From 15 May to 2 November 2008 Museum in Docklands is returning to the scene of London’s most infamous crimes in Jack the Ripper and the East End, the first exhibition to explore the Jack the Ripper murders and their enduring legacy.
From police files and photographs to letters from the public and the supposed Ripper himself, examine, for the first time, surviving documents and artefacts from the investigation and follow the crimes as they unfolded.
Step back in time to the labyrinth of late-Victorian Whitechapel, and uncover the human stories behind the sensational reports and explore the lives of the victims, witnesses, suspects and police, and the world they lived in.
Although no one knows who he was, Jack the Ripper is probably the capital’s most infamous son, his story passing into legend, shaping the way London and the East End are imagined. Full of objects attesting to the never-ending public appetite for this story, the exhibition will ask why the tale of the Whitechapel murders continues to resonate 120 years on and why this one unknown figure has become so iconic, and so much a part of London.
Admission times:
10.15 - 12.15
12.45 - 14.45
15.15 - 16.45
NOT RECOMMENDED FOR CHILDREN UNDER 12.
Tickets for this exhibition are available with a self print option only. Unlike some other online ticketing retailers we will not charge you for printing your tickets at home.
TRAVEL
By DLR: West India Quay
By Tube: Canary Wharf
By Bus: D3, D7, D8, 277, N50, D6, 15, 115
ACCESS
The Museum is fully accessible to wheelchair users. Wheelchairs and powered scooters can be borrowed free of charge.
Call 0870 444 3855 to enquire about the facilities the Museum provide that may help you during your visit.