———. “The International Society,” The English Review, May 1912.
———. “The Old Ladies of Etching-Needle Street,” The English Review, January 1912.
———. “The Royal Academy,” The English Review, July 1912.
———. “The Spirit of the Hive,” The New Age, May 26, 1910.
———. “The Thickest Painters in London,” The New Age, June 18, 1914.
Sickert, Walter Richard. Drawings and Paintings, 1890-1942, catalogue, Tate Gallery, Liverpool.
Sims, George R., ed. Living London, Vol. I, Cassell and Company, Ltd., London, 1902.
Sinclair, Robert. East London, Robert Hale Ltd., 1950.
Sitwell, Osbert. A Free House! Or the Artist as Craftsman, Being the Writings of Walter Richard Sickert, Macmillan & Co., London, 1947.
———. Noble Essences, Macmillan & Co., Ltd., London, 1950.
Slang Dictionary, The: Etymological, Historical, and Anecdotal, Chatto & Windus, London (circa 1878).
Smith, Lieut.-Col. Sir Henry. From Constable to Commissioner, Chatto & Windus, London, 1910.
Smith, Thomas, and William J. Walsham. A Manual of Operative Surgery on the Dead Body, Longmans, Green and Co., London, 1876.
Stevenson, Robert Louis. The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Longmans, Green and Co., London, 1886.
Stoker, Bram. Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving, Vols. I and II, William Heinemann, London, 1906.
Sutton, Denys. Walter Sickert: A Biography, Michael Joseph Ltd., London, 1976.
Swanwick, H. M. I Have Been Young, Victor Gollancz Ltd., London, 1935.
Taylor, Alfred Swaine. The Principles and Practice of Medical Jurisprudence, John Churchill & Sons, London, 1865.
Thompson, Sir H. Modern Cremation, Smith, Elder & Co., London, 1899.
Treves, Sir Frederick. The Elephant Man, and Other Reminiscences, Cassell & Co., London, 1923.
Troyen, Aimee. Sickert as Printmaker, Yale Center for British Art, February 21, 1979.
Tumblety, Dr. Francis. The Indian Herb Doctor: Including His Experience in the Old Capitol Prison, published by the author, Cincinnati, 1866.
Walford, Edward. Old and New London, Vol. III, Cassell, Petter, Galpin & Co., London (circa late nineteenth century).
Webb, Beatrice. My Apprenticeship, Longmans, Green and Co., London, 1926.
Welch, Denton. “Sickert at St. Peter’s,” in Late Sickert, Paintings 1927-1942, Arts Council of Great Britain, 1981.
Wheatley, H. B. Reliques of Old London Suburbs, North of the Thames, drawn in lithography by T. R. Way, George Bell and Sons, London, 1898.
Whistler, James McNeill. The Baronet & the Butterfly: Eden versus Whistler, Louis-Henry May, Paris, February 10, 1899. (This particular volume was owned by one of Sickert’s own circle, artist and writer William Rothenstein.)
———. Mr. Whistler’s Ten O’Clock, London, 1888.
Whistler: The International Society of Sculptors, Painters & Gravers, Catalogue of Paintings, Drawings, Etchings and Lithographs, William Heinemann, London (circa 1905).
Wilde, Oscar. The Trial of Oscar Wilde. From the Shorthand Reports, privately printed, Paris, 1906.
Wollstonecraft, Mary. Equality for Women within the Law, J. Johnson, London, 1792.
World’s Famous Prisons, The, Vol. II, The Grolier Society, London (circa 1900).
Wray, J. Jackson. Will It Lift? The Story of a London Fog, James Nisbet & Co., London (possibly circa 1900).
INDEX
Abberline, Frederick George (police inspector)
and Kelly murder
Actors
psychopathic murderers as
Sickert as
Addictions, Sickert and
Adhesives
Affaire de Camden Town, L’ (painting), Sickert
Age of victim, estimates of
Air pollution, nineteenth-century London
Alcoholism
of Annie Chapman
of Mary Kelly
Sickert and
Alexander Pirie & Sons, Ltd.
See also A Pirie & Sons watermarks
Alibis, Sickert and
Ambient temperature
Ambulances
American art student story
Anatomy, knowledge of
Anesthetics
surgery without
Anger, and psychopathy
Angus, Christine Drummond
See also Sickert, Christine Angus
Angus, D. D. (descendant of Christine Angus’s family)
Angus, John
Anonymous letters to newspapers
Anthropology, forensic
Anthropometry
Antisocial behaviors
A Pirie & Sons watermarks
Appearance of Sickert changes of
Architecture, interest in
Arm, severed
Arnold (H Division superintendent)
Arsonists
Art criticism, Sickert and
Artist
destruction of paintings
Sickert as
Art Weekly
Artworks
Ripper letters as
by Sickert
exhibitions
female nudes
male nudes
murder scenes
music-hall sketches
Normandy paintings
Punch and Judy figures
religious themes
signature on
uncatalogued
violence to women
World War I era
See also Paintings by Sickert; Sketches by Sickert
Ashton, Harold
Authority:
Oswald Sickert and
Walter Sickert and
Automobile, owned by Sickert
Autopsies
Autopsy reports of Ripper murders
Catherine Eddows
loss of
Bank holiday, Victorian London
Barnett, Joseph
Baron, Wendy
Barrett (police constable)
Barrett, William
Basements, dark
Basket Shop, The (painting), Sickert
Battersea Bridge
Baxter, Wynne Edwin (coroner)
Bedford Music Hall
Beetmoor, Jane, murder of
anonymous letter to The Times and
Behavior, psychopathic
Beheadings
Bell, Clive
Bell’s Great Operations of Surgery
Bellwood, Bessie
Bertillon, Alphonse
Besant, Annie
Bethnal Green, London
Bird, Maggie
Birth control, Victorian views
Birtley, Durham, murder in
Bishopsgate Police Station
Blanche, Jacques-Emile
letters from Sickert
and Sickert marriage
Bleak House, Dickens
Blood
at Chapman murder scene
knowledge about, Victorian era
spatter patterns
Bloodhounds
Warren and
Blood poison, prostitution as
Bloody cloth, Eddows murder
Bloody Sunday
Bode Technology Group, The
Body, as murder evidence
Body fluids
testing of
Body parts
disposition of
preservation of
severed arm
severed leg
Sickert and
stealing of
Body snatchers
Body temperature
Bond, Thomas (police surgeon)
and Kelly murder
and McKenzie murder
and unidentified torso
Bonus (Angus family lawyer)
Booth, William
Bottle, Ripper letter in
Bower, Peter
Bower, Sally
Bow Street Patrol/Runners
&nb
sp; Bowyer, Thomas
Boxing, Sickert and
Boys, murders of
Bradford, Yorkshire
Bradlaugh, Charles
Bradshaw’s Railway Guide
Brain abnormalities of psychopaths
Brandy warehouse fire
Brierly, Alfred
Bright, John
Britain, Tate
British Association, annual meeting
Broadhurst Gardens, Sickert home
stationery
Broadstairs (painting), Sickert
Brown, Gordon (police surgeon)
and Eddows murder
Brown, James
Browse, Lillian
Buchanan, William
letter to The Times
Buckle, Joseph
Buildings, paintings of
Bull’s-eye lanterns
Bundy, Ted
Burning at stake
Cadosch, Albert
Camden Town, London
Bedford Music Hall
murder in
paintings of
Sickert’s studio
Camden Town Murder, The, (painting), Sickert
Cannibalism
Captivity, psychopaths and
Carnival, crime scene as
Case, Miss E.
Case records, sealing of
Casper, Johann Ludwig
Casual wards
Celebrities, Sickert and
Central Finger Print Bureau, Scotland Yard
Chambers, Robert
Chandler, Joseph (police inspector)
Chapman, Annie
burial of
murder of
conflicting witness statements
Childhood abuse, and psychopathy
Children:
female, as music-hall performers
murders of
Sickert and
surgery on
Chinn (Nelson Tavern proprietor)
Chloroform
Christian VIII (king of Denmark)
Christianity, Sickert and
Church, Sickert and
Churchill, Winston
City of London
Mitre Square
City of London Police:
and Beetmoor murder
and Eddows murder
Ripper letters
Clarence, Edward, Duke of
Class system, problems of
Clipping book kept by Abberline
Clothing:
cutting through
as evidence
worn by Ripper
Clues:
in Cornwall guest book
to Dimmock murder, postcards
to Eddows murder
to Gill murder
present-day technology and
in Ripper letters
mishandled
in Sickert’s artworks
Coal, as fuel
Cobden, Ellen Melicent Ashburner
after father’s death
See also Sickert, Ellen Cobden
Cobden, Janie
feminism of
letters
and Sickert
Cobden, Kate (Mrs. Richard)
Cobden, Katie (daughter)
Cobden, Richard
statue of
Cobden, Richard Brooks (son)
Coles, Frances
Computerized image enhancement
Conduit Street, London
Connolly, Mary Ann “Pearly Poll”
Conscience, psychopaths and
Conspiracy theories
Constables
Contraception, Victorian views
Control, loss of
Conway, Thomas
Cooper, Alfred Duff
Cooper, Eliza
Coram, Thomas
Coriolanus, Shakespeare
Corn Laws, repeal of
Cornwall
Sickert connection
Coroners
Coroner’s court, England
Corporation of London Records Office “Whitechapel Murders” file
Cosmetics
Coveralls, white, worn by Sickert
Cox, Mary Ann
Cremation
Crimes:
Sickert’s interest in
solution of
Crime scenes:
Eddows murder
Kelly murder
Nichols murder
photographs of
present-day management of
Ripper murders
Tabran murder
Crime scene scope
Criminal Investigation Department (CID)
Criminal population, psychopathy in
Cromwell, Oliver
Cross, Charles
Crow, Alfred
Cut throats
Cymbeline, Shakespeare
Daily Chronicle
Daily Telegraph, The
Dairyman, peculiar experience
Damaging information about Sickert, publication of
Darwin, Charles, Expression of the Emotions
Davis, John
Days of My Years, Macnaghten
Dead bodies
sketches of
Death
causes of
stab wound to heart
investigation objective
psychopaths and
violent, Cornwell and
Death and the Maiden (painting), Sickert
Death inquests. See Inquests
Deduction errors
Chapman murder
Dimmock murder
Eddows murder
Gill murder
severed arm
Stride murder
Tabran murder
Degas, Edgar
Delusional thinking
Depression, psychological
Despair (painting), Sickert
Detectives, Metropolitan Police
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, and psychopathy
Diary, of Abberline
Dickens, Charles
Bleak House
surgery without anesthesia
Die Fliegende Blatter
Diemschutz, Louis
Dieppe, France
Sickert’s friends in
Dimmock, Emily
murder of
Sickert and
Disappearances
of Sickert
of Sickert associates
Discrepancies in police reports
Disease:
fear of
prostitution as
Disguises
Ripper and
Sickert and
Disraeli, Benjamin
Divisional surgeons, Metropolitan Police
Divorce of Sickerts
Djambia (Oriental dagger)
DNA:
of Sickert, lack of
testing
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (play)
See also The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Stevenson
Documents, missing from Ripper cases
Donovan, John
Doss-houses
Drugs, Sickert and
Druitt, Montague John
DNA tests
Druitt, Robert
Druitt, William
Drunkenness, Victorian views
Du Jardin, Karel
Duke (doctor from Spitalfields)
Dunoyer de Segonzac, André
East End, London, Victorian era
causes of death
female torso found in
mortuary
and Ripper
Sickert and
vigilance committee
East London, Victorian era
East London Observer
Echo
Eddows, Catherine
murder of
facial mutilation
mortuary photograph
Eden, Sir William
Edison, Thomas
Editors, letters to
“Elderly Gentleman” letter to The Times
�
��Elephant Man” (Joseph Carey Merrick)
Ellis, George Viner, Illustrations of Dissections
Emaciated females, Sickert and
Emmons, Robert
Employment, for women
England, murder investigations
English Channel crossings
English Review, The, Sickert article
Ennui (painting), Sickert
Envelopes, difficulty in testing
Environmental pollution, nineteenth-century London
Epispadias
Eriugena, Johannes Scotus
Escape route, from Chapman murder
Etching ground, bloodlike
Evans, Stewart P., Jack the Ripper: Letters from Hell
Evening Standard, and Camden Town murder paintings
Events, peculiar
Evidence in Ripper murders
collection of
Eddows murder
mishandling of
Executions, public
Exhibitions of Sickert’s works
Expression of the Emotions, Darwin
Eyes of dead people
Facial mutilations
Fair at Night, Dieppe, The (painting), Sickert
Fairstein, Linda
Famous Crimes
Fantasies, psychopathic
Female orgasm, Victorian views
Female remains, unidentified
Feminism, Victorian era
Ferrara, Paul
Ffrangcon-Davies, Gwen
Fielding, Henry
Fielding, John
Fierro, Marcella
Finances:
Oswald Sickert and
Walter Sickert and
Fingerprints
Fisher, Richard
Fistulas
surgeries for
Flemish hounds. See Bloodhounds
Fliegende Blatter, Die
Fog, London
Forensic pathologists
Forensic science
anthropology
blood spatter patterns
and Chapman murder scene
facial reconstructions
testing of Ripper letters
Victorian era
Sickert’s knowledge of
Foster, Frederick William
France:
Sickert’s move to
travel from England
unsolved murders
François, Madame, unsolved murder
From Constable to Commissioner, Smith
Frontal lobe of brain
abnormality of, and psychopathy
Funerals of victims, murderers at
Fuseli (artist)
Galton, Francis
Gambling, Sickert and
Games, psychopathic
Garrotting
Gatti’s Hungerford Palace of Varieties
Ripper and
Sickert’s sketches
Gender, ambiguity of
Genetic markers
Genitals, malformation of
“Gentleman slummer,” Sickert as
George Yard Buildings, murder of Tabran
Gide, André
Gill, John
murder of
Giuseppina (Venetian prostitute)
Portrait of a Killer Page 41