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Martha Tabram

Martha Tabram (May 10, 1849 - August 7, 1888) is considered by some to be a possible early victim of the notorious unidentified serial killer Jack the Ripper, who killed and mutilated Censored pages in the Whitechapel area of London. Tabram's name is sometimes misspelled as "Martha Tabran," and she was at other times known as "Emma Turner" or "Martha Turner," taking the last name of the man she had most recently lived with. She was 39 and destitute at the time of her death.

Tabram's body was first noticed at 3:30 in the early morning of Tuesday, August 7, 1888, lying on a landing above the first flight of stairs in George Yard Buildings, Gunthorpe Street, Whitechapel. The landing was so dimly lit that this resident of the apartment building mistook her for a sleeping vagrant, and it was not until 4:50am that a second resident saw she was dead. Her killer had stabbed her 39 times in the body and neck, including nine stab wounds in the throat, five penetrating the left lung, two the right lung, one the heart, five the liver, two the spleen, and six the stomach, also wounding her lower abdomen and genitals. A third resident had not noticed anyone lying there while using the stairs three times around 1:50am, indicating Tabram was killed between 1:50am and 3:30am. Residents had seen and heard nothing between those times.

Contemporary newspaper reports at the beginning of September linked Tabram's murder to those of Emma Elizabeth Smith on April 3 and Mary Ann Nichols on August 31, though Smith before dying told police that a gang had attacked her. Later killings of one victim on September 8, two on September 30, and one on November 9 were also linked at the time to Tabram. The last five murders mentioned are now generally referred to as the "canonical five" victims of Jack the Ripper. All were knife murders of impoverished prostitutes in the Whitechapel district, generally perpetrated in darkness in the small hours of the morning, in a secluded site to which the public could gain access, and occurred on or close to a weekend. The day before Tabram's murder was the night of a Bank Holiday.

Tabram was born Martha White on May 10, 1849, in Southwark, London, the daughter of Charles Samuel White, a warehouseman, and his wife Elisabeth. The family had five children altogether. In May 1865 when Martha was sixteen, her parents separated; six months later her father died suddenly. Later she went to live with Henry Samuel Tabram, a foreman packer at a furniture warehouse, and married him on December 25, 1869.

In 1871 the couple moved to a house close to her childhood home, where they had a son in February of that year and another son in December of the following year. The marriage was troubled due to Martha Tabram's drinking, which was heavy enough to cause alcoholic fits, and her husband left her in 1875. For about three years he paid her an allowance of twelve shillings a week, then reduced this to two shillings and sixpence when he heard she was living with another man.

Martha Tabram lived on and off with Henry Turner, a carpenter, from about 1876 until shortly before her death. This relationship was also troubled by Tabram's drinking and occasionally staying out all night. By 1888 Turner was out of regular employment and the couple earned income by selling trinkets and other small articles on the streets, while lodging for some months in a house off Commercial Road in Whitechapel. Around the beginning of July they left abruptly, owing rent, and separated for the last time about the middle of that month. Tabram moved to a common lodging house in Spitalfields.

The Monday night before her murder, Tabram was drinking with another prostitute, Mary Ann Connelly, known as "Pearly Poll," together with two soldiers in a public house close to George Yard Buildings. The two couples left and separated at 11:45pm, each woman with her own client. This was the last time Tabram was seen alive. Connelly, not cooperating wholly with police, later identified two soldiers in barracks as their clients, but both had alibis. No suspect was ever arrested for Tabram's murder.

Later students of the Ripper murders have largely excluded Tabram from the list of five "canonical" Ripper victims, chiefly because her throat was not cut followed by evisceration in the manner of later victims. This view was advanced by Sir Melville Macnaghten, Chief Constable of the Metropolitan Police Service Criminal Investigation Department, who attributed Tabram's killing to an unidentified soldier in private notes he made in 1894, which came to light in 1959. Dr. Timothy Killeen, who performed the post mortem on Tabram, strengthened this belief with his opinion that one of Tabram's wounds was inflicted with a weapon longer and stouter than the others, a dagger or possibly a bayonet.

Researchers such as Philip Sugden (see below), and Sean Day in Peter Underwood's Jack the Ripper: One Hundred Years of Mystery (ISBN 0713719540), view Tabram as a probable Ripper victim. The time of her murder, at least two hours after leaving with her soldier client, would have allowed her to solicit another client. Macnaghten did not join the force until the year after the murders, and his notes reflect only the opinions of some police officers at the time, and include factual errors in the information presented about possible suspects. Serial killers have been known to have changed their murder weapons, but especially to develop their modus operandi over time, as the Ripper did with increasingly severe mutilations. While the five canonical Ripper murders were located roughly to north, south, east and west of Whitechapel, Tabram's murder occurred close to their geographic centre, which some suggest could indicate a murder perpetrated on impulse more than planning by a killer who perhaps lived close by.

The truth of whether Tabram was killed by the same hand as the others, much like the search for the identity of the Ripper, may never be definitively resolved.

Further reading

  • The Complete History of Jack the Ripper by Philip Sugden, ISBN 0786702761, is widely held to be one of the best on the topic.

External links

  • Casebook: Jack the Ripper http://www.casebook.org/index.html has numerous articles covering many aspects of the case, and reproduces many original source texts relevant to the case.



Last updated: 02-09-2005 19:47:55
Last updated: 02-28-2005 17:50:41