Detective Inspector Edmund Reid – Matthew Macfadyen
Detective Sergeant Bennett Drake – Jerome Flynn
Captain Homer Jackson – Adam Rothenberg
Long Susan – MyAnna Buring
Detective Constable Albert Flight – Damien Molony
Rose Erskine – Charlene McKenna
Detective Inspector Jedediah Shine – Joseph Mawle
Fred Best – David Dawson
Chief Inspector Fred Abberline – Clive Russell
Jane Cobden – Leanne Best
Bella Drake – Gillian Saker
Sergeant Donald Artherton – David Wilmot
Joseph Merrick – Joseph Drake
Directors
Tom Shankland (episodes 1 & 2), Christoper Menaul (episodes 3 & 4), Kieron Hawkes (episodes 5 & 6), Andy Wilson (episode 7 & 8)
Writers
Richard Warlow (episodes 1, 2, 7 & 8), Marnie Dickens (episode 3), Jamie Crichton (Episode 4), Toby Finlay (episodes 5 & 6), Thomas Martin (episode 5),
Official Series Synopsis
East London, 1890. The long shadow of Jack The Ripper may be receding, but the job of preventing Whitechapel from descending into hell has never been harder for Detective Inspector Edmund Reid and his loyal deputies Detective Sergeant Bennet Drake and Captain Homer Jackson. As the century enters its final decade, recession stalks Great Britain; its preeminent role in the world is under threat. And nowhere are the bloated British Empire’s problems felt more keenly than in its dark heart: the East End of London.
Against a society in rapid decline, the men of H Division battle new crimes – the wickedness of imperial ambition comes home to roost on Whitechapel’s streets in the form of a new drug scourge; a eugenicist stalks the freakshows; a female gang with twice the ferocity of their male counterparts sets itself on vengeance against their industrial tormentors; escaped bombers; energy magnates; and subversive cult Svengalis. All these and more will test Reid and his allies to their very limit – while at every turns they face corruption in their own ranks, from the neighbouring force of Limehouse’s K Division, and its formidable and entirely amoral leader, Detective Inspector Jedediah Shine.
The team face challenges on the home front too. Without his wife, Emily, to anchor him, Reid wrestles personal demons of guilt and isolation. Homer Jackson, no longer bound by the need to keep a low profile, questions the suitability of Whitechapel as a place to call home. And Bennet Drake has a new wife; but in committing to her he may have lost the brutal intensity that was a hallmark of his policing.
Meanwhile, at her brothel on Tenter Street, ‘Long’ Susan Hart struggles to protect her home and livelihood from the secret debt she owes the ruthless moneylender Silas Duggan, while Rose Erskine, once Susan’s best girl, seeks a new life – and fame – on the stage of the Whitechapel music halls.
The past is gone but our heroes need to find a way to come to terms with a new present in order to combat the ever-shifting meance of life on the Whitechapel frontline.