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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Abigail O'Leary

Face of Jack the Ripper uncovered after police make chilling find in London archives

The face of Jack the Ripper has been uncovered after police made a chilling discovery while searching through old archives.

Amongst dozens of artefacts, the face was found etched into the handle of a wooden walking stick, which was owned by the officer who spent years attempt to catch the London serial killer.

Scotland Yard detective Frederick Abberline was taken off the case in 1889 after failing to snare the notorious Jack the Ripper, who terrorised London’s East End.

The image etched into the handle is the only reported facial composite of the Ripper whose identity remains a mystery more than a century later.

For years the cane had been stored at the Police College in Bramshill, Hampshire, and was feared lost when the institution was shut in 2015.

The only reported facial composite of notorious serial killer Jack the Ripper, which was carved into the handle of a walking cane, has been recovered in Ryton (College of Policing)

But it was rediscovered by staff searching through memorabilia at the College of Policing’s HQ in Ryton, West Midlands.

Now the chilling face with haunting eyes has gone on display to highlight advancements in police technology to recruits.

A College of Policing spokesman said two staff unearthed it when rooting through artefacts placed into storage following Bramshill’s closure.

The college’s content creator Antony Cash said: "Finding this cane was an exciting moment for us.

The Ripper butchered at least five women in Whitechapel, London's east end, over three months in 1888 (Getty Images/iStockphoto)

"Jack the Ripper is one of the biggest and most infamous murder cases in our history and his crimes were significant in paving the way for modern policing and forensics as it caused police to begin experimenting with and developing new techniques as they attempted to try and solve these murders, such as crime scene preservation, profiling and photography.

"This walking cane is such a fascinating artefact which represents such a historically significant time in policing.

Elizabeth Stride, murdered at Berner Street in the Whitchapel area on East London on 30th September 1888 (Mirrorpix)
An engraving shows the discovery of one Jack the Ripper's victims (Corbis via Getty Images)

"It’s amazing that we can put it out on display here in Ryton, alongside the original newspaper cuttings, so that our officers can see first-hand how far we’ve advanced in policing since then.’’

The Ripper butchered at least five women in Whitechapel over three months in 1888.

Each victim’s throat was cut and body mutilated in a way that suggested the killer had some knowledge of human anatomy.

Half a kidney extracted from one victim was mailed to the police along with a series of taunting notes from the purported killer calling himself Jack the Ripper.

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