Mary Anne, the first Five Victims of Jack The Ripper In 1888 the body of Mary Anne "Polly" Nichols is discovered in the impoverished White Chapel district of London, England. She is considered the first of the 'Canonical Five' victims of Jack the Ripper. On the 31st of August, 1888, the horrifically mutilated body of a woman was found in a gateway in Buck's Row in Whitechapel. Later that day, she was identified as Mary Ann Nichols, better known to her family, friends and acquaintances as "Polly" Nichols. She had separated from her husband and five children in 1880, and thereafter her life became a downward spiral, blighted by poverty and alcoholism. By the beginning of August, 1888, she had found her way to the East End of London, where she resided at two Spitalfields common lodging houses, Wilmott's, situated at 18, Thrawl Street, and The White House, located on Flower and Dean Street. The cost of a night's lodging in these establishments was fo...
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