In June 1873, Barnardo married Sara Louise Elmslie (1842–1944), known as Syrie, the daughter of an
underwriter for
Lloyd's of London. Syrie shared her husband's interests in evangelism and social work. The couple settled at Mossford Lodge,
Essex, where they had seven children, three of whom died in early childhood. A fourth child, Marjorie, had
Down syndrome. One daughter,
Gwendolyn Maud Syrie (1879–1955), known as Syrie like her mother, was married to wealthy businessman
Henry Wellcome, and later to the writer
Somerset Maugham, and became a socially prominent London interior designer. Barnardo died of
angina pectoris in London on 19 September 1905, and was buried in front of Cairns House,
Barkingside, Essex. The house is now the head office of the children's charity he founded,
Barnardo's. A
memorial stands outside Cairn's House.
Alleged Jack the Ripper suspect At the time of the
Whitechapel murders, due to the supposed medical expertise of
Jack the Ripper, various doctors in the area were suspected. Long after his death, Barnardo was named a possible suspect by Donald McCormick (1970) and Gary Rowlands (2005). Rowlands proposed that Barnardo's lonely childhood and religious zeal led him to kill prostitutes to clear them from the streets and to encourage them to place their children into his care. Only because of an accident in a swimming pool that left him deaf shortly after murdering Mary Kelly did he stop killing, as being deaf left him more vulnerable to capture. There is no evidence that Barnardo committed the murders, and critics of this theory have also pointed out that his age and appearance did not match any of the descriptions of the Ripper. Barnardo was well known in the East End, however, and would visit cheap boarding houses to talk to underprivileged customers. During one of these visits, he spoke to a group at 32 Flower and Dean Street, Whitechapel, during the period of the murders. One of the women drunkenly cried, 'We're all up to no good and no-one cares what becomes of us; perhaps some of us will be killed next.' He later viewed the body of
Elizabeth Stride, Jack the Ripper's third
canonical victim, at the mortuary and confirmed that she had been among those present. ==Legacy – Barnardo's ==