The official
inquest into Nichols's death opened at the Working Lads' Institute on Whitechapel Road on Saturday, 1 September. Proceedings were presided over by the
Middlesex coroner,
Wynne Edwin Baxter. On the first day, the jury was
sworn in and taken by the coroner's assistant to view Nichols's body at the mortuary in Pavilion Yard before reconvening at the Working Lads' Institute. Three witnesses testified on the opening day. The first was Nichols's father, who stated that his daughter had been separated from her husband for "about seven or eight years", that he had not seen her since Easter, and that she had no known enemies. PC John Neil also gave evidence, describing his discovery of Nichols's body and noting that the location was dimly lit, the nearest illumination being "a street lamp shining at the end of the row". Recounting the scene and his call for assistance, Neil stated: "Deceased was lying lengthways along the street, her left hand touching the gate. I examined the body by the aid of my lamp, and noticed blood oozing from a wound in the throat. She was lying on her back, with her clothes disarranged. I felt her arm, which was quite warm from the joints upwards. Her eyes were wide open. Her bonnet was off and lying at her side, close to the left hand. I heard a constable passing Brady Street, so I called him." In response to questions from the coroner, Neil acknowledged that Whitechapel Road was "fairly busy" even at that hour, and that the murderer could have escaped in that direction. The final witness to testify on the first day was Dr Llewellyn. His testimony, as reported in
The Times on 3 September, stated: Following Llewellyn's testimony, the inquest was adjourned until 3 September.
Police testimony Inspector John Spratling gave evidence on the second day of the inquest. He testified that he heard of the murder at 4:30 am, by which time Nichols's body had already been taken to the mortuary. Spratling confirmed that only PC Neil's beat required him to walk through Buck's Row, and his own questioning of several residents revealed that none had seen or heard anything unusual. Also to testify was horse-slaughterer Harry Tomkins, who stated that he had not left his workplace after 1:00 am on 31 August and that neither he nor his colleagues had heard anything untoward. Asked about the noise level in the yard, Tomkins described it as "very quiet", although he conceded he had been too far from the crime scene to have heard any cries for help. Two police officers followed Tomkins to the stand. Inspector Joseph Helson testified that, in his opinion, the deceased had not been carried to the spot where her body was found. PC Jonas Mizen stated that he had been informed of a woman lying in Buck's Row by a carman at 3:45 am on Friday morning, and that upon arriving at the scene, PC Neil immediately instructed him to fetch a handcart. Charles Cross followed PC Mizen to the stand. He testified that he discovered Nichols's body while walking to work, initially mistaking it for a tarpaulin, before realising it was a woman. He then heard the footsteps of Robert Paul approaching behind him and motioned to him, saying, "Come and look over here; there is a woman lying on the pavement." Cross stated that Paul had touched Nichols's chest and said, "I think she is breathing, but very little, if she is." As both men were late for work, they left the woman where she lay, resolving to report their discovery to the first policeman they encountered. Asked why neither man had noted the wounds to Nichols's throat, Cross replied that Buck's Row was poorly illuminated.
Day three The third day of the inquest was held on Monday, 17 September. Eight witnesses testified, including Mrs Emma Green, a widow who lived with her three children in the cottage immediately beside the stable entrance where Nichols's body had been found. Green stated that she had heard nothing unusual on the night of the murder and that, although rowdy individuals often passed along Buck's Row, the houses were occupied by hardworking people. PC John Thain also gave evidence, stating that his beat typically took him past Buck's Row every thirty minutes and that he had been signalled into the street by PC Neil at 3:45 am. Thain testified he had been immediately dispatched to fetch Dr Llewellyn, and that the body was taken to the mortuary while he remained in Buck's Row. He then searched Essex Wharf, the Great Eastern Railway arches, and the District Railway for evidence, but found nothing. Two of the final witnesses to testify on 17 September were the keeper of the Old Montague Street Mortuary, Robert Mann, and an inmate of the Whitechapel Workhouse named James Hatfield. Mann stated that he had placed the body inside the mortuary at 5:00 am, adding that her clothes had not been cut before he and Hatfield removed them. Hatfield then testified he and Mann—contrary to instructions given by Sergeant Enright—had taken off all Nichols's clothing in preparation for Dr Llewellyn's arrival. Following Hatfield's testimony, the coroner adjourned proceedings until 22 September. ==Conclusion==