Ripper of Waterloo Road

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1838
19th century
19th century crime
19th century murder
A01=Jan Bondeson
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Author_Jan Bondeson
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Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=BTC
Category=DNXC
charles dickens
charles frederick field
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eliza grimwood
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eq_biography-true-stories
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grimwood
grimwood mysteries
high class prostitute
inspector charles frederick field
ipswich
Jack the ripper
lambeth
Language_English
london
murder
murder investigation
murder of eliza grimwood
oliver twist
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penny dreadfuls
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prostitute
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real crime
ripper
serial killer
softlaunch
south london
The Murder of Eliza Grimwood in 1838
the ripper
true crime
true crime history
unsolved
urban legend
victorian crime
victorian murder inquiry
victorian murder mystery
|inspector charles field

Product details

  • ISBN 9780750967792
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Jan 2017
  • Publisher: The History Press Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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When Jack the Ripper first prowled the streets of London, an evening newspaper commented that his crimes were as ghastly as those committed by Eliza Grimwood’s murderer fifty years earlier. Hers is arguably the most infamous and brutal of all nineteenth-century London killings. Eliza was a high-class prostitute, and on 26 May 1838, following an evening at the theatre, she brought a ‘client’ back to her home in Waterloo Road. The morning after, she was found with her throat cut and her abdomen viciously ‘ripped’. The client was nowhere to be seen. The ensuing murder investigation was convoluted, with suspects ranging from an alcoholic bricklayer to a royal duke. Londoners from all walks of life followed the story with a horror and fascination – among them Charles Dickens, who took inspiration from Eliza’s death when he wrote the murder of Nancy in Oliver Twist. Despite this feverish interest, the case was left unsolved, becoming the subject of ‘penny dreadfuls’ and urban legend. Unusually for a crime of this early period, the diary of the police officer leading the investigation has been preserved for posterity, and Jan Bondeson takes full advantage of this unique access to a Victorian murder inquiry. Skilfully dissecting what evidence remains, he links this murder with a series of other opportunist early Victorian slayings, and, in putting forward a credible new suspect, concludes that the Ripper of Waterloo Road was, in fact, a serial killer claiming as many as four victims.

JAN BONDESON is a respected true crime historian, having written twenty books, among them The London Monster and Rivals of the Ripper (both The History Press).

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