Jack The Ripper Case Notes & Death Masks To Feature In Museum Of London

Jack The Ripper Case Notes, Death Masks And Hangman's Ropes: Mementoes From London's Grisly Criminal Past
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Guns, gallstones, death masks and hangman's ropes are going on display in an exhibition drawn from one of Britain's most macabre, and least-seen, museums.

For more than a century, the Crime Museum inside London police headquarters has been open only to Scotland Yard staff and invited guests.

Established in 1875 to help educate officers in the new field of scientific detection, it documents many of Britain's most notorious crimes, from the Jack the Ripper slayings to the Acid Bath Murders and the Great Train Robbery.

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The Death mask of Daniel Good, executed outside Newgate prison on 23 May 1842 for the murder of his wife, Jane Jones

Hundreds of the objects will leave Scotland Yard for the first time as part of an exhibition opening in October at the Museum of London.

The museum on Thursday announced details of the show, which will include the death masks of criminals hanged at now-demolished Newgate Prison, a pistol used in an attempt to kill Queen Victoria and notes from a senior detective on the 1888 Jack the Ripper murders of women in London's East End.

Ordinary objects take on sinister meanings. A talcum powder tin turns out to have a secret compartment in which members of a suburban Soviet spy ring hid microdots. A pair of patched and frayed stockings was used to make masks worn by the brothers who committed a 1905 robbery-murder.

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Some of the accessories used by 'Acid Bath Murderer' John Haigh

"A lot of these objects that we are displaying, they were concerned with murder, they are part of horrific events," said co-curator Julia Hoffbrand. "But many of them are very everyday, and they talk about people's lives."

One of the most chilling displays concerns "Acid Bath Murderer" John Haigh, a 1940s serial killer who dissolved his victims' bodies in sulfuric acid.

The exhibition includes the leather gloves and apron Haigh wore to dispose of wealthy widow Olive Durand-Deacon - and a few tiny, pebble-like objects found amid the stomach-churning sludge in his workshop. They are gallstones, the only part of Durand-Deacon to survive the acid. Haigh was hanged for murder.

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The badge of the Leicestershire Regiment that helped to convict David Greenwood of murder in 1918

On a less chilling note, there's an empty champagne bottle left behind in a hideout by perpetrators of a 1963 mail-train heist known as the Great Train Robbery. The robbers got away with £2.6 million (more than $60 million today) - but left fingerprints on the bottle and elsewhere. Most of the gang was soon rounded up.

One item missing from the exhibition is the ricin pellet, lodged on an umbrella tip, that killed Bulgarian dissident Georgi Markov on Waterloo Bridge in 1978. Hoffbrand said curators had hoped to include it, but it was not allowed to leave Scotland Yard because the case remains open.

The Crime Museum Uncovered
Balaclava and hat worn by gun-man involved in Spaghetti House Siege, 1975 © Museum of London(01 of30)
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Counterfeiting and forgery implements(02 of30)
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Death Mask of Daniel Good, 1842 (c) Museum of London (03 of30)
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Death Mask of Robert Marley 1856(04 of30)
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Drinks cans used in drug smuggling(05 of30)
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Execution Ropes 19th and 20th Century(06 of30)
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Fold-up ladder belonging to cat burglar Charles Peace, executed in 1878 © Museum of London(07 of30)
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Fold-up ladder belonging to cat burglar Charles Peace, executed in 1878 v2 © Museum of London (08 of30)
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Fourteen counterfeit silvered 2p coins, 1979 © Museum of London(09 of30)
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Jack the Ripper appeal for information poster issued by Metropolitan Police, 1888 © Museum of London(10 of30)
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Laptop recovered from Glasgow Airport terrorist attack, 2007 © Museum of London(11 of30)
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Masks used by the Stratton Brothers 1905(12 of30)
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Medical implements and drugs used in illegal abortions, 20th century © Museum of London(13 of30)
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Murder bag forensics kit(14 of30)
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Personal possession of Ronnnie Biggs 1963(15 of30)
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Personal possessions of the Great Train Robbery gang, 1963 © Museum of London(16 of30)
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Pin-cushion embroidered with human hair by Annie Parker, 1879 © Museum of London(17 of30)
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Scotland Yard Crime Museum 2015(18 of30)
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Shrapnel from an unexploded Fenian bomb 1884(19 of30)
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Talcum powder tin 1961(20 of30)
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The button that was used to convict David Greenwood of murder, 1918 © Museum of London(21 of30)
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The Krays - briefcase with syringe and poison(22 of30)
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Veuve Clicquot Ponsardin champagne belonging to the Great Train Robbery gang, 1963 © Museum of London(23 of30)
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Violin belonging to cat burglar Charles Peace, executed in 1878 © Museum of London(24 of30)
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(25 of30)
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Personal possessions of the Great Train Robbery gang recovered from their hideout at Leatherslade Farm, including an empty bottle of Veuve Clicquot champagne and a tin of Andrews Liver Salts, 1963.
The Crime Museum Uncovered Media Preview 2(26 of30)
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(27 of30)
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Fourteen counterfeit silvered 2p coins seized by Metropolitan Police, 1979.
(28 of30)
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A curious pin-cushion embroidered with human hair by Annie Parker, a woman who, in her tragically short life, was arrested over 400 times for alcohol-related offences, 1879.
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A rare ‘Notice to Occupier’ flyer appealing to the public to come forward with any information regarding the infamous Jack the Ripper murders, 1888.
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Personal possessions of the Great Train Robbery gang recovered from their hideout at Leatherslade Farm, including an empty bottle of Veuve Clicquot champagne and a tin of Andrews Liver Salts, 1963.

Police and city hall officials hope the exhibition, which runs for six months from 9 October, will be the forerunner of a permanent public museum for Scotland Yard.

Assistant Commissioner Martin Hewitt said it was important to strike the right tone, and keep crime victims at the center of the story.

"What we do not want is something that's a macabre police version of going to the London Dungeon, a kitschy tourist attraction.

"I would be very disappointed if anyone comes away thinking were are glamorizing any of the people who have committed the offenses in this exhibition," Hewitt said.