'Said to be a Doctor' means might not be ...
That Macnaghten sincerely and thus mistakenly thought Druitt was a doctor is a theory about certain sources, not a fact -- and arguably a redundant one.
In the one document about the un-named Druitt for public consumption, his memoirs, Macnaghten confirms no such claim about the suicided suspect.
Nor does Littlechild say that Tumblety killed himself, just that it was 'believed' that he had done so. This suggests that somebody, who should know, had informed him of this -- and yet it was not quite a definitely, ascertained fact.
Did Macnaghten so tell him, fusing bits of Druitt with Tumblety?
From 'Scoundrels Scallywags and Some Honest Men', 1929, the ex-Chief Inspector of CID Tom Divall wrote the following:
'The much lamented and late Commissioner of the CID, Sir Melville Macnaghten, received some information that the murderer had gone to America and died in a lunatic asylum there. This perhaps maybe correct, for after this news nothing was ever heard of any similar crimes being committed.'
Anderson and Swanson, for some reason, wrongly believed that 'Kosminski' had been sectioned in early 1889, and then subsequently died. And that there were not more murders of the same kind.
That is not how the police initially treated subsequent Whitechapel murders, right up to 1891.
Surely, is it not likely that all these tales originate with Macnaghten? For that comment to Divall is like a fusion of Druitt, Tumblety and 'Kosminski': the mad, the fled, and the dead.
The giveaway Mac element is the redacted notion that the police knew at the time that Kelly was the final 'Jack' murder which he conceded in his memoirs was not true.
That Macnaghten sincerely and thus mistakenly thought Druitt was a doctor is a theory about certain sources, not a fact -- and arguably a redundant one.
In the one document about the un-named Druitt for public consumption, his memoirs, Macnaghten confirms no such claim about the suicided suspect.
Nor does Littlechild say that Tumblety killed himself, just that it was 'believed' that he had done so. This suggests that somebody, who should know, had informed him of this -- and yet it was not quite a definitely, ascertained fact.
Did Macnaghten so tell him, fusing bits of Druitt with Tumblety?
From 'Scoundrels Scallywags and Some Honest Men', 1929, the ex-Chief Inspector of CID Tom Divall wrote the following:
'The much lamented and late Commissioner of the CID, Sir Melville Macnaghten, received some information that the murderer had gone to America and died in a lunatic asylum there. This perhaps maybe correct, for after this news nothing was ever heard of any similar crimes being committed.'
Anderson and Swanson, for some reason, wrongly believed that 'Kosminski' had been sectioned in early 1889, and then subsequently died. And that there were not more murders of the same kind.
That is not how the police initially treated subsequent Whitechapel murders, right up to 1891.
Surely, is it not likely that all these tales originate with Macnaghten? For that comment to Divall is like a fusion of Druitt, Tumblety and 'Kosminski': the mad, the fled, and the dead.
The giveaway Mac element is the redacted notion that the police knew at the time that Kelly was the final 'Jack' murder which he conceded in his memoirs was not true.
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