00:00:06
Jack the Ripper kills his fourth
00:00:12
victim Scotland Yard is
00:00:17
helpless 400 mil away an extraordinary
00:00:21
man works on edinburgh's top murder
00:00:24
cases a leading professor of Medicine Dr
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Joseph Bell is a Pioneer in a new field
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[Music]
00:00:33
forensic
00:00:34
[Music]
00:00:38
science desperate Scotland Yard enlists
00:00:41
bill to help crack the Ripper
00:00:45
case what the police do not know is that
00:00:48
Joseph Bell is the real life model for
00:00:51
the greatest fictional detective in
00:00:53
history he inspired his student Arthur
00:00:56
Coran Doyle to create a legend
00:01:03
[Music]
00:01:06
this is the story of the
00:01:08
real Sherlock
00:01:12
[Music]
00:01:18
Holmes Sherlock Holmes is created in a
00:01:21
small village in sou sea
00:01:26
England Holmes is the brainchild of
00:01:29
Arthur conand
00:01:30
a 27-year-old
00:01:34
doctor he makes his first public
00:01:36
appearance in November
00:01:38
1887 and becomes the most famous
00:01:41
detective of all
00:01:43
[Music]
00:01:47
time literary historian Owen Dudley
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[Music]
00:01:53
Edwards the Holmes character has been
00:01:57
the most frequently performed on
00:02:00
television on the stage in varieties of
00:02:04
adaptations in screen in caricature in
00:02:07
pasti P Elementary my dear Watson there
00:02:11
are no tarantul in South Africa but
00:02:14
Holmes is more than just a literary
00:02:17
character all over the world people
00:02:20
still believe that Sherlock Holmes
00:02:22
actually lived I am Sherlock Holmes I
00:02:26
know
00:02:26
everything what is it that makes this
00:02:29
imaginary Victorian detective seems so
00:02:33
real Arthur Conan Doyle created a
00:02:35
character who seems real the Ducks
00:02:38
because he is
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real Doyle literally lifted homes from
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his
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past he was Conan Doyle's teacher and
00:02:47
Mentor Dr Joseph
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Bell 3 years before he and Conan Doyle
00:02:57
meet Bell is a surgeon and lecturer at
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the University of Edinburgh follow to
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the mysterious but charismatic he keeps
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his private life separate from his
00:03:08
Public
00:03:11
Image Bell has an ambitious dream to
00:03:15
apply science to Crime
00:03:25
detection he's in the sitting room sir
00:03:30
hello
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Henry how are you hi an old friend Dr
00:03:35
Henry Duncan Little John offers Bell a
00:03:38
gateway to the Dark World of crime I'm
00:03:41
conducting an autopsy this afternoon he
00:03:43
wants Bell to help him investigate a
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suspicious
00:03:47
death young
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Lindsay and Lindsay she died last night
00:03:53
in hospital two weeks after a stabbing
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incident there may be spinal damage so
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I'll have to do an multiple stab wounds
00:04:01
but survived in hospital what how are we
00:04:08
look two weeks later Lindsay
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died one
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right Little John wants Bell to help
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determine the exact cause of death trus
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they will mat the weapon inflamation
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would explain one of Lindsay's wounds is
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still seeping yeah let's have a look at
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it
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[Music]
00:04:32
the minor wound is a breeding ground for
00:04:34
a major
00:04:36
infection bacteria propagates beneath
00:04:38
her skin coursing through her
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bloodstream vessels dilate reducing
00:04:45
blood flow to a lethal
00:04:47
trickle the heart starved for oxygen
00:04:50
slows down and
00:04:52
finally stops
00:04:58
beating doctors in 's day no little of
00:05:01
bacterial
00:05:04
infection still his autopsy confirms
00:05:08
it an Lindsay died of an infection from
00:05:12
her
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wounds now police can launch a criminal
00:05:25
case for forensic anthropologist and
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best-selling novelist Dr Kathy reiches
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Bell's work in pathology is
00:05:36
groundbreaking Joseph Bell was probably
00:05:38
one of the first forensic Pathologists
00:05:41
as we know them today he was one of the
00:05:43
first to use an autopsy to investigate a
00:05:48
criminal
00:05:51
situation B biographer Dr Eli
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Libo there hadn't been much in the way
00:05:58
of science Det detecting in solving
00:06:01
crimes the time Joe Bell became a
00:06:04
forensic expert but Bell with his
00:06:06
scientific background definitely felt
00:06:09
that science could get to the root of
00:06:12
solving criminal
00:06:15
problems Bell has found a new
00:06:21
calling from this day he moves crime
00:06:24
detection forward
00:06:31
former detective and legal specialist
00:06:34
Richard
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ly Joe Bell was well placed uh in terms
00:06:40
of History of Time uh and professionally
00:06:44
to provide a new method a new way of
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approaching crime
00:06:49
investigation although it was simple it
00:06:51
was crucially important and it was it
00:06:53
was lacking at that
00:06:57
time in the late 1800s
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Edinburgh is in the throws of
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[Music]
00:07:09
industrialization crime is
00:07:12
rampant it is more than the police can
00:07:18
handle it's very very probable that many
00:07:21
cases of homicide went
00:07:23
unnoticed and were probably written off
00:07:26
as suicides or accidents because there
00:07:28
was there was a an inability to detect
00:07:30
the signs of homicide at that
00:07:34
time between 1874 and
00:07:37
1878 Bell develops his detection skills
00:07:41
in chemistry toxicology pathology and
00:07:45
handwriting
00:07:47
analysis they are the first steps
00:07:49
towards what we now know as CSI crime
00:07:53
scene investigation
00:07:55
[Music]
00:08:00
Bell works on seven known cases and puts
00:08:03
five men in
00:08:04
[Music]
00:08:06
prison well just as you say it's about
00:08:10
sanitation I agree the city should know
00:08:12
more about the cause of
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death he insists on anonymity excuse me
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Mr L John Kelly mlin from the Scotsman
00:08:21
yes would you answer a few questions
00:08:23
about he wants his name kept out of
00:08:24
legal records and will not speak to the
00:08:27
Press we'll talk again soon Henry set up
00:08:30
the camera
00:08:32
here first a loss of motion on the upper
00:08:35
half of the tongue a young man will soon
00:08:37
draw Bell from the Shadows ratify your
00:08:42
deductions in
00:08:43
1877 a new student joins his
00:08:46
class his name is Arthur Conan
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Doyle any questions
00:09:00
[Music]
00:09:02
in
00:09:03
1877 Arthur Conan Doyle is a 17-year-old
00:09:06
medical
00:09:10
student born into a poor Irish Catholic
00:09:13
Family his parents struggle to send him
00:09:16
to medical
00:09:19
school his grades are poor
00:09:24
[Music]
00:09:24
[Applause]
00:09:29
doy's home life is Bleak come on can't
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be the drink woman his father Charles is
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unemployed
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alcoholic and violent come
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[Applause]
00:09:39
[Music]
00:09:42
on so he's somebody who's known
00:09:45
suffering somebody who's had to conceal
00:09:47
it somebody witnessed the fact he became
00:09:50
a doctor somebody who wants to be a
00:09:52
Healer both in his own family and in the
00:09:56
world World At Large
00:10:00
I'll be
00:10:04
the the university becomes Conan Doyle's
00:10:09
Sanctuary which symptoms allow diagnosis
00:10:12
nowhere more so than in the classroom of
00:10:15
Dr Joseph Bell first a loss of motion of
00:10:19
the upper half of the tongue and a
00:10:21
portion of the mucus he dazzles his
00:10:23
students with his powers of
00:10:26
deduction the first anomaly of the
00:10:28
pancreas is the glands he calls it the
00:10:32
method the second therefore is the DTs
00:10:36
observe carefully deduce shrewdly differ
00:10:40
and confirm with hard evidence diagnosis
00:10:43
eyes and ears to see and he and memory
00:10:45
to record the senses such are the
00:10:48
Implements of a successful
00:10:51
diagnosis o bring in an experation
00:10:53
please one of the stories that Doyle
00:10:55
likes so very much and that he puts in
00:10:57
his autobiography
00:10:59
was the man who came across the uh
00:11:02
Meadow and came to the Outpatient
00:11:05
Clinic and Joe Bell said when the man
00:11:07
walked
00:11:08
in sir did you enjoy your I see you've
00:11:11
been across the West links today well
00:11:14
yes how in the world did you know that
00:11:16
he said
00:11:17
sit he said I can see from the red clay
00:11:21
on the bottom of your shoe that that's
00:11:22
where you've been it's the only part of
00:11:25
Edinburgh where you're going to find
00:11:27
clay like that now what he is this man
00:11:30
and then he says what's wrong with him
00:11:31
pointing to one student and the student
00:11:34
said he has hip problems sir use your
00:11:38
eyes I know he said but that's not his
00:11:40
real problem his real problem is he's
00:11:43
got chronic
00:11:45
alcoholism look at the rubican nose the
00:11:48
fluid face but since you must make a
00:11:52
complete diagnosis you will see sticking
00:11:55
out of his right coat pocket whiske a
00:11:58
bottle of whiskey
00:11:59
always gratify your dedu you must verify
00:12:03
your
00:12:04
[Music]
00:12:07
conclusions Bell's astonishing powers of
00:12:10
deduction Define Conan Doyle's famous
00:12:13
detective Sherlock
00:12:15
Holmes in The Adventures of the five
00:12:18
orange Pips Holmes will Echo Joel
00:12:21
Bell you have come from the southwest I
00:12:24
see that clay and chalk mixture which I
00:12:27
see upon your toe caps is quite dis
00:12:30
distinctive the metallic poisons B was
00:12:33
something of a showman and one suspects
00:12:36
that initially cono was put off by
00:12:38
this the more one saw of bell the more
00:12:42
extraordinary it was that his deductions
00:12:44
really proved to be absolutely
00:12:49
true on January 2nd
00:12:52
1878 Bell is summoned to solve a mystery
00:12:55
worthy of homes it unfolds at the home
00:12:58
of Eugene Shan trell a wealthy French
00:13:04
[Music]
00:13:09
linguist good afternoon sir
00:13:12
[Music]
00:13:14
afternoon this way
00:13:17
[Music]
00:13:23
gentlemen Dr shant trell's wife
00:13:25
Elizabeth is Gravely ill who shant thank
00:13:29
you for coming good morning sir good
00:13:32
morning she's
00:13:34
catatonic I can barely detect her pulse
00:13:37
her breathing's very
00:13:39
shallow how long have you been here 25
00:13:42
minutes I started AR as soon as I arri
00:13:45
her pulse is weak her breathing shallow
00:13:49
what do you think Joe I they get her to
00:13:51
the hospital I agree with
00:13:54
[Music]
00:13:55
that she was mooning on the bed barely
00:13:59
TR tells B what happened down the to
00:14:02
shut off the m i don't understand
00:14:05
it my wife was feeling a trifle ill last
00:14:09
night she barely ate and retired to her
00:14:12
room
00:14:14
early I spoke to her before she went to
00:14:17
sleep told her that a good rest would
00:14:19
surely bring her strength
00:14:25
back this morning my servant heard
00:14:27
Elizabeth making moaning sounds in her
00:14:29
bed and roused me when I ran into her
00:14:32
room there was a gurgling noise coming
00:14:34
from her throat can you not smell that
00:14:38
woman go down the gas I could barely
00:14:42
breathe I ordered the maid to turn off
00:14:44
the supply at the meter and called for a
00:14:50
doctor for the life of me I have no idea
00:14:54
where the league came from
00:15:03
on the count of three gentlemen wait a
00:15:06
minute then something
00:15:09
strange they look like vomit
00:15:13
stains nausea is uncommon in cases of
00:15:16
coal gas
00:15:18
poisoning thank God you're here it
00:15:20
doesn't add up she's c
00:15:23
t the evidence tells Belle that
00:15:26
Elizabeth went to bed conscious
00:15:28
[Music]
00:15:33
and the breath of victims of cool gas
00:15:35
poisoning should wreak a
00:15:37
fumes there is not the slightest
00:15:41
[Music]
00:15:46
scent Joseph Bell had to rely on his
00:15:49
ability at observation today we have
00:15:51
many Hightech methods that will allow
00:15:54
scientists to notice evidence that might
00:15:56
otherwise go unnoticed with the naked
00:15:58
eye
00:16:09
the technology is called an omnichrome
00:16:12
ni it emits ultraviolet light calibrated
00:16:15
to illuminate iron an element found in
00:16:17
human fluids blood semen saliva and
00:16:23
vomit even faint stains become apparent
00:16:26
revealing potential sources of DNA
00:16:29
or Trace
00:16:31
narcotics the hard evidence
00:16:33
investigators need to crack a
00:16:39
case in
00:16:40
1878 Bell has only his senses to guide
00:16:44
him and he knows something's
00:16:48
wrong he takes the evidence to the lab
00:16:51
for
00:16:56
analysis Elizabeth shantrell will never
00:16:59
tell her
00:17:03
story at 400 p.m. she
00:17:09
dies if she died of gas poisoning there
00:17:11
should be telltale signs small
00:17:23
scle organs would wkak of gas
00:17:29
they smell
00:17:32
[Music]
00:17:34
normal coal gas contains carbon monoxide
00:17:38
which turns the victim's blood bright
00:17:41
red again the test is
00:17:45
negative Bell is
00:17:48
convinced gas did not kill Elizabeth
00:17:53
[Music]
00:17:56
shantrell he made sure that there was no
00:17:58
evidence of pre-existing disease or
00:18:00
death of a natural cause such as stroke
00:18:03
there was none that left only poisoning
00:18:07
which is what Belle
00:18:11
suspected Elizabeth vomited on her bed
00:18:13
sheets and fell into a coma before
00:18:17
death this is not symptomatic of cyanide
00:18:20
strick nine and arsenic
00:18:24
poisoning for Bell the only alternative
00:18:27
is opium
00:18:39
a heavy dose of dissolved opium enters
00:18:41
the digestive tract passes through the
00:18:43
stomach lining and is absorbed into the
00:18:48
bloodstream it invades the lower brain
00:18:51
and shuts down the central nervous
00:18:54
system the signal that commands the body
00:18:56
to breathe stops
00:19:00
within hours the lungs stop pumping and
00:19:03
the victim
00:19:08
dies Belle removes a blood sample from
00:19:11
Elizabeth's
00:19:17
heart after preparation and heating a
00:19:20
series of crystals remain each has a
00:19:24
signature
00:19:26
shape Belle can't even find a single
00:19:29
opium
00:19:30
Crystal but Belle knows that opium
00:19:33
dissolves quickly a perfect murder drug
00:19:36
for a late 1800's
00:19:43
killer if Dr Bell were working today he
00:19:46
would take a sample of blood from Miss
00:19:47
Chantell and after properly preparing it
00:19:50
inject it into a machine like this a gas
00:19:52
chromatograph
00:19:58
the sample is vaporized and ejected into
00:20:01
a super sensitive
00:20:03
Tube gas chromatography detects the
00:20:06
presence and precise concentration of
00:20:08
every chemical in a
00:20:11
sample even the faintest Opium traces
00:20:14
would be
00:20:17
found Belle's tests are not so
00:20:21
accurate but his instincts sense murder
00:20:25
[Music]
00:20:31
on the bed barely conscious I SM gas
00:20:35
Sean TR said he suspected a leaky gas
00:20:37
pipe smell that
00:20:39
woman go down and shut off the gas line
00:20:41
yes sir in so many English Homes at the
00:20:45
time many people were asphyxiated by gas
00:20:49
so when chantrell immediately started
00:20:51
talking about bad pipes and Cal Gas the
00:20:55
police bought that
00:20:56
story for the life of me I have no idea
00:21:00
whether the Belle does not he sends a
00:21:03
man from the Edinburgh gas company to
00:21:05
inspect Elizabeth's
00:21:08
bedroom the gas fitter confirms Belle's
00:21:13
hunch I went to Mr shant's
00:21:17
house and I think it was deliberate the
00:21:20
pipe had been tampered
00:21:24
with I checked the gas line I believe it
00:21:27
was deliberately sliced but even if sha
00:21:29
trell ruptured the pipe himself there is
00:21:32
no way to prove
00:21:33
[Applause]
00:21:34
[Music]
00:21:37
it it will be 27 years before the courts
00:21:40
admit fingerprints as evidence in a
00:21:42
capital
00:21:45
case if an investigating officer had
00:21:48
gotten a comment from Mr chantrell that
00:21:50
he hadn't touched the gas piping and
00:21:53
then they found his fingerprints in
00:21:55
those locations that would go a long way
00:21:58
towards showing inconsistencies in his
00:22:01
story today a viscous solvent called
00:22:05
superglue makes fingerprints highly
00:22:07
visible under ultraviolet
00:22:11
light the print is photographed enhanced
00:22:14
and compared with the
00:22:18
suspects print analysis is the number
00:22:20
one source of forensic evidence used in
00:22:23
legal prosecution
00:22:28
in
00:22:29
1878 Bell has no such
00:22:35
luxury he returns to the scene of the
00:22:38
crime to hunt for other
00:22:48
Clues Henry
00:22:51
opium you're right get this to Dr Kum at
00:22:54
the
00:22:54
University Dr Shan trell bought 30 doses
00:22:57
of opium shortly before his wife's death
00:23:01
the report that you wanted sir tests
00:23:04
failed to detect opium in Elizabeth's
00:23:07
blood but Days Later Belle receives the
00:23:10
chemical analysis of the vomit stains on
00:23:12
Elizabeth's
00:23:18
pillow it confirms
00:23:21
[Music]
00:23:22
[Applause]
00:23:25
[Music]
00:23:27
opium on J anuary 5th Eugene shantrell
00:23:30
is arrested for
00:23:33
murder he spends the next 4 months
00:23:36
awaiting trial you don't they have taxis
00:23:39
come on and you
00:23:49
go
00:23:56
that's the case is the top of
00:24:03
Edinburgh Bell does not attend the trial
00:24:07
Little John presents their
00:24:10
findings like Sherlock Holmes Bell
00:24:13
recedes into the
00:24:16
background Sherlock Holmes in the sign
00:24:18
of four Echoes Bell's
00:24:23
action I am the highest court of appeal
00:24:25
and detection I examine the data as an
00:24:29
expert and pronounce a specialist's
00:24:31
opinion I claim no credit in such
00:24:34
cases my name figers in their
00:24:37
[Music]
00:24:39
newspapers at the trial Little John
00:24:42
provides the hard
00:24:44
evidence the public is
00:24:47
captivated not detect any smell like
00:24:50
that of cold Gust in 1878 the language
00:24:53
of science is alien to the courts of
00:24:55
England but there is one Element missing
00:25:00
motive State her name and Sean's ma
00:25:03
takes the stand I miss Mary Burns Irish
00:25:06
Woman made a fool of me again have you
00:25:09
master took a good deal of drink and he
00:25:11
often used strong language a good Jo of
00:25:14
opion will lay you down for good and no
00:25:17
one will be the wiser he was fond of
00:25:19
saying go to hell many times he told her
00:25:22
to go back to her
00:25:23
[Music]
00:25:24
mother what qualifies as an accident
00:25:27
then more incriminating evidence I have
00:25:31
a friend who a son died Dr Shan tr's
00:25:33
insurance broker testifies that 3 months
00:25:36
before her death he had Elizabeth's life
00:25:38
insured for
00:25:40
£1,000 the equivalent to almost
00:25:42
$85,000 today payable to
00:25:48
himself the jury deliberates for just
00:25:51
over an hour and returns a verdict
00:25:54
guilty of murder
00:25:57
[Music]
00:26:00
the judge condemns him to death by
00:26:04
[Applause]
00:26:08
hanging however the story is not over
00:26:11
for Joseph Bell Eugene shant trell's
00:26:14
dying words will haunt Bell from Beyond
00:26:17
the
00:26:18
Grave he put away his last cigar took
00:26:21
off his hat and said bye-bye Little John
00:26:24
you did it little John give my
00:26:27
compliments to Jo
00:26:28
you both did the two of you did a good
00:26:30
job in seeing me hang
00:26:34
father come be done on Earth as it is in
00:26:37
heaven give us this day our daily bread
00:26:40
and forgive us our trespasses as we
00:26:42
forgive those who trespass against us
00:26:44
lead us not his temptation us from for
00:26:47
thine is theing power and Glory forever
00:26:51
and ever amen
00:26:56
[Music]
00:27:03
Shan trell's Last Words reach the
00:27:06
[Music]
00:27:07
papers Dr Bell's secret is
00:27:12
out the timing could not be better for
00:27:15
the impressionable young Arthur Conan
00:27:17
Doyle just then Belle hires him as an
00:27:21
assistant let's he Leer's advice in his
00:27:24
Memoirs he writes is there anything else
00:27:27
listen ask reason which I've never
00:27:29
understood he singled me out from the
00:27:32
drove of students who frequented the
00:27:34
ward and made me his clerk then I had
00:27:37
ample chance of studying his methods
00:27:40
[Music]
00:27:45
SC go hold him down
00:27:49
[Music]
00:27:58
Bell remains formal and
00:28:00
distant strict Victorian Moors about
00:28:03
student teacher relations are never
00:28:06
breached I think coland Doyle was
00:28:09
probably a little bit more hurt about
00:28:12
Belle's coldness than he ever let on he
00:28:15
was a hungry boy as far as affection was
00:28:18
concerned and he wasn't getting it from
00:28:20
the man whom he was serving or trying to
00:28:22
serve so
00:28:25
well Belle's Frosty manner will fuel
00:28:28
Conan Doyle's
00:28:31
fiction in the sign of four Sherlock
00:28:34
Holmes
00:28:35
says detection is or ought to be an
00:28:38
exact science and should be treated in
00:28:40
the same cold and unemotional
00:28:42
[Music]
00:28:46
manner Conan Doyle serves his teacher
00:28:48
for close to one
00:28:51
year in 1881 he graduates and leaves
00:28:55
Edinburgh
00:29:00
he opens a medical practice in SOI
00:29:05
England it begins with few patients and
00:29:09
even fewer
00:29:10
pounds his practice barely supports
00:29:13
[Music]
00:29:16
him Conan Doyle decides to write short
00:29:19
stories to make 's meet in the spring of
00:29:22
1886 he gets his great inspiration
00:29:30
break it up break it up the English
00:29:33
press is Rife with reports of police
00:29:37
incompetence that really was one of the
00:29:39
major conoy cases against the police who
00:29:42
they rush to judgment so somebody is
00:29:44
incriminated rapidly and every possible
00:29:47
fact is Twisted then to show that they
00:29:49
are
00:29:50
guilty if careless police are the
00:29:52
problem a fictional Joe Bell might be
00:29:55
the answer today
00:29:58
we are concerned with detecting the
00:30:00
presence in concent in the only filmed
00:30:03
interview Arthur Conan Doyle ever gives
00:30:06
he
00:30:07
explains I used as a student to have a
00:30:11
old Professor his name was Bill who
00:30:15
extraordinarily quick at deductive work
00:30:17
he would look at the patient he would
00:30:20
hardly allow the patient to open his
00:30:22
mouth but he would make his diagnosis of
00:30:25
the disease and also very often of the
00:30:29
patient's nationality and occupation and
00:30:32
other points entirely by his part of
00:30:35
observation so naturally I thought to
00:30:38
myself well if a scientific man like
00:30:41
Bell was to come into the detective
00:30:43
business he wouldn't do these things by
00:30:46
chance he get the thing by building it
00:30:49
up
00:30:55
scientifically in March 1886
00:30:58
Conan Doyle gives birth to a
00:31:02
legend Sherlock
00:31:04
[Music]
00:31:11
Holmes in 1887 Conan Doyle publishes the
00:31:14
first Sherlock Holmes story a study in
00:31:19
Scarlet Holmes Springs to Life as a
00:31:23
living person because of course col
00:31:26
Doyle has a living person very very much
00:31:28
in mind Conan Doyle's first description
00:31:31
of Holmes matches Bell
00:31:33
perfectly his eyes were sharp and
00:31:36
piercing and his thin hawk-like nose
00:31:39
gave his whole expression an air of
00:31:40
alertness and
00:31:45
decision both readers and reviewers are
00:31:48
enthralled upwards of 40,000 copies of a
00:31:51
study in Scarlet cell in the first
00:31:56
year no one yet knows knows that the
00:31:58
great detective is based on a real
00:32:01
[Music]
00:32:05
man strangely the real Sherlock Holmes
00:32:08
is about to join the hunt for England's
00:32:11
most notorious
00:32:13
killer
00:32:24
hello in the summer of 1888 London is is
00:32:28
living in
00:32:29
Terror a new kind of Predator has
00:32:32
emerged in 19th century
00:32:35
England the sexual serial
00:32:39
killer he appears in the filthy back
00:32:41
streets of an area called White
00:32:44
[Music]
00:32:50
Chapel his name is Jack the Ripper
00:32:59
[Music]
00:33:00
when people think of Victorian London
00:33:02
they think of fashionable London they
00:33:04
think of men with silk top hats ladies
00:33:07
with large dresses and even larger
00:33:09
bustles White Chapel was none of these
00:33:11
things in 1888 the year of the Jack the
00:33:14
Whipper murders it was an area of high
00:33:17
unemployment overcrowded rooms slum
00:33:20
dwellings
00:33:37
hello ducky what a quickie that he cost
00:33:39
you
00:33:47
Tanner 3:40 a.m. Friday August 31st
00:33:53
1888 it is the body of a woman Paulie
00:33:56
Nichols
00:33:59
her throat is slashed from ear to ear
00:34:07
[Music]
00:34:25
[Music]
00:34:35
a week later Annie chapen is still warm
00:34:37
when her body is
00:34:43
found her neck is deeply cut her stomach
00:34:46
and sexual organs are sliced open her
00:34:49
intestines placed around her neck
00:34:52
[Music]
00:34:57
September 30th in a span of 45 minutes
00:35:00
the Ripper butchers two more women
00:35:03
Katherine edos and Elizabeth
00:35:06
[Music]
00:35:08
stride then the most nightmarish killing
00:35:11
of
00:35:14
all on November 9th police discover the
00:35:17
body of 25-year-old Mary
00:35:20
Kelly the right thigh bone was sticking
00:35:22
up in the air it had been split open
00:35:24
with an axe the Torso had been skinned
00:35:27
down to the rib age one breast her womb
00:35:29
and her kidneys were found under her
00:35:30
neck the other breast and her liver were
00:35:33
found under one of her feet her heart
00:35:35
was
00:35:41
missing large one man has thousands
00:35:45
living in
00:35:46
[Music]
00:35:49
fear Scotland Yard is desperate for
00:35:53
help they need someone like Sherlock
00:35:57
Holmes
00:36:07
after the Eugene shantrell case police
00:36:09
all over England know about Bell's
00:36:14
expertise Scotland Yard sends him the
00:36:16
Ripper
00:36:19
file in their hunt for Jack the Ripper
00:36:23
the police have unknowingly Enlisted the
00:36:25
help of the real Sherlock Holmes
00:36:29
the police have the names of a few Prime
00:36:34
suspects they include a man named
00:36:36
kosminsky a psychopath and White Chapel
00:36:40
resident Michael ostrog a Russian doctor
00:36:44
woman hater and
00:36:46
[Music]
00:36:47
convict and montique J druitt an
00:36:51
unlikely suspect a lawyer and gentleman
00:36:56
[Music]
00:37:01
Bell's closest colleague Henry Duncan
00:37:03
Little John also receives a copy of the
00:37:09
file Bell and little John examine the
00:37:11
Ripper
00:37:12
letters in 1888 Scotland Yard received
00:37:16
thousands per
00:37:18
week only a handful are considered
00:37:21
genuine including one
00:37:23
letter from hell
00:37:33
Belle uses handwriting to deduce a
00:37:35
person's
00:37:36
[Music]
00:37:42
character today written evidence is
00:37:45
still crucial to investigators but they
00:37:47
rely on a range of new
00:37:50
technologies modern document examiners
00:37:52
are no longer interested in looking at
00:37:54
handwriting to explain personality
00:37:57
they look at the characteristics of
00:37:59
handwriting for identification purposes
00:38:02
and they also bring in a lot more modern
00:38:05
techniques such as the use of chemical
00:38:07
analysis on inks and papers the use of
00:38:09
ultraviolet light sources and techniques
00:38:13
which allow them to bring out
00:38:14
indentations which might have been
00:38:16
created in the document by writing on an
00:38:18
overlying piece of
00:38:22
paper it's called electrostatic
00:38:25
detection and it reveals text invisible
00:38:28
to the naked
00:38:29
[Music]
00:38:31
eye the pressure placed on a pen nib
00:38:34
often leaves indentations on subsequent
00:38:36
sheets of
00:38:40
paper with the help of static
00:38:42
electricity and fine toner particles
00:38:45
these markings can sometimes be
00:38:47
[Music]
00:38:52
exposed using the methods of his day
00:38:55
Bell draws his own conclusions
00:38:58
as does Little
00:39:03
John they exchange envelopes and make a
00:39:06
startling
00:39:07
[Music]
00:39:13
Discovery the name they write down
00:39:16
[Music]
00:39:24
matches but sometime after 1888 Bell's
00:39:28
report to Scotland Yard
00:39:30
[Music]
00:39:32
disappears unless it miraculously
00:39:35
Services we will never know who Dr Bell
00:39:38
believed to be Jack the
00:39:45
Ripper but there is one prime
00:39:49
candidate looking at the suspects I
00:39:52
think that if Joe Bell named anyone it
00:39:55
would have been monteu druid
00:39:58
on January 2nd
00:40:00
1889 montigue druitt is found dead in
00:40:03
the river
00:40:07
temps his pockets are filled with
00:40:11
[Music]
00:40:16
Stones The Killing
00:40:20
stop possibly Bell by that time would
00:40:22
have already pinpointed uh Dru as the as
00:40:26
as the killer which may again if this
00:40:29
was known to Dr this may have actually
00:40:30
precipitated his suicide it's a
00:40:36
possibility Bell would never know if he
00:40:39
discovered the identity of Jack the
00:40:41
[Music]
00:40:47
Ripper in July of 1891 Arthur Conan
00:40:51
Doyle is commissioned to write six
00:40:53
Sherlock Holmes stories for the popular
00:40:55
strand magazine
00:40:59
now the Strand started with a
00:41:01
circulation of 300,000 and once the home
00:41:03
storage started catching on it went up
00:41:05
to 500,000 and went on
00:41:07
[Music]
00:41:10
climbing readers across England are
00:41:14
captivated to give an example of coland
00:41:17
Doyle's marvelous turn of phrase take
00:41:20
the story Silver Blaze the Police
00:41:22
Inspector rural Police Inspector says to
00:41:24
Sherlock Holmes are there any other
00:41:26
points to which you would draw my
00:41:28
attention to the Curious incident of the
00:41:31
dog in the nighttime the dog did nothing
00:41:33
in the nighttime that was the Curious
00:41:40
incident Coran Doyle's wit and economy
00:41:43
of language is legendary but his
00:41:46
greatest achievement is less well
00:41:48
known coland Doyle picked up the whole
00:41:53
scientific method of medical
00:41:56
investigation and planked it into the
00:41:59
detective process Belle's methods
00:42:02
resonate in
00:42:03
homes good doctors make good
00:42:06
detectives crime is the new
00:42:11
disease half fiction half reality
00:42:15
Sherlock Holmes and Joseph Bell usher in
00:42:17
a new
00:42:18
era what we now know as
00:42:24
CSI basking in his success Conan Doyle
00:42:28
pays personal tribute to Dr Joe
00:42:31
Bell it is most certainly to you that I
00:42:34
owe Sherlock Holmes I do not think his
00:42:36
analytical work is in the least an
00:42:38
exaggeration of what I've have seen you
00:42:40
produce in the outpatient
00:42:42
Ward the golf course on a show Conan
00:42:45
Doyle tells the Press of his real life
00:42:49
inspiration the media smells a good
00:42:53
story Joe Bell was interviewed by
00:42:56
Edinburgh newspaper and he was listed as
00:42:58
the model for Sherlock Holmes and he was
00:43:00
called that they actually called him
00:43:04
Sherlock Conan Doyle's gratitude becomes
00:43:07
Belle's curse the subject is taught in
00:43:10
the lecture room but learn by the B to
00:43:15
his astonishment the Press remakes Bell
00:43:17
in H's cold and calculating
00:43:20
imagei there a man without a heart there
00:43:23
no substitute for practice gentlemen
00:43:29
Bell
00:43:30
writes I hope folk that know me see
00:43:33
another and better side to me than what
00:43:35
Doyle
00:43:36
[Music]
00:43:39
saw I am haunted by my double Sherlock
00:43:45
Holmes but the Sherlock Holmes sensation
00:43:48
is
00:43:50
Unstoppable Conan Doyle's stories are
00:43:52
translated into dozens of languages and
00:43:55
sold around the world
00:43:58
people began to recognize that there was
00:44:01
something there which was new they began
00:44:04
to buy the
00:44:06
magazine and uh it uh prospered so I may
00:44:11
say did I now what was our feel despite
00:44:14
all the attention Jo Bell continues
00:44:17
working until the age of 64 when he
00:44:20
retires to his elegant country estate
00:44:22
morriswood
00:44:30
[Music]
00:44:45
art imitates life in the second stain
00:44:49
Conan Doyle has homes move to the
00:44:51
country build an apiary and spend his
00:44:54
days keeping bees
00:44:59
Bell dies in 1911 at the age of
00:45:05
74 Bell becomes a mere footnote to the
00:45:08
literary giant he inspired but his
00:45:11
legacy lives on in forensics labs around
00:45:15
the
00:45:16
world and through Sherlock Holmes the
00:45:20
detective who will never die
00:45:30
oh
00:45:32
[Music]