Annie Chapman
Annie Chapman (c. 1841 – 1888), born Eliza Ann Smith, was a prostitute living in 19th-century London, known for being the second victim of the notorious serial killer Jack the Ripper during the Whitechapel murders.
Biography
On 1 May 1869, Annie married her relative John Chapman, a coachman at All Saints Church in London's Knightsbridge district. The couple then moved to Whitechapel in 1886.[1]
With her husband's death, Annie turned to prostitution, believing that she would not earn any income with other jobs. She joined one of Lady Olwyn Owers' brothels. She then spent her time without a proper home, and usually stayed at the Crossingham's lodging house at 35 Dorset Street where she paid eight pence a night for a double bed.[1]
In the early morning of 8 September, the supposed body of Annie Chapman was found steps from the property of 29 Hanbury Street by its elderly resident John Davis. He alerted his neighbors, and together, they sought out a policeman to report the murder.[2]
However, an investigation by Master Assassin Evie Frye suggested that the real Chapman may have in fact survived, and that her brother Jacob—in an attempt to end Jack's reign of terror—had sent one of his Assassin initiates to take the intended victims place, due to the evidence of an Assassin ring found at the crime scene.[3]
Appearances
- Assassin's Creed: Syndicate – Jack the Ripper (pictured in Database entry only)
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Assassin's Creed: Syndicate – Jack the Ripper – Database: Annie Chapman
- ↑
Annie Chapman on Wikipedia
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Syndicate – Jack the Ripper – The Mother of All Crimes