The Blackout Ripper Timeline
The Officially Recorded Historical Account
This page presents a visual summary of the generally accepted historical record relating to the Blackout Ripper case during World War II.
The timeline below reflects the sequence of events as they have traditionally appeared in police summaries, court proceedings, and secondary historical sources.
Important: This reference timeline represents the commonly cited narrative and does not reflect any revised findings or investigative reconstructions.
Murder of Evelyn Hamilton — Marylebone
Murder of Evelyn Oatley — Soho
Murder of Margaret Florence Lowe — Marylebone
Murder of Doris Jouannet — Paddington
Attempted murders; one survivor later provides evidence
Arrest of Gordon Cummins
Trial and conviction at the Old Bailey
Execution at HMP Wandsworth
Understanding the Official Blackout Ripper Timeline
The timeline above reflects the commonly accepted historical account of the Blackout Ripper case, one of the most infamous serial murder investigations in wartime London.
Based on police summaries, court records, and long-cited secondary sources, this sequence of events has shaped public understanding of the case for more than eight decades.
However, historical timelines—particularly those constructed under wartime conditions—are not always as settled as they appear.
How the Accepted Narrative Was Formed
The official Blackout Ripper timeline emerged from a combination of:
- Contemporary police reports compiled during World War II
- Testimony presented at the Old Bailey
- Wartime press coverage subject to blackout restrictions and censorship
- Later historical retellings that repeated earlier conclusions
Over time, these sources became consolidated into a single narrative, often without revisiting the underlying documentation in detail.
The Limits of Wartime Investigations
London in 1942 was operating under extraordinary circumstances.
Mandatory blackout conditions affected visibility, patrol routes, witness reliability, and the ability to verify movements and timelines. Air raids, population displacement, and limited record-keeping further complicated investigative accuracy.
As a result, many elements of the case were accepted based on the best information available at the time—rather than through comprehensive cross-verification.
Why Historical Timelines Deserve Re-Examination
True crime history is not static.
As original documents resurface, inconsistencies are identified, and sources are compared side-by-side, long-held assumptions can be tested against the evidence.
In the case of the Blackout Ripper, questions remain regarding:
- The precise timing of key events
- The sequencing of witness accounts
- The placement and movements of suspects during critical windows
- How conclusions were drawn under wartime pressure
These issues do not alter the existence of the crimes—but they do affect how the story has been told.
What Comes Next
This page presents the officially recorded framework as it is generally understood.
A separate analysis examines areas where the original investigation shows signs of conflict, contradiction, or unresolved ambiguity.
That examination does not rely on speculation, but on a structured review of dates, documents, witness statements, and recorded movements.
Continue to: Original Investigation Conflicts
