson book. Hiatus cause by dancing with Tessie O'Shea, then Stephen Knight newspaper serialisation and book.
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I voted British Culture.
Being nine years old in the Autumn of 1988, there was not much chance of me not hearing about the case. Add that to the fact that I was a morbid child and something of a nascent goth, it was little wonder that it stuck in my memory.
Come 1998, I was reintroduced to the Whitechapel Murders in A-Level history, specifically looking at the diary as a suspect source, and I've been interested in the case on and off ever since.
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When my brother and I were young my mother used to threaten us with JtR if we were misbehaving...I subsequently learned that this was something her mother had done too.
Cheers
Dave
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Is there any way you can see how you voted?
Half the time I can't remember what way I voted and want to be sure if I was telling lies or not.
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Apart from various newspaper articles, and the general awareness that Brits had/have about JTR, I have to say that it was Stephen Knight's book which first piqued my interest in the subject. That remains my only debt of thanks to the Royal/Masonic Conspiracy, by the way.
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I've always been interested in mysteries of all kinds from the time I was small, but I first 'met Jack' in the 1960's as a very young teenager, when I was taken by an older relative around the Ripper sites. Even then they were very much changed from Jack's day, but there were more contemporary buildings around the streets that still survived than there are now, though some were in very bad repair.
After that I read books like Cullen's 'Autumn of Terror' and was hooked!
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I already knew the name of course but my real interest came a few year back form watching the Stewart Evan documentary on Francis Tumbelty.
I was fascinated by the whole scenario of finding papers of the time hidden in an old book pointing out a suspect like that. Although it didn't pan out I still look fondly on the memory of it.
(for those who want to point out they weren't hidden it is my memory so I get to say they were)
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I was vaguely aware of JTR before but my interest started when I commenced work upon leaving school when I commenced my first job with Kearley & Tonge in Mitre Square.
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I don't remember anything specific. I read something about the mystery, emphasis on mystery. Then I read a book or the book that brought in the Royals. I didn't like the gory details. Around that time I had begun writing and worked for a paper. I got the idea a journalist might be able to solve the case so I started reading everything I could find and doing any research I could think of.
At this point I am more mystified about the fact that there were plenty of murderous, vicious, creepy men all over the world who could have been Jack, and that the name became a synonym for many other crimes, as Howard's inexhaustible supply of newspaper clippings proves. Indeed when I go to my old newspaper source that covers the U.S., there are many uses of the name JtR that are just tacked on to get attention and have absolutely nothing to do with the Whitechapel fiend.
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School in 12th grade. We all had to pick who we thought Jack The Ripper was. I went with George Chapman.
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The first time I consciously took an interest in Jack was after seeing the Mary Kelly photograph in a book I bought in 1979 (The Murderers' Who's Who by J.H.H. Gaute and Robin Odell). That sparked my interest in the Whitechapel Murders although after watching the Barlow and Watts docu-drama recently, I vaguely remember watching that when it was originally aired but I would be only 13 at the time.
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