1.
Mitre Square is a small, quiet square just off Mitre Street in Aldgate in The City of London. The square has three entrances.
2.
Goulston Street is a thoroughfare that runs north to south from Wentworth Street to Whitechapel High Street. It still has residential properties on either side of the road but the ground floors of the blocks are shops, one of which is the Happy Days Fish and Chip Shop. It was in the doorway that now forms the entrance to the chip shop where the apron was found.
3.
White’s Row, was one of several densely populated thoroughfares that, like Dorset Street a little further along, ran off the busy Commercial Street.
4. Christ Church Spitalfields
Christ Church, Spitalfields can be ranked with the most important eighteenth-century churches in Europe and is widely considered to be one of the finest baroque churches in England.
5. Old Spitalfields Market
Spitalfields Market is a traders' market as well as a food and art market.Traders began operating around 1666, after the Great Fire of London, where the market stands today
6.
The Ten Bells is a public house at the corner of Commercial Street and Fournier Street in Spitalfields in the East End of London. It is sometimes noted for its supposed association with two victims of Jack the Ripper: Annie Chapman and Mary Jane Kelly.
7. Fournier Street
Fournier Street, formerly Church Street, is a street of 18th-century houses in the East End of London. It is in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets and runs between Commercial Street and Brick Lane. The street is named after a man of Huguenot extraction, George Fournier.
8.
Brick Lane Jamme Masjid, formerly known as the London Jamme Masjid, is a Muslim place of worship in Central London and is in the East End of London.
9.
Hanbury Street was the scene of what is generally accepted as the second murder committed by Jack the Ripper. Hanbury Street is a street running in an East to West zig-zagging direction off Commercial Street, not far from Shoreditch station on the Tube.
10. Whitechapel Bell Foundry
The Whitechapel Bell Foundry was a business in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. At the time of the closure of its Whitechapel premises, it was the oldest manufacturing company in Great Britain.