Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Chapman took at least four mistresses, who posed as his wife; he killed three by poisoning. [4] They were Mary Isabella Spink (1858 – 25 December 1897), [5] Bessie Taylor (died 13 February 1901) [5] and Maud Marsh (died 22 October 1902). [6]

  2. Chapman took several mistresses, who often posed as his wife, three of whom he subsequently poisoned to death. They were Mary Spink (died December 25, 1897), Elizabeth Taylor (died 14 February 1901) and Maud Marsh (died 22 October 1902).

  3. George Chapman with wife Bessie Taylor. Not one to remain bereaved, Chapman soon hired a former restaurant manageress named Bessie Taylor to work at the pub, and a relationship soon blossomed. Another bogus marriage was entered into, and again Chapman began to abuse his "wife."

  4. In 1890, he worked in a barbershop at the corner of Whitechapel High Street and George Yard, very close to where Martha Tabram was murdered in August of 1888. Klosowski married Lucy Baderski, expecting that the wife he left in Poland wouldn't find out about it.

  5. 3 days ago · Unperturbed Chapman married again, but when this wife, Maud Marsh, also died on 22nd October 1902, her family sought the opinion of their own doctor who became suspicious. The bodies of his first two wives were exhumed and significant traces of poison were found.

  6. A well dressed George Chapman with ‘wifeMaud Marsh So could Chapman have been Jack the Ripper? Inspector Abberline, for one, certainly thought so when he heard about his trial for murder at Southwark in 1903.

  7. May 2, 2022 · The murderous-looking George Chapman, from H.L. Adam, Trial of George Chapman – Notable British Trials, London 1930. In 1893, he returned to London, where he met a woman named Annie Chapman, with whom he cohabited for a while.

  1. People also search for