I raised this on another thread a few months ago, but think perhaps it should be subject of a thread in its own right:
The view that the 'Dear Boss' was written by an 'enterprising journalistic' is now generally accepted and has almost become axiomatic. If, however, the DB was not written by the killer, what underpins the widely-held view that the victims were slain because they were prostitutes? Of the C5, Nichols, Chapman, Stride & Kelly seem to have plied that trade, if only on a casual basis. Eddowes perhaps, but I don't think that's established as a certainty. How sure, then, can we be that these women were killed because they were whores, if the DB was a hoax?
Why not because they were heavy drinkers, perhaps even alcoholics? Because they were dowdy? Because they were poor? Because they were gobby? Simply because they were women? Is there any evidence - assuming that the DB is not such - that these unfortunates were killed because the Whitechapel Murderer was "down on whores"?
Regards, Bridewell.
The view that the 'Dear Boss' was written by an 'enterprising journalistic' is now generally accepted and has almost become axiomatic. If, however, the DB was not written by the killer, what underpins the widely-held view that the victims were slain because they were prostitutes? Of the C5, Nichols, Chapman, Stride & Kelly seem to have plied that trade, if only on a casual basis. Eddowes perhaps, but I don't think that's established as a certainty. How sure, then, can we be that these women were killed because they were whores, if the DB was a hoax?
Why not because they were heavy drinkers, perhaps even alcoholics? Because they were dowdy? Because they were poor? Because they were gobby? Simply because they were women? Is there any evidence - assuming that the DB is not such - that these unfortunates were killed because the Whitechapel Murderer was "down on whores"?
Regards, Bridewell.
Comment