No, Phil, it's not strange at all ...
To Phil Carter
I counter-argue that Mac's comments of 1913 and his memoirs of 1914 do perfectly match all the other sources you refer to, including Reid and Littlechild.
Druitt's dual identity as a respectable barrister and a 'furious' killer, yet 'Protean' and high functioning -- at least for a time -- was a 'secret'.
A secret which Macnaghten posthumously discovered when he met with Farquharson and then, likely, William Druitt (the veiled version of this contact is in Sims, 1903 and 1907). Thus he 'laid' to rest the 'ghost' of Jack the Ripper as he divulged in 1914, a too-opaque revelation ignored then and now.
Macnaghten kept this bombshell entirely to himself because he did not trust Anderson, or anybody else, not to leak the information that the Ripper was long deceased.
But in 1894 the Cutbush tabloid tale might have pried loose the true story from Dorset again as it had leaked once in 1891. There was always the danger of it happening again, on any day.
Plus if the North Country Vicar of 1899 means Druitt then Macnaghten also was aware that something of the true story was scheduled to be revealed at the tenth aniiversary of Druitt's burial -- a tale moreover which would do Scotland Yard no good at all.
In 1894 Mac put on file that Druitt was a suspect, but a minor one about whom the police had no hard evidence or even hard information either -- except that his family 'believed' because he was sexually insane. This ludicrous paradox would just have to be faced down if it came to it, and it didn't.
The Vicar source also explains why Mac acted in contradictory directions: both concealing Druitt from the state and somewhat revealing him to the public -- but hidden by being semi-fictionalised. Sure enough he was never found.
Mac got in first via 'Aberconway', via Griffiths and then Sims, the latter specifically debunking the Vicar -- quite rudely and inaccurately.
Mac in 1894 also somewhat elevated two minor suspects, one of whom, by 1898, Macnaghten knew was not a doctor (just as Druitt was not one either) and who had been completely cleared of the Whitechapel crimes (eg. Ostrog in France). But Mac needed two window-dressing suspects for the big shot writers and so 'Kosminski' and Ostrog stayed on the list as he had decided to semi-fictionalise them too, like Druitt.
Anderson needed to be distracted by a chief suspect so he quite falsely told his loathed chief that 'Kosminski' had been sectioned soon after Kelly (well, five months after) and who was conveniently deceased (whereas Mac knew Aaron Kosminski was very much alive and out and about for a long time after Kelly's murder: see 'Aberconway' plus Sims, 1907).
Sure enough from the moment, in 1895, he had his masturbating lunatic Anderson began blabbing to the press, just as Mac expected -- hence the need to keep the real deceased chief susoect, Druitt, a secret from the rest of the police to protect his family.
Sims likely knew Druitt's full name because a minor comic writer, Frank Richardson from the Edwardian era, also knew the real name (eg. 'Dr Bluitt') and it is quite arrogant of Sims to not write the full name to the former head of the Special Branch.
Later, Macnaghten could easily get around Littlechild's revelation if Sims queried him, with the reply: Littlechild has it backwards: confusing 'Dr T' with 'Dr D' because Tumblety died of natural causes in 1903.
Of course Jack Littlechild has no idea about 'Dr D', and assumed wrongly it must be a garbled version of 'Dr T' (and is not completely wrong) by Anderson via Griffiths, as nobody at the Yard knew anything about Druitt except Macnaghten.
The common interpretation of the primary police sources -- that they are all desperately flailing with competing non-suspects -- arguably misses the real story completely. Macnaghten knew all about everybody, and all the suspects, and he manipulated the data to 'keep everyone satisfied' (Fred Wensley).
Just consider, Phil, what all secondary sources had missed until now: that Macnaghten knew 'Kosminski' was alive and Anderson (based on his son's biography) and Donald Swanson did not (in both 1895 and 1910) or Swanson is merely repeating Anderson's opinion rather than confirming it -- but that still means he does not know the truth about that suspect either.
Of course Reid, Abberline, Smith et al know nothing about Druitt. How could they? It was a 'private' investigation by Mac in 1891, and kept private (Abblerine's comments of 1903 are simply wrong: Druitt was not a medical student, was not the subject of Home Office Report, and was not suspected because of the timing of his suicide -- because the date of his demise was way too early).
What complicates the issue is that Macnaghten, via cronies, created the myth of the all-efficient police force who knew the identity of 'Jack' just before he killed himself and were about to make an arrest. Yet Mac's own memoirs dismissed this fun, [institutionally] self-serving red herring, one he had himself, anonymously, set up and then discarded in retirement.
To Phil Carter
I counter-argue that Mac's comments of 1913 and his memoirs of 1914 do perfectly match all the other sources you refer to, including Reid and Littlechild.
Druitt's dual identity as a respectable barrister and a 'furious' killer, yet 'Protean' and high functioning -- at least for a time -- was a 'secret'.
A secret which Macnaghten posthumously discovered when he met with Farquharson and then, likely, William Druitt (the veiled version of this contact is in Sims, 1903 and 1907). Thus he 'laid' to rest the 'ghost' of Jack the Ripper as he divulged in 1914, a too-opaque revelation ignored then and now.
Macnaghten kept this bombshell entirely to himself because he did not trust Anderson, or anybody else, not to leak the information that the Ripper was long deceased.
But in 1894 the Cutbush tabloid tale might have pried loose the true story from Dorset again as it had leaked once in 1891. There was always the danger of it happening again, on any day.
Plus if the North Country Vicar of 1899 means Druitt then Macnaghten also was aware that something of the true story was scheduled to be revealed at the tenth aniiversary of Druitt's burial -- a tale moreover which would do Scotland Yard no good at all.
In 1894 Mac put on file that Druitt was a suspect, but a minor one about whom the police had no hard evidence or even hard information either -- except that his family 'believed' because he was sexually insane. This ludicrous paradox would just have to be faced down if it came to it, and it didn't.
The Vicar source also explains why Mac acted in contradictory directions: both concealing Druitt from the state and somewhat revealing him to the public -- but hidden by being semi-fictionalised. Sure enough he was never found.
Mac got in first via 'Aberconway', via Griffiths and then Sims, the latter specifically debunking the Vicar -- quite rudely and inaccurately.
Mac in 1894 also somewhat elevated two minor suspects, one of whom, by 1898, Macnaghten knew was not a doctor (just as Druitt was not one either) and who had been completely cleared of the Whitechapel crimes (eg. Ostrog in France). But Mac needed two window-dressing suspects for the big shot writers and so 'Kosminski' and Ostrog stayed on the list as he had decided to semi-fictionalise them too, like Druitt.
Anderson needed to be distracted by a chief suspect so he quite falsely told his loathed chief that 'Kosminski' had been sectioned soon after Kelly (well, five months after) and who was conveniently deceased (whereas Mac knew Aaron Kosminski was very much alive and out and about for a long time after Kelly's murder: see 'Aberconway' plus Sims, 1907).
Sure enough from the moment, in 1895, he had his masturbating lunatic Anderson began blabbing to the press, just as Mac expected -- hence the need to keep the real deceased chief susoect, Druitt, a secret from the rest of the police to protect his family.
Sims likely knew Druitt's full name because a minor comic writer, Frank Richardson from the Edwardian era, also knew the real name (eg. 'Dr Bluitt') and it is quite arrogant of Sims to not write the full name to the former head of the Special Branch.
Later, Macnaghten could easily get around Littlechild's revelation if Sims queried him, with the reply: Littlechild has it backwards: confusing 'Dr T' with 'Dr D' because Tumblety died of natural causes in 1903.
Of course Jack Littlechild has no idea about 'Dr D', and assumed wrongly it must be a garbled version of 'Dr T' (and is not completely wrong) by Anderson via Griffiths, as nobody at the Yard knew anything about Druitt except Macnaghten.
The common interpretation of the primary police sources -- that they are all desperately flailing with competing non-suspects -- arguably misses the real story completely. Macnaghten knew all about everybody, and all the suspects, and he manipulated the data to 'keep everyone satisfied' (Fred Wensley).
Just consider, Phil, what all secondary sources had missed until now: that Macnaghten knew 'Kosminski' was alive and Anderson (based on his son's biography) and Donald Swanson did not (in both 1895 and 1910) or Swanson is merely repeating Anderson's opinion rather than confirming it -- but that still means he does not know the truth about that suspect either.
Of course Reid, Abberline, Smith et al know nothing about Druitt. How could they? It was a 'private' investigation by Mac in 1891, and kept private (Abblerine's comments of 1903 are simply wrong: Druitt was not a medical student, was not the subject of Home Office Report, and was not suspected because of the timing of his suicide -- because the date of his demise was way too early).
What complicates the issue is that Macnaghten, via cronies, created the myth of the all-efficient police force who knew the identity of 'Jack' just before he killed himself and were about to make an arrest. Yet Mac's own memoirs dismissed this fun, [institutionally] self-serving red herring, one he had himself, anonymously, set up and then discarded in retirement.
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