Patricia Cornwell – Portrait Of A Killer Jack The Ripper

Dr. Cooper was a twenty-seven-year-old medical star rapidly on the rise in his profession. His specialties were the treatment of rectal and venereal diseases, but no search of his published writings or other liter­ature unearthed any mention of his treating so-called fistulas of the penis. Explanations of Sickert’s fistula range from fair to awful. Nature may have slighted him with a genetically inherited malformation of the gen­itals called hypospadias, in which the urethra terminates just below the tip of the penis. German medical literature published at the time of Sickert’s birth indicates that a case of simple hypospadias was “trifling” and more common than generally known. A “trifling” case meant the fistula would not interfere with procreation and was not worth the risk of a sur­gical procedure that could cause infection and death.

Since Sickert’s malformation required three surgeries, his problem must not have been “trifling.” In 1864, Dr. Johann Ludwig Casper, pro­fessor of forensic medicine at the University of Berlin, published a de­scription of a more serious form of hypospadias: In this malformation, there is an opening in the urethra at the “root” or base of the penis. Even worse is epispadias, which occurs when the urethra is divided and runs like a “shallow gutter” along the back of a rudimentary or incompletely developed penis. In mid-nineteenth century Germany, such cases were considered a type of hermaphroditism or “doubtful sex.”

When Sickert was born, his gender may have been ambiguous, mean­ing his penis was small, possibly misshapen, and imperforate (lacking a urethra). The bladder would have been connected to a canal that opened at the base of the penis – or near the anus – and there may have been a cleft in the scrotum that resembled the female clitoris, vagina, and labia. It is possible that Sickert’s gender wasn’t clearly established until his tes­ticles were discovered in the folds of the so-called labia and it was de­termined that he had no uterus. In cases of ambiguous genitalia, if the afflicted child’s gender turns out to be male, he is usually masculine and healthy in all respects as he matures except for his penis, which may be acceptably functional but is certainly not normal. In the early days of surgery, attempts to repair seriously deformed genitalia generally resulted in mutilation.

Without medical records, I can’t say exactly what Sickert’s penile anomaly was, but if his problem was only “trifling” hypospadias, why did his parents resort to risky surgery? Why did his mother and father wait so long before attempting to correct what must have been a very un­pleasant affliction? Sickert was five when he underwent surgery the third time, and one wonders how soon this occurred following the first two operations. We know that his great-aunt interceded to bring him to Lon­don, suggesting that his disability was acute and that possibly the two previous operations had been recent and may have resulted in compli­cations. If indeed he was three or four when this nightmarish medical or­deal began, it could be that his parents delayed corrective procedures until they were certain of his gender. I do not know when Sickert was named Walter Richard. To date, no birth certificate or record of a chris­tening has turned up.

In Helena’s memoirs she writes that when she was a child “we” always referred to Walter and his brothers as “Walter and the boys.” Who are ire? I doubt his brothers referred to themselves as Walter and the boys, nor would I imagine that little Helena came up with the phrase on her own. I am inclined to suspect that the reference to Walter and the boys came from one or both parents.

Given Helena’s picture of a young Walter who was precocious and dominant, such a law unto himself that he wasn’t placed in the same cat­egory as the other sons, it may be that the phrase Walter and the boys was a way of acknowledging his precocity. It may also be that he was physically different from his brothers – or maybe from all boys. If the lat­ter is the explanation, the repeated use of the phrase could have been hu­miliating and emasculating for the young Walter.

Sickert’s early boyhood was traumatized by medical violence. When corrective surgery for hypospadias occurs after the age of eighteen months, it can create fears of castration. Sickert’s operations would have resulted in strictures and scarring that could have made erections painful or impossible. He may have suffered partial amputation. His art does not include nude males, with the exception of two sketches I found that ap­pear to have been done when he was in his teens or in art school. In each, the nude male figure has a vague stub of a penis that looks anything but normal.

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