During the second decade of the twentieth century, an unidentified serial killer was believed to have operated in Atlanta, Georgia, brutally killing at least twenty Black woman. Due to the similarities between the Whitechapel victims and the victims in Atlanta, the Georgia press dubbed their killer “the Atlanta Ripper,” an anonymous monster whose presence held the city’s Black population in a grip of fear. For a period of roughly five years, the Atlanta Ripper killed with regularity on the city streets, slashing, mutilating, and otherwise brutalizing the bodies of the women they killed. Despite having at least six viable suspects, investigators were never able to conclusively identify the Atlanta Ripper and the murders remain unsolved.
Atlanta Constitution . 1912. "Negro woman slain; suspect arrested." Atlanta Constitution, January 21: 5.
Atlanta Constitution. 1912. "Jack the Ripper believed to be a modern Bluebeard with 12 wives as victims." Atlanta Constitution , August 11: 1.
Atlanta Journal. 1910. "Deaths." Atlanta Constitution, April 5: 10.
—. 1911. "Antoher negress killed; black butcher at work?" Atlanta Journal, June 16: 14.
—. 1911. "Black 'Jack the Ripper' slays another negress." Atlanta Journal, July 2: 7.
—. 1911. "Has 'Jack the Ripper' fallen into dragnet?" Atlanta Journal, July 13: 4.
—. 1912. "Jack the Ripper caught at last, say detectives." Atlanta Journal, August 10: 1.
—. 1911. "'Jack the Ripper' foiled in 8th attempt Saturday." Atlanta Journal, July 9: 3.
—. 1912. "Negro woman murdered just outside the city." Atlanta Journal, April 8: 20.
—. 1911. "One of the Ripper crimes is no longer a mystery." Atlanta Journal, August 4: 11.
—. 1911. "Rosa Trice foully murdered." Atlanta Journal, January 23: 9.
—. 1911. "Will "Jack the Ripper" claim eight victim this Saturday?" Atlanta Journal, July 8: 8.
—. 1911. "Young negro is held for 'Ripper's' crime." Atlanta Journal, July 12: 17.
Constitution, Atlanta. 1911. "Negro woman killed; no clew to slayer." Atlanta Constitution , May 29: 7.
Franklin Evening Star. 1912. "Nineteenth horrid crime of Atlanta's Jack the Ripper." Franklin Evening Star, April 9: 2.
New York Times. 1911. "Eight victims now of Atlanta Ripper." New York Times, July 3: 3.
—. 1906. "Rioting goes on, despite troops." New York Times, September 24: 1.
Wells, Jeffrey. 2010.
The Atlanta Ripper: The Unsolved Case of the Gate City's Most Infamous Murders. Cheltenham, UK: The History Press.
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