Difference between revisions of "Princess Alice disaster"
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+ | |title=Princess Alice disaster | Thames | 3rd September 1878 | ||
+ | |titlemode=replace | ||
+ | |keywords=pleasure steamer, The Princess Alice, steam collier, Thames, Elizabeth Stride, prostitute, murder, whitechapel | ||
+ | |description=On the 3rd September, 1878, a pleasure steamer called The Princess Alice collided with a steam collier on the Thames. The Princess Alice went down with the loss of 527 lives. | ||
+ | }} | ||
On the 3rd September, 1878, a pleasure steamer called ''The Princess Alice'' collided with a steam collier on the Thames. ''The Princess Alice'' went down with the loss of 527 lives. | On the 3rd September, 1878, a pleasure steamer called ''The Princess Alice'' collided with a steam collier on the Thames. ''The Princess Alice'' went down with the loss of 527 lives. | ||
[http://crimehub.co.uk/index.php?title=Elizabeth_Stride Elizabeth Stride], a prostitute murdered by Jack The Ripper, had lied to most people saying that she had lost her husband and two of her children in the Princess Alice disaster. Other records proved her claims to be false. | [http://crimehub.co.uk/index.php?title=Elizabeth_Stride Elizabeth Stride], a prostitute murdered by Jack The Ripper, had lied to most people saying that she had lost her husband and two of her children in the Princess Alice disaster. Other records proved her claims to be false. |
Latest revision as of 06:53, 3 September 2018
On the 3rd September, 1878, a pleasure steamer called The Princess Alice collided with a steam collier on the Thames. The Princess Alice went down with the loss of 527 lives.
Elizabeth Stride, a prostitute murdered by Jack The Ripper, had lied to most people saying that she had lost her husband and two of her children in the Princess Alice disaster. Other records proved her claims to be false.