28 January, 2015

The Order Exposed - Whitechapel Power Failure

A second newspaper clipping has been shared. Unlike the first article shared, this one has a visible date, and the main story being reported upon is legible, for the most part. A transcription of the article appears below the image.


United Herald, Saturday October 17, 1886 - One Penny

District Paralysed by Power Failure

Total outage: Whitchapel, Stepney, Shadwell.
Partial outage: Wapping, Bethanl Green, Spitalfields, Tower.

Council authorities have yet to provide an explanation for the loss of electric power experienced throughout the Whitechapel district. The situation remains unresolved as this paper went to press, prompting fears that the already notorious neighbourhood could descend further into disorder with looting and violent [repp...] among rival underworld factions likely to increase.

The interruption in electric service is rumoured to have followed an incursion by Her Majesty’s Knights into the area. The blackout came seconds after a ghastly eruption of animal noise. Whitechapel’s legion of stray dogs set to a fiendish howling and were seen rampaging through the streets and alleys.

“It were a terrible thing to hear. A terrible thing,” claimed one [guttersnipe] who said he himself heard nothing untoward.

Were the knights to blame for the sudden disruption? What reason did they have for violating the Whitechapel perimeter? Officials [b...] quarters remain mum on the subject. Could terrorists have tampered with the power station, hoping to instill panic? And do they now plan on escalation to city-wide chaos? Or was Whitechapel’s well-known reputation as a stockpile of illegal [w]eapons to blame?

Our readers demand answers.

The incident described occurs in the East London district of Whitechapel, which is probably most famously known for being the location of serial killer, Jack the Ripper's activities. However Jack's five canonical murders only took place after the article above was published. Thus Whitechapel must have been a "notorious neighbourhood" for other reasons in 1886.

From what I've found on Wikipedia, in the early 1880s Whitechapel was primarily inhabited by poorer members of the English working class. There was also an influx of immigrants, primarily Irish and Jewish, and many inhabitants of the district would have been living well be low the poverty line. As such, many of the women were forced to become prostitutes in order to subsidise a families meagre income.

According to a day of the week calculator by Calculator Cat, 17 October 1886 was a Sunday, not a Saturday. I checked 17 October 1880, in case I'd misread the date, but that was a Sunday too.

Of interest is the headline of another article at the bottom of the page, "Additions to the underground planned." This may tie the above clipping to the Railway Map of Central London that was posted shortly afterwards.


No comments:

Post a Comment