
A recent donation of Dr. Openshaw's medals, photographs and other papers to the Royal London Hospital Archives and Museum by his grandson, led to the composition of an interesting article by Assistant Archivist Kate Hughes. While the photographs and papers now reside in the Hospital Archives as "The Openshaw Archive", the medals are on display at the Royal London Hospital Museum, where they can be seen Monday to Friday, 10 am to 4:30 pm
The article is of interest to anyone studying the Ripper case, but in particular those whose impressions of Dr. Openshaw have been entirely formed on the basis of the Lusk kidney and his part in it's story. Earlier Ripper books ascribed many claims to Openshaw in regards to the Lusk kidney--claims that no competent medical man could make without looking foolish. Fortunately it is know accepted that Openshaw's actual pronouncements about the kidney were more modest and entirely plausible.

Read the article here.
To the right is a photograph of a mechanical hand designed by Dr. Openshaw during WW1. It is in the possession of the National Museum of Science and Industry.