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H. H. Holmes "Murder Castle"

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Keira Kensington
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« Reply #15 on: September 13, 2015, 09:01:38 pm »

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« Reply #19 on: September 13, 2015, 09:02:41 pm »

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« Reply #21 on: September 13, 2015, 09:03:16 pm »

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« Reply #22 on: September 13, 2015, 09:06:39 pm »

Greetings,

I am Dane Ladwig, Author of “Dr. H. H. Holmes and the Whitechapel Ripper”.

In 1888, in the East End of London, the heart of the Whitechapel district was crippled by the crimes of a fiendish murderer known as Jack the Ripper.  Across the ocean, in America, another monster was on the loose – Dr. H. H. Holmes.

The mystery of the unsolved Jack the Ripper murders would puzzle the world for the next century and the years ahead. Scotland Yard Detectives, Stockholm’s finest minds, criminologist and experts (or “Ripperologists”) all endeavored and failed to unravel the mysterious identity of the world’s most notorious serial killer.

After more than a century of conjecture and inconclusive theories, the Ripper’s identity is no less a mystery than it was at the time of the murders. Is it possible Scotland Yard investigators were correct after all? Could the notorious Ripper have been an American visiting London? Furthermore, is it possible the visiting Ripper was an American physician and convicted serial killer?

In Dr. H. H. Holmes and the Whitechapel Ripper, the unproven propositions regarding the possible identity of Jack the Ripper are considered and weighed against the facts. Theory and literature based on opinion and imagination are left aside as only the facts and reason are considered. The Historian, student, Ripperologist, or simply those intrigued with perhaps the greatest of all unsolved mysteries, should add to their knowledge with what is revealed in this compelling account of Dr. H. H. Holmes and the Whitechapel Ripper…     



http://www.holmestheripper.com/
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« Reply #23 on: September 13, 2015, 09:08:14 pm »





Search Continues09.29.145:45 AM ET
Jack the Ripper Is Still at Large
Armchair sleuths have been competing for years to determine the identity of one of the most notorious serial killers. But they’re still far from answering: who was Jack the Ripper?

This month, the Daily Mail broke a story that, if it could be proved accurate, would probably qualify as the paper’s biggest scoop in more than a century.

In a lengthy “exclusive” timed to coincide with the release of his new book Naming Jack the Ripper, Russell Edwards—a London businessman and self-described “armchair detective”—claims to have unmasked the true identity of modern history’s most famous serial killer.   

Using DNA pulled from a shawl he'd purchased purportedly belonging to the Ripper’s fourth victim, Catherine Eddowes, Edwards and a molecular biologist named Dr. Jari Louhelainen present what they say is “definitive proof” that Aaron Kosminski—a Polish emigre and early Ripper suspect—was responsible for the series of heinous murders that took place in the Whitechapel section of London in the autumn of 1888.

“I’m overwhelmed that 126 years on, I have solved the mystery,” Edwards reflects in his piece.

But Ripper enthusiasts are a dubious bunch, and as quickly as the story was published, Edwards’ “proof” was attacked by skeptics who have questioned everything from the shawl’s provenance (never clearly established), its true age (possibly manufactured a decade or more after the Ripper murders), and the DNA science used to link the shawl to both the victim and the perpetrator.

Due to the degeneration of the genetic material, Louhelainen was forced to rely on less accurate mitochondrial DNA, which American courts have generally ruled is inadmissible in criminal proceedings because it is not a unique identifier. As NBC News science writer Alan Boyle pointed out, the specific DNA signature tied to Kosminski belongs to a common subgroup that could potentially have come from thousands of people.

Others say that even if Kosminski, a Jewish hairdresser, did kill Eddowes, that doesn’t prove he is the Ripper. Some even question whether the Whitechapel murders are the work of a single killer at all, and if a murderer who self-identified as Jack the Ripper ever existed.

Indeed, both the legend and legacy of Jack the Ripper are far more gripping than the crime spree attributed to him. In the history of serial killers, the Ripper wasn’t especially prolific. He is thought to be responsible for fewer than half a dozen murders, all of which occurred in a small section of East London over a single four-month period in 1888. Two of the five victims commonly attributed to Jack the Ripper are now suspected of being killed by copycats.   

    Indeed, both the legend and legacy of Jack the Ripper are far more gripping than the crime spree attributed to him.

Nevertheless, a cottage industry has grown up around the case. There are dozens of competing Jack the Ripper tours, websites, and books, most with their own self-appointed “expert” attached; over the past century a string of hoaxes has duped more than a few of them into making claims about the Ripper’s identity that they later regretted. 

Asked for his thoughts on why a handful of murders committed more than a century ago still resonate with so many people, Stephen Ryder—the executive editor of the Ripper site casebook.org—says the killer’s dramaturgic handle has likely played a role.

“It’s just like today, branding is everything,” said Ryder, whose award-winning website has established itself as one of the more credible sources for so-called Ripperologists. “On top of that, it’s got all the elements of a good Sherlock Holmes novel—grisly murders, gaslit streets, taunting letters sent to the police, suggestions of conspiracies and cover-ups.”

Then there are people like Ryder, and his casebook.org colleague Robert Anderson, who painstakingly keep the legend alive for the tens of thousands of Ripper enthusiasts around the world who remain on the case. 

While the official investigation has been closed since 1892, over the years, hundreds of professional and amateur sleuths have put forward dozens of potential suspects, some considerably more worthy than others. As Ripper experts put the screws to Edwards’ “conclusive” DNA match, an audience of roughly 35 gathered on Friday night in a sitting room inside the Victorian-era Ebenezer Maxwell Mansion in Philadelphia to hear another version of the Ripper story from author and former trial attorney Jeffrey Mudgett. 

Mudgett penned and self-published the 2011 book Bloodstains—which explores his discovery, at the age of 40, that he is the great-great-grandson of the notorious American swindler and serial killer Henry Howard (H.H.) Holmes.  He has his own theory about the true identity of the Whitechapel murderer—that it was none other than Holmes himself—and he is making his case in a traveling lecture/one-man-show called “The Trial of Jack the Ripper.”

Unlike Edwards, Mudgett doesn’t claim that he can prove Holmes is the Ripper. Instead he presents his case in a “mock grand jury,” asking his audience to weigh the evidence, almost all of it circumstantial,  and vote on whether there is “probable cause” to bring Holmes to trial for the three Whitechapel murders that most agree are the work of a single killer.

Despite his reluctance to claim conclusively that Holmes and the Ripper are the same person, Mudgett makes it clear where he stands on the issue; and he is convinced that after hearing him out you’ll come away with the same conclusion. 

“[The Ripper] was not a royal surgeon, not a Polish hairdresser, not a famous painter,” he said as he paced the room in the role of prosecutor. “No one can prove beyond a reasonable doubt who Jack the Ripper was, it takes a trial court to do that. But I can show probable cause that H.H. Holmes and Jack the Ripper are the same person.”

Holmes—who was most recently profiled in Erik Larson's 2003 book The Devil in the White City—would have been 27 at the time of the Ripper murders. He would later confess to killing nearly 30 people, many of whom were tortured and asphyxiated in the sprawling Chicago “Murder Castle” he built specifically for the purpose. He was never charged with those crimes, but was arrested in 1894 for murdering his business partner and three of his children as part of an insurance scam. He was executed by hanging in Philadelphia two years later.

The short version of Mudgett's hypothesis goes like this: Sometime in the summer of 1888, Holmes—who, as a trained doctor, fit the early Scotland Yard profile of the Ripper—traveled on an ocean liner to Britain, committed the Whitechapel murders, and wrote the famous “Dear Boss” letter—postmarked three days before Catherine Eddowes’ murder—in which Jack the Ripper allegedly coined his own monicker.

Mudgett claims that he has proof of Holmes’ British travels in a diary left to him by his grandfather, but for some reason he does not include these as evidence. Instead, the sole piece of physical evidence he can present is a computerized handwriting analysis that finds strong similarities between certain aspects of Holmes’ writing and that of the letter writer. 

That’s not enough to convince Ryder, however, who points out that the authenticity of the “Dear Boss” letter has been in question since the day it was received, and is now believed to be a hoax. Nor is Holmes the first “suspect” whose handwriting has been positively compared to that of the letter’s author.

In any case, Ryder adds: “Even if we knew for sure that Holmes wrote that letter, that wouldn’t prove he was the murderer.  A perverse kook, maybe, but considering his later activities in Chicago, that wouldn’t be surprising.”

At the presentation I attended, Mudgett managed to convince a slight majority that Holmes deserved to stand trial for the Ripper killings. I voted no, and left the event with less faith than ever in the judgment of my fellow man. But in terms of sheer theatrics, Mudgett is on to something. His presentation was stiff, and his findings flimsy, but he managed to keep an audience of educated museum goers in rapt attention. And that, after all, is much more the point than solving a 126-year old-case.

Mudgett has been invited to present his mock trial as a TED Talk next month, and is using the Ripper/Holmes link to lobby for the official memorialization of Holmes’ victims here in America.

Meanwhile, both he and Edwards have joined a long line of Ripperologists who have hitched their wagon to a case that so many of their colleagues have a stake in remaining unsolved.


http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/09/29/jack-the-ripper-is-still-at-large.html
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« Reply #24 on: September 13, 2015, 09:11:07 pm »

“Bloodstains” by Jeff Mudgett

March 6, 2015 By Emily Leave a Comment
or, after reading it . . . “How H.H. Holmes gave me a brain tumor”.



Dr. H.H. Holmes
Many people, upon hearing that they are the progeny of a mass-murderer, bury this fact and shy away from it as much as possible. Jeff Mudgett, a lawyer and former Commander in the U.S. Naval Reserve, instead takes his direct lineage to one of history’s most notorious killers and runs with it. He also has taken his crusade everywhere from TED to the printed page to prove that his relative was, in fact, Jack the Ripper.
Herman Mudgett aka H.H. Holmes


Herman Mudgett aka H.H. Holmes

Jeff’s great-great-grandfather was a man named Herman Webster Mudgett, better known as Dr. Henry Howard Holmes aka “H.H. Holmes”. The American serial killer was active at the end of the 19th century and executed in 1896, overlapping with the Ripper’s reign of terror in Whitechapel.

He is most famous for his “Murder Castle” in Chicago, a hotel that he had built to lure young, unattached female attendees of the World’s Fair looking for a place to sleep. He would then trap and kill the unsuspecting women within a series of passageways, secret rooms, gas chambers, vaults and acid pits. After his capture, Holmes confessed to 27 murders, but it’s possible that the actual number of Murder Castle victims may have been closer to 200.

The Infamous “Murder Castle”

Below is an old photograph of the 3 story ‘castle’ which Holmes had erected on 601-603 W. 63rd St. in Chicago, just prior to the arrival of The World’s Fair in 1893.
H.H. Holmes Murder Castle in Chicago



The block-long 3 story “World’s Fair Hotel”, better known as the “Murder Castle”.
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« Reply #25 on: September 13, 2015, 09:11:55 pm »

The Holmes Diaries

Jeff Mudgett claims that he inherited two diaries from his grandfather, and after expert handwriting analysis, determined H.H. Holmes had authored them. He includes long transcriptions from these diaries, though without the inclusion of photocopies. Excerpts Mudgett includes detail several of Holmes’ murders, a prurient story of his childhood **** by a priest, and the story of his escape from prison and his staged execution.

That’s right. In addition to claiming to know the identity of Jack the Ripper, Mudgett also asserts that H.H. Holmes tricked someone into going to the gallows in his place and went on to live a long life in the shadows.
Jeff Mudgett



“Bloodstains” author,
Jeff Mudgett

Mudgett posits that, according to the diaries, his great-great-grandfather was present in London with one of his assistants (a literal partner-in-crime) during the Whitechapel Murders. According to Mudgett, the diaries describe “training sessions” between Holmes and his assistant. The man was instructed to murder prostitutes and excessively mutilate their bodies in order to cause a sensation in the country. Holmes’ intent here was to distract from his own murders and sexual-organ harvest of upper class women. Rich women’s ovaries would supposedly have healthier hormones in them to aid in Holmes’ pursuit of a youth serum that would allow him to live an unnaturally long life.

There is a certain logic to Mudgett’s theory about Holmes’ role in the Ripper killings. Objections to Holmes’ candidacy as a Ripper suspect include the difference in M.O. between the methodical Holmes and the almost hysterical sexual sadism of the Ripper. Mudgett’s theory, however, makes it so that the mutilations were a deliberate forensic countermeasure to throw people off Holmes’ trail and accomplished by a different hand (though under Holmes’ direction).

Unfortunately, in the opinion of this reviewer, the melodramatic tone of Bloodstains calls the credibility of Mudgett’s story into question. It is undeniably over the top, though Mudgett does beg forgiveness from the reader preemptively during the introduction.

    “…Be patient with my sometimes struggling writing. Remember, there were no ghost-writers involved with the creation of Bloodstains—just a ghost.”
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« Reply #26 on: September 13, 2015, 09:13:09 pm »

Patience is also necessary to withstand the long rambling segments in which Mudgett describes hallucinations of Holmes’ ghost. Coincidentally, around the same time Mudgett inherited the diaries, he also inherited the murderer’s arrogant and demanding spirit. He literally sees his great-great-grandfather’s face and hears the man’s voice in his head, trying to convince Mudgett to become a killer as well.
Bloodstains by Jeff Mudgett



“Bloodstains” by Jeff Mudgett

Doctors explain the hallucinations, attributing them to an equally coincidental development of a brain tumor and periodic life-threatening seizures. The illness threatens Mudgett’s life throughout the story, and at one point he is given a terminal diagnosis. The tumor also miraculously dissipates around the same time that Mudgett solves a few personal mysteries surrounding his ancestry.

The Ripper theory presented in Bloodstains is probably the least absurd part of the story, and though it has been the major takeaway for many reviewers, plays a very small part in the scope of the book. The entertainment value of Bloodstains may appeal to some Ripperologists. Anyone searching for physical evidence and critical analysis, however, will likely be frustrated with the read and should stick to Mudgett’s TED talk.
Jeff Mudgett on H.H. Holmes as Jack the Ripper

In this presentation, Jeff Mudgett, author of “Bloodstains”, addresses a crowd at a TEDx event in Vancouver.


http://whitechapeljack.com/jeff-mudgett-bloodstains-hh-holmes-book-review/
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« Reply #27 on: September 13, 2015, 09:16:07 pm »

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« Reply #28 on: September 13, 2015, 09:16:26 pm »

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« Reply #29 on: September 13, 2015, 09:16:46 pm »

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