Respect
Apology and acceptance out of the way I do feel that when any insulting or aggressive posting takes place an unnecessarily combative tone enters the debate. I have now re-filed a stack of material that may have caused an unnecessary amount of upset had I posted it.
I have great respect for Philip Sugden both as a historian and as a friend. That, of course, does not mean that I agree with everything that he conjectures or opines. I should not think that any two authorities on any given subject agree to such an extent. But I have the greatest respect for his work in this field and we both agree on a preferred top suspect for the Ripper which is neither Chapman nor Tumblety. I have found his book to be the most accurate written on the case and the errors that I detected in it were imports from other author sources and he was misled as in the example cited by Martin where the report in question actually originated with Warren, was mainly written by an amanuensis, and was directed to Assistant Commissioner A. Carmichael Bruce who was handling Anderson's paperwork duties at that supervisory level in Anderson's absence. Indeed, the first marginal annotation on the report is Bruce's. However, Martin is quoting from Phil Sugden's old (first) edition and not the corrected new edition of his book in which this erroneous statement does not appear.
What Martin has stated in his post does not cause me to change my opinion of Anderson one iota. Nor does it change my agreement with Philip's assessment of the bias of the A-Z. It is for others to read all that is available and published and draw their own conclusions. But I think that Philip's words that 'there is, or ought to be, room for honourable disagreement amongst scholars' are true and should be heeded by all. It does appear to me, though, that some scholars reach their own conclusions, decide that they are right, and then are unable to accept any criticism of their work.
What I have often stated is that I am not out to destroy Anderson or his reputation. But I am in the business of presenting the fullest amount of relevant material available to the reader and student of these crimes, thus giving an even-handed and balanced view. Signally, crucial material that militates against Anderson, and affects any assessment of the worth of his writings, has been omitted from Martin's published work, despite the fact that Martin is aware of this material. Now this is fact - not my opinion, the citations do not appear in Martin's work, it is an act of omission.
I am not at war with the A-Z, its authors, or anyone else. I have some very find memories of time spent with Martin dating way back to 1989. And he was one of my guiding lights when I ventured back onto the paths of Ripperology after a short hiatus. In fact cut out all the Ripper crap and both he and Paul are great company and Martin has a very broad spectrum of knowledge which would have anyone listening in awe. But as far as Ripperology goes I believe that I have read more than anyone, bar none, and I have much material that will never see the light of day. And that is not a teaser, it is material that is better left unseen. What authors in this field should realise is that there are no icons, no single fountain-head of knowledge and no all-knowing authority - and if you set yourself up on a pedestal you will soon be knocked down. As I get older I seek Ripperological solace with very dear friends, older and wiser than I, friends like Richard Whittington-Egan, Don Rumbelow and Phil Sugden. They are honest and dispassionate and I consider myself very lucky to know them.
Originally posted by fido
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I have great respect for Philip Sugden both as a historian and as a friend. That, of course, does not mean that I agree with everything that he conjectures or opines. I should not think that any two authorities on any given subject agree to such an extent. But I have the greatest respect for his work in this field and we both agree on a preferred top suspect for the Ripper which is neither Chapman nor Tumblety. I have found his book to be the most accurate written on the case and the errors that I detected in it were imports from other author sources and he was misled as in the example cited by Martin where the report in question actually originated with Warren, was mainly written by an amanuensis, and was directed to Assistant Commissioner A. Carmichael Bruce who was handling Anderson's paperwork duties at that supervisory level in Anderson's absence. Indeed, the first marginal annotation on the report is Bruce's. However, Martin is quoting from Phil Sugden's old (first) edition and not the corrected new edition of his book in which this erroneous statement does not appear.
What Martin has stated in his post does not cause me to change my opinion of Anderson one iota. Nor does it change my agreement with Philip's assessment of the bias of the A-Z. It is for others to read all that is available and published and draw their own conclusions. But I think that Philip's words that 'there is, or ought to be, room for honourable disagreement amongst scholars' are true and should be heeded by all. It does appear to me, though, that some scholars reach their own conclusions, decide that they are right, and then are unable to accept any criticism of their work.
What I have often stated is that I am not out to destroy Anderson or his reputation. But I am in the business of presenting the fullest amount of relevant material available to the reader and student of these crimes, thus giving an even-handed and balanced view. Signally, crucial material that militates against Anderson, and affects any assessment of the worth of his writings, has been omitted from Martin's published work, despite the fact that Martin is aware of this material. Now this is fact - not my opinion, the citations do not appear in Martin's work, it is an act of omission.
I am not at war with the A-Z, its authors, or anyone else. I have some very find memories of time spent with Martin dating way back to 1989. And he was one of my guiding lights when I ventured back onto the paths of Ripperology after a short hiatus. In fact cut out all the Ripper crap and both he and Paul are great company and Martin has a very broad spectrum of knowledge which would have anyone listening in awe. But as far as Ripperology goes I believe that I have read more than anyone, bar none, and I have much material that will never see the light of day. And that is not a teaser, it is material that is better left unseen. What authors in this field should realise is that there are no icons, no single fountain-head of knowledge and no all-knowing authority - and if you set yourself up on a pedestal you will soon be knocked down. As I get older I seek Ripperological solace with very dear friends, older and wiser than I, friends like Richard Whittington-Egan, Don Rumbelow and Phil Sugden. They are honest and dispassionate and I consider myself very lucky to know them.
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