Charles Allen Lechmere

Charles Allen Lechmere (5 October 1849 – 23 December 1920), also known as Charles Allen Cross, was a native of East London who reportedly worked as a carman (delivery driver) for the Pickfords company for more than 20 years. On 31 August 1888, Lechmere apparently found the body of Mary Ann Nichols, the first of Jack the Ripper's five canonical victims, while on his way to work. Although long regarded as merely a passer-by at the crime scene, Lechmere has since been named as a Jack the Ripper suspect by contemporary true crime writers.

The suggestion that he might actually be the Whitechapel Murderer was first raised by Derek Osborne in 2000 in an issue of the magazine Ripperana. The following year saw the possibility further explored in an article by John Carey, while Osborne went on to examine a set of remarkable coincidences which suggested that the man who gave his name as 'Cross' at the inquest was in fact a man legally known as Lechmere. Lechmere's possible guilt was further discussed by John Carey in 2002; by Osborne in 2007, and by Michael Connor in four issues of The Ripperologist between 2006 and 2008.

Mainstream awareness of Lechmere grew in 2014 when journalist Christer Holmgren and criminologist Gareth Norris explored the case against him in the 2014 Channel Five documentary Jack the Ripper: The Missing Evidence. In 2021, Holmgren produced a book in which Lechmere is linked not only to the Whitechapel Murders, but also to the longer series of killings known as the Thames Torso Murders.

Biography
Charles Allen Lechmere was born on 5 October 1849, in Soho. He was the son of John Allen Lechmere and Maria Louisa Roulson. His father was a boot-maker who deserted the family, and moved to Northamptonshire when Charles was very young. He began a family there with another woman.

Charles Lechmere's mother married policeman Thomas Cross in 1858, and the boy Charles was recorded as 'Cross' (the only occasion known) in the 1861 United Kingdom census.

Thomas Cross died in 1869, when his stepson was twenty. Charles Lechmere married Elizabeth Bostock on 3 July 1870, at Christ Church, in the parish of St George in the East. His mother married Joseph Forsdike on 29 July 1872, at Bethnal Green, and Charles Lechmere signed the register as a witness.

Involvement in the Whitechapel murders
In Lechmere's testimony to the Nichols inquest, he said that he left for work at around 3:30a.m. While walking Buck's Row, he discovered the body of Mary Ann "Polly" Nichols lying next to a gateway. Lechmere found Nichols at about 3:40a.m.   According to his first press interview, Robert Paul, who was walking some distance behind, first noticed him standing "where the woman was"; in reports of his inquest testimony Paul said he saw him "in the middle of the road." When approached by Lechmere, Paul at first avoided him, thinking he was about to be attacked. After touching Paul on the shoulder, Lechmere brought him over to look at the woman. Because they were wary of being late for work, Lechmere and Paul left Buck's Row. They decided to notify the first policeman they came across of what they had seen. At about 3:45a.m., at the corner of Hanbury Street and Baker's Row, both saw PC Mizen and told him what they had found. According to the testimony of Robert Paul, he saw Mizen no more than four minutes after Paul first saw the body of Nichols. No blood was described by either man, but at about 3:45a.m., when a constable (PC Neil) found Nichols, blood was coming from the wound in her throat (according to the evidence at the inquest). Some theorists suggest that the cut to her throat was very fresh when Lechmere and Paul were present. Neither man reported seeing or hearing anyone else at Buck's Row.

Jack the Ripper suspect
The theory suggests that Lechmere may have murdered Nichols and begun mutilating her body when he suddenly heard the sound of Paul's footsteps; he then rapidly pulled down her clothing to cover up her wounds and portrayed himself as the discoverer of the body. However, both Lechmere and Paul testified that they were together and tried to pull down the clothing. As Paul and Lechmere were both late for work they continued to work intending to notify the next PC they found. PC Mizen was reported as saying that Lechmere told him, "You are wanted in Buck's row by a policeman; a woman is lying there." PC Neil was at the scene when PC Mizen arrived but Lechmere had no way of knowing that. Some newspapers reported that instead Lechmere had said to Mizen, "You're wanted down there (pointing to Buck's Row)." A 2014 TV documentary also points out that Lechmere did not appear at the inquest until after Paul had been quoted in the press to the effect that another man had been present. What it didn't say was that Lechmere appeared at the second day of the inquest whereas Paul had to be rousted out of bed by the police for interviewing and didn't appear until two weeks later. At the inquest, Lechmere gave his name as Charles Allen Cross, using the surname of his police constable stepfather; later investigators found that no-one named Cross was listed in the census records for the address he supplied, meaning that his true identity was a mystery for well over a century. He did give his address and place of employment to the inquest.

The locations of Lechmere's home, family and place of work put him in the vicinity of several 'Ripper' murders and other, extra-canonical killings besides. Holmgren argues that geographic profiling, developed decades after the Ripper murders, can help narrow down likely suspects by analyzing their established movements and habitual locations in comparison to crime scenes. Criminals tend to strike in areas that are not too close to home, yet with which they are somewhat familiar and comfortable. Given this data, Holmgren argues Lechmere is the most plausible suspect for the Ripper murders. Lechmere's logical shortest routes to work—one passing down Hanbury Street, the other down Old Montague Street—would have Lechmere pass nearby streets around the same times as Martha Tabram, Polly Nichols, and arguably Annie Chapman were murdered. The murders of Elizabeth Stride and Catherine Eddowes on the same night (the so-called "Double Event") took place further south—and in the small hours of a Sunday, likely the only day Lechmere would not have been travelling from home to work. Stride was killed in proximity to Lechmere's mother's house and in the area he grew up in; the locality in which Eddowes was murdered would have been well known to him, as it was on the logical route to Broad Street from at least one of his earlier addresses. However, Holmgren fails to state that the geographical profiling applied to the Jack the Ripper case by Kim Rossmo puts the likely abode of the killer as in the area of Thrawl Street and Flower and Dean Street which is nowhere near Lechmere's home in Doveton Street.

Mary Jane Kelly was murdered near the northernmost route to his work, and the time frame in which she is estimated to have been killed is reconcilable with his presumed journey, although the day she was killed was a holiday and he may have had the day off work.

Later life
Charles Lechmere is recorded in the 1901 Census as a railway agent carman. He started his own business as a grocer in 1902. Lechmere died in December 1920 at the age of seventy-one of a cerebral haemorrhage, hardening of the arteries, and chronic bronchitis.