Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Elizabeth Stride


Related Topics

In the News (Thu 17 Dec 09)

  
  Elizabeth Stride
Elizabeth's body was examined by Dr Blackwell at 1.16am.
He found parts of her body were still warm and concluded that she had been dead between 20 and 30 minutes.
Experts claim that Elizabeth had not been mutilated as badly as the other victims.
homepages.tesco.net /~Richard.Tarrant/jtr/victim3.htm   (148 words)

  
  Elizabeth Stride - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Elizabeth Stride is believed to be the third victim of the notorious unidentified serial killer Jack the Ripper, who killed and mutilated prostitutes in the Whitechapel area of London during the late summer and autumn of 1888.
Stride's body was discovered close to 1:00 in the early morning of Sunday, September 30, 1888, lying on the ground in Dutfield's Yard, off Berner Street (since renamed Henriques Street) in Whitechapel.
At 5 ft 5 in (165 cm), Stride was around 4 to 5 inches (10 to 12.5 cm) taller than the average for Whitechapel women of the era—although Mary Jane Kelly was even taller.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Elizabeth_Stride   (831 words)

  
 Casebook: Jack the Ripper - Timeline - Elizabeth Stride
Elizabeth was born as Elizabeth Gustafsdotter to Gustaf Ericsson and Beata Carlsdotter at Stora Tumelhed farm, Torslanda, Sweden, near Gothenburg.
Elizabeth was hospitalized at Kurhuset for venereal ulcer.
Elizabeth was briefly an inmate of Poplar Workhouse.
www.casebook.org /timeline.stride.html   (7340 words)

  
 Casebook: Jack the Ripper - Elizabeth Stride
Elizabeth Stride was born Elisabeth Gustafsdotter on November 27, 1843 on a farm called Stora Tumlehed in Torslanda parrish, north of Gothenburg, Sweden.
She was described by Elizabeth Tanner as a very quiet woman who sometimes stayed out late at night and did cleaning for Jews.
According to Elizabeth Tanner, the lodging house deputy, she arrived at the house after a quarrel with Kidney.
www.casebook.org /victims/stride.html   (4035 words)

  
 Jack the Ripper   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Elizabeth Stride (Elizabeth Stride: elizabeth stride is believed to be the third victim of the notorious unidentified serial...
Nichols and Stride were not missing any organs, but Chapman's uterus was taken, and Eddowes had her uterus and a kidney carried away and was left with facial mutilations.
Elizabeth Jackson, a prostitute whose various body parts were collected from the River Thames (River Thames: The longest river in England; flows eastward through London to the North Sea) between May 31 and June 25 of 1889.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /reference/jack_the_ripper   (5183 words)

  
 Jack the Ripper Biography
Elizabeth Stride, (maiden name Elisabeth Gustafsdotter, nicknamed "Long Liz"), born in Sweden on November 27, 1843 and killed on September 30, 1888.
For example, Nichols and Stride were not missing any organs, Chapman's uterus was taken, Eddowes had both her uterus and a kidney carried away, and Kelly had only her heart taken from the crime scene, although many of her internal organs were removed and left in her room.
Elizabeth Stride and Catherine Eddowes were both killed during the early hours of September 30, 1888.
www.myclassiclyrics.com /artist_biographies/Jack_the_Ripper_Biography.htm   (5939 words)

  
 The five victims of Jack the Ripper
Elizabeth Stride was born in Sweden in 1843, the daughter of a farmer, who most likely came to England as a domestic.
She married a carpenter by the name of Thomas Stride in 1869, yet little information exists as to if the couple had children or the reason for their separation.
It is known that Thomas died in 1884 of heart disease and Elizabeth spent her last three years with a waterside laborer named Michael Kidney.
txtx.essortment.com /victimsjackrip_rbzf.htm   (1169 words)

  
 Jack the Ripper’s Victims by Denise M. Clark
Elizabeth Stride, a 45-year-old woman of Swedish descent, had also been married, but the relationship was considered over even before the death of her husband in 1884.
Her autopsy recorded bruises on her shoulders, supporting the belief that she had been pressed to the ground and held there while her throat was cut.
Annie Chapman was buried at Manor Park, Elizabeth Stride in Pauper’s Grave number 15509, in East London Cemetery.
crimemagazine.com /ripper.htm   (2890 words)

  
 R I P P E R
lizabeth Stride was born in Torslanda, Sweden in 1843.
A continuing theme in the Ripper case, Liz Stride is widdowed when her husband dies in 1884 of heart disease, and not in the sinking of the Princess Alice Steamer on the Thames, as Liz would later claim.
She is seen in this vicinity for over an hour, having already been sighted by two laborers with a man outside a pub, and a policemen sees her with a young man with a deerstalker hat and carrying a parcel, very close to the spot where she was to lose her life.
uk.geocities.com /danny_d_k/ripper/stride.html   (583 words)

  
 THE MYSTERY READER reviews: Bannerman’s Ghosts by John R. Maxim
It is not apparent to the reader at this point who is responsible for this act of vengeance, but Bourne veers off on a quest for Elizabeth Stride, an assassin who had been reported dead some years before.
Elizabeth is making a life but still mourns the operative Martin Kessler, who apparently had met his demise in a prior book.
Elizabeth is found, the trawler is stopped, and nonstop action ensues.
www.themysteryreader.com /maxim-ghosts.html   (644 words)

  
 Mercy's Embrace
Elizabeth found she was staring into a pair of bright, china-blue eyes, edged with outrageously long lashes.
Elizabeth declined the invitation to sit, but she had to listen to a good deal more before she was able to escape, on the pretext of speaking to Yee.
Elizabeth was charmingly dressed, if one did not count the rather ratty wool shawl about her shoulders; he had a good idea how much her get-up had cost, which was plenty.
www.austen.com /derby/laural1e.htm   (13470 words)

  
 Jack the Ripper, the most famous serial killer of all time - The Crime library
After a few red herrings, she was identified as Elizabeth Stride, who was born in 1843 in Sweden.
This story was useful in getting charity from the Swedish Church in London, and in generally arousing sympathy for her.
The real story is that her husband, John Stride, was a survivor of the Thames River tragedy, but he had died later in the poorhouse.
www.crimelibrary.com /serial_killers/notorious/ripper/stride_6.html   (956 words)

  
 Jack The Ripper Dr Francis Tumblety????
After the murder of Elizabeth Stride on Sunday 30th September Thomas had been questioned by the police of his whereabouts of the previous night of the murder.
Thomas Barnardo became more involved with the plight of poor of the area, he wrote a letter to the Times dated the 6th October in support of The Rev. Lord Sidney Godolphin who had also had his letter published regarding the young children of the area who were left to fend for themselves.
Elizabeth Stride is buried at the East London Cemetery on the same day the 6th October.
www.goldonian.org /sub_pages/jacktheripper.htm   (5483 words)

  
 The College Years
Elizabeth looked up insulted by the man's words and saw the blonde smile at the dark man as if he was the extoller of world truth.
Elizabeth was chuckling to herself as she made her way back to the table a few minutes later.
Elizabeth's hair was mated with sweat, mud covered her legs clear up to her thigh and her face was still red from the exertion, but he was convinced he had not see anything more beautiful in his life.
www.austen.com /derby/alicia4.htm   (12668 words)

  
 Jack the Ripper - Simple English Wikipedia
Jack the Ripper is the name given to a serial killer, or a group of serial killers, active during the summer and fall of 1888 in the Whitechapel district of London, England.
The main victims thought to be by the same man were five prostitutes, Mary Ann Nichols (killed August 31), Elizabeth Stride (September 30), Catherine Eddowes (September 30), and Mary Jane Kelly (November 9), even though several other murders were reported around the time of these.
Some think he might of been a doctor or a butcher because of how he cut and killed the women.
simple.wikipedia.org /wiki/Jack_the_Ripper   (153 words)

  
 Census UK
She was baptized on December 5 of that year and confirmed in a church in Torslanda.
On March 7, 1869 she marries John Thomas Stride at the parish church, St. Giles in the Fields.
Diemschutz himself stated that he believed the Ripper was still in the yard when he had entered, due to the warm temperature of the body and the continuingly odd behaviour of his pony.
www.censusuk.co.uk /stride.htm   (369 words)

  
 Victims of Jack Elizabeth Stride (London Walks)
He subsequently identified the body of Elizabeth Stride as being the woman that he had seen.
He had discovered the body of Elizabeth Stride, the third of the victims of Jack the Riper.
Although Elizabeth Stride's throat had been cut, the rest of the body had not been mutilated and this led police to surmise that he had been interrupted as he went about his bloody business.
www.london-walks.co.uk /28/inexpensive-london-tours-.shtml   (471 words)

  
 VICTIMS
She moved to London in 1866.She married John Stride and told people that he and two of their children died in the wreck of the steamer The Princess Alice.
Israel Schwartz said at the same time he saw Stride thrown to the ground by her companion.
46 years old, Kate was killed on the same night as Liz Stride, leading Ripperologists to call it “the double event.” She had three children with Thomas Conway, whom she separated from in 1880.
www.holmesonscreen.com /RipperVictems.htm   (1223 words)

  
 eBay - Book: Haven (ISBN: 0380786699)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Elizabeth Stride has come to Hilton Head Island to escape her past as "the Black Angel"--a ruthless assassin--and to escape Martin Kessler, a fellow operative who owned a piece of her soul.
By joining forces in a daring rescue of the girl, Elizabeth and Martin will be forced to put their fates in each other's hands one more time--and decide once and for all if they are to live together or apart.
Elizabeth Stride, once a ruthless international assassin called "the Black Angel", is trying to escape her past on Hilton Head Island.
product.ebay.com /Haven_ISBN_0380786699_W0QQfvcsZ2178QQsoprZ617077   (424 words)

  
 Victim3   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Elizabeth Stride was born Elisabeth Gustafsdotter on November 27, 1843.
It was believed that Diemschutz's arrival caused the Ripper to stop and flee, due to the odd behavior of his pony, and because Stride’s body was still warm when they found her.
Stride’s mutilations were not quite as extensive as the two previous victims’.
www.louisville.edu /~hnlaws01/vic3.html   (384 words)

  
 Denver Post Online: Books & Authors   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Stride lives a quit life playing tennis and golf and dating a doctor.
Stride and Kessler get caught up in the affair when they learn the target is a teenage girl whose parents, unknown to her, have been killed by her evil rich uncle who wants her back in Egypt.
The proposed kidnapping escalates into nuclear terrorism when Stride and Kessler foil the attempt to snatch the teenager.
extras.denverpost.com /books/book2.htm   (425 words)

  
 Jack the Ripper: Case Study
Around 1:00 of the 30th the body of Elizabeth Stride was discovered by another man driving a trap and pony.
Perhaps because his attack on Elizabeth Stride had been interrupted, he was making up for lost time.
Details of Elizabeth Stride's murder are also covered in chapter 18 of Jack the Ripper Portrait of a Killer: Case Closed.
www.suite101.com /lesson.cfm/18593/1945/4?l=8   (1021 words)

  
 Zodiackiller.com Message Board
Polly (August 31st) and Elizabeth Stride (September 30th 2 days after the Dear Boss letter was received), lived at 32 Flower and Dean at the time of their murders.
Elizabeth Stride the evening she was killed gave a friend at her residence a large piece of material to hold (green velvet).
Polly Nichols, Catherine Eddowes, and Elizabeth Stride had at sometime lived on that street.
www.zodiackiller.com /mba/zt/1396.html   (1646 words)

  
 Jack The Ripper
Mary Ann (Polly) Nichols, Annie Chapman, Elizabeth Stride, Catharine Eddows, and Mary Jane (Marie Jeanette) Kelly are the five woman believed to have been killed by Jack the Ripper.
September 30, 1888 Elizabeth Stride was discovered on Berner's Street (http://ripper.wildnet.co.uk/ripintro/htm).
She was strangled and her throat was cut just as the others before her, but there was nothing that could be construed as body mutilation (http://ripper.wildnet.co.uk/ripintro.htm).
www.studyworld.com /jack_the_ripper.htm   (1879 words)

  
 LEFTFIELD-PSI Jack the Ripper Article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
For this article, I am standing by with the theory that Stride was the first victim on the night of September 30.
The idea that Catherine Eddowes could have been merely drunk, at the wrong place at the wrong time, appeared to be a prostitute while there and lost her life as a result of those combined actions and misrepresentations is a bonechilling contemplation.
London police surgeon--assuming that Dr. Phillips was still occupied with Elizabeth Stride--was called to the murder scene and to perform the consequential autopsy.
www.leftfield-psi.net /occult/ripper2.html   (4489 words)

  
 Bannerman’s Ghosts
Elizabeth Stride, once known as the Black Angel, one of the world’s most formidable assassins, has been living a quiet life away from the horrors of her past.
Paul Bannerman, the head of a team of, well, mercenaries might be the term, except that they’re good people, who do what they do because it’s their talent, because it's what they are trained for, and because they believe they can do more good outside the law than in playing within it.
  When he hears that someone is looking for Elizabeth, he finds himself interested, especially when he hears who is searching for her.
www.gottawritenetwork.com /MystrevJune.htm   (806 words)

  
 Jack the Ripper -   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Elizabeth Stride, (maiden name Elisabeth Gustafsdotter, nicknamed "Long Liz"), born in Sweden on November 27, 1843, and killed on Sunday, September 30, 1888.
Catherine Eddowes, (used the aliases "Kate Conway" and "Mary Ann Kelly," from the surnames of her two common-law husbands Thomas Conway and John Kelly), born on April 14, 1842, and killed on Sunday, September 30, 1888.
Elizabeth Jackson, a prostitute whose various body parts were collected from the River Thames between May 31 and June 25 of 1889.
psychcentral.com /psypsych/Jack_the_Ripper   (3686 words)

  
 Mystery Guide - Haven by John R. Maxim   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
But Elizabeth's is not the only face he recognizes among the affluent island residents.
Her uncle has murdered both her parents, and she remains the only obstacle preventing him from inheriting not only his brother's wealth, but a heavily guarded warehouse where stolen warheads are hidden.
As Martin and Elizabeth attempt to save the girl, a larger threat is uncovered -- a plan to exterminate the population of Hilton Head with germ warfare.
www.mysteryguide.com /bkMaximHaven.html   (491 words)

  
 On the trail of Jack the Ripper
At12.45am an unnamed witness watched a man drag Stride into the street and shout "Lipski" at her while a second man left a public house opposite and watched the commotion from the shadows.
Nichols, Chapman, Stride, Eddowes and Kelly have become the acknowledged victims but there were other unfortunate prostitutes who met a similar end, and bore the same Ripper trademark wounds on their bodies.
He was also implicated in the murder of Elizabeth Stride by a Hungarian Jew named Israel Schwartz who claimed to have seen Kozminski attack Stride and force her to the floor, and even picked him out in a police line-up.
www.mara.org.uk /Jack_Ripper.htm   (7884 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.