Cutbush and Cutbush?

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  • Lewis C
    Inspector
    • Dec 2022
    • 1370

    #16
    Originally posted by The Rookie Detective View Post
    Is there a scenario whereby MacNagthen incorrectly believed that Cutbush was related to Chief Superintendent Cutbush?

    Hence the bid to try and push Cutbush out of the limelight, by submitting a random list of (arguably) nonsense suspects?
    IIRC correctly, Wolf's book about Cutbush makes that suggestion, that Mac's belief that the Cutbushes were related may have motivated him to defend Thomas.

    For anyone interested in this book, its contents are posted in the other Ripper forum, or at least they were at one time.

    Comment

    • Herlock Sholmes
      Commissioner
      • May 2017
      • 23357

      #17
      Originally posted by Lewis C View Post

      IIRC correctly, Wolf's book about Cutbush makes that suggestion, that Mac's belief that the Cutbushes were related may have motivated him to defend Thomas.

      For anyone interested in this book, its contents are posted in the other Ripper forum, or at least they were at one time.
      It is Lewis.



      Sadly AP Wolf (real name Paul Webb) died in 2024 aged 73.
      Herlock Sholmes

      ”I don’t know who Jack the Ripper was…and neither do you.”

      Comment

      • Debra A
        Assistant Commissioner
        • Feb 2008
        • 3507

        #18
        Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

        According to Debra Arif, Chris Scott, Roger Palmer and Robert Linford (to name but four) they weren’t. That’s good enough for me Chris…I suspect that it will be good enough for you too.
        Hi Herlock,

        Extensive research showed that Charles Henry Cutbush and Thomas Hayne Cutbush were not related in any way at all. This was confirmed by an extensive family tree featuring generations of Thomas H Cutbush's family, drawn up for a legal inheritance case and preserved at the National Archives. I have a copy of it in my garage somewhere, it's huge in size!

        Macnaghten was also mistaken when he wrote that Thomas's father was dead, we know that he had in fact deserted his wife and two sons and sailed to New Zealand where he married bigamously. The British press reported this fact in 1891 and also the Australian and New Zealand press were reporting in 1894 that "Jack the Ripper was thought to be the son of a New Zealand colonist" How could the papers, even the overseas ones get something right that Macnaghten got wrong in his account of Cutbush?

        It was AP's belief that Thomas H Cutbush might be the illegitimate child of Charles Henry Cutbush but there is no evidence to support this or any reason to believe the two families even knew each other.

        One thing that did come up in later research was that a relative of Cutbush's had business premises on Aldgate High Street, a couple of doors down from where Catherine Eddowes was arrested the night before the morning of her murder.

        Just to pick up on something mentioned earlier in the thread that Charles Henry Cutbush's son may be the man in Cane Hill asylum in 1909- The Charles Cutbush in Cane Hill asylum actually died there in 1909 whereas I believe Charles Henry's son, Charles/Charlie Stokes, was alive well in to the mid 1900s.

        Comment

        • The Rookie Detective
          Superintendent
          • Apr 2019
          • 2201

          #19
          Originally posted by Debra A View Post

          Hi Herlock,

          Extensive research showed that Charles Henry Cutbush and Thomas Hayne Cutbush were not related in any way at all. This was confirmed by an extensive family tree featuring generations of Thomas H Cutbush's family, drawn up for a legal inheritance case and preserved at the National Archives. I have a copy of it in my garage somewhere, it's huge in size!

          Macnaghten was also mistaken when he wrote that Thomas's father was dead, we know that he had in fact deserted his wife and two sons and sailed to New Zealand where he married bigamously. The British press reported this fact in 1891 and also the Australian and New Zealand press were reporting in 1894 that "Jack the Ripper was thought to be the son of a New Zealand colonist" How could the papers, even the overseas ones get something right that Macnaghten got wrong in his account of Cutbush?

          It was AP's belief that Thomas H Cutbush might be the illegitimate child of Charles Henry Cutbush but there is no evidence to support this or any reason to believe the two families even knew each other.

          One thing that did come up in later research was that a relative of Cutbush's had business premises on Aldgate High Street, a couple of doors down from where Catherine Eddowes was arrested the night before the morning of her murder.

          Just to pick up on something mentioned earlier in the thread that Charles Henry Cutbush's son may be the man in Cane Hill asylum in 1909- The Charles Cutbush in Cane Hill asylum actually died there in 1909 whereas I believe Charles Henry's son, Charles/Charlie Stokes, was alive well in to the mid 1900s.
          Exquisite, sublime and just another level entirely.

          This is how to formulate a post.

          Just brilliant!
          "Great minds, don't think alike"

          Comment

          • Herlock Sholmes
            Commissioner
            • May 2017
            • 23357

            #20
            Originally posted by Debra A View Post

            Hi Herlock,

            Extensive research showed that Charles Henry Cutbush and Thomas Hayne Cutbush were not related in any way at all. This was confirmed by an extensive family tree featuring generations of Thomas H Cutbush's family, drawn up for a legal inheritance case and preserved at the National Archives. I have a copy of it in my garage somewhere, it's huge in size!

            Macnaghten was also mistaken when he wrote that Thomas's father was dead, we know that he had in fact deserted his wife and two sons and sailed to New Zealand where he married bigamously. The British press reported this fact in 1891 and also the Australian and New Zealand press were reporting in 1894 that "Jack the Ripper was thought to be the son of a New Zealand colonist" How could the papers, even the overseas ones get something right that Macnaghten got wrong in his account of Cutbush?

            It was AP's belief that Thomas H Cutbush might be the illegitimate child of Charles Henry Cutbush but there is no evidence to support this or any reason to believe the two families even knew each other.

            One thing that did come up in later research was that a relative of Cutbush's had business premises on Aldgate High Street, a couple of doors down from where Catherine Eddowes was arrested the night before the morning of her murder.

            Just to pick up on something mentioned earlier in the thread that Charles Henry Cutbush's son may be the man in Cane Hill asylum in 1909- The Charles Cutbush in Cane Hill asylum actually died there in 1909 whereas I believe Charles Henry's son, Charles/Charlie Stokes, was alive well in to the mid 1900s.
            Hi Debra,

            Thinks for that information. Even after your excellent research I still couldn’t help wondering if there was some kind of difficult to trace familial link between the two that hadn’t been picked up on (you can tell that I’m not a genealogist) because I found it difficult to see how Mac could have made such an assumption. On reflection though perhaps it’s not so surprising - someone makes the error, Mac hears of it and it’s then assumed true and no big deal is made of it so it’s never questioned. We all know how something that isn’t true can become accepted until someone like you decides to check. No doubt next week I’ll be doubting this possible explanation.

            Do you know what type of business his cousin had on Aldgate High Street? We know of two jobs that Thomas had but I’m assuming that there was no possible connection?
            Herlock Sholmes

            ”I don’t know who Jack the Ripper was…and neither do you.”

            Comment

            • Lewis C
              Inspector
              • Dec 2022
              • 1370

              #21
              Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

              Hi Debra,

              Thinks for that information. Even after your excellent research I still couldn’t help wondering if there was some kind of difficult to trace familial link between the two that hadn’t been picked up on (you can tell that I’m not a genealogist) because I found it difficult to see how Mac could have made such an assumption. On reflection though perhaps it’s not so surprising - someone makes the error, Mac hears of it and it’s then assumed true and no big deal is made of it so it’s never questioned. We all know how something that isn’t true can become accepted until someone like you decides to check. No doubt next week I’ll be doubting this possible explanation.
              Hi Herlock,

              I have researched my own genealogy, and there are some places in my family tree where I can't trace it back any further than my 2nd great grandparents. Everyone is related, so if no relationship was found between the Cutbushes, that would indicate incomplete family trees. However, it seems they weren't closely related, as Mac thought they were, so I doubt that Mac's belief was based on a more complete knowledge of their family trees than what we have. I think this is just yet another thing that Mac was mistaken about.

              Comment

              • Debra A
                Assistant Commissioner
                • Feb 2008
                • 3507

                #22
                Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

                Hi Debra,

                Thinks for that information. Even after your excellent research I still couldn’t help wondering if there was some kind of difficult to trace familial link between the two that hadn’t been picked up on (you can tell that I’m not a genealogist) because I found it difficult to see how Mac could have made such an assumption. On reflection though perhaps it’s not so surprising - someone makes the error, Mac hears of it and it’s then assumed true and no big deal is made of it so it’s never questioned. We all know how something that isn’t true can become accepted until someone like you decides to check. No doubt next week I’ll be doubting this possible explanation.

                Do you know what type of business his cousin had on Aldgate High Street? We know of two jobs that Thomas had but I’m assuming that there was no possible connection?
                Hi Herlock,
                Sorry for the late reply. I was reminded of an old JTR Forums thread where I discovered an early fictional treatment, a story named "The Vampire" where the murders were attributed to a medical student in a book titled "The Devil's derelicts". The author had the surname Harcourt, reportedly a bit of a bounder, and for some reason the papers, when reporting on his past exploits, described him as a nephew of Sir William Harcourt, a prominent figure of the time. Both men denied the relationship because there was no such relationship. Perhaps when rare names cropped up there was an assumed relationship? It's a common occurrence.
                Anyway... Fasham Venables, Cutbush's cousin had a woolen wa[rehouse] at 34 Aldgate High Street. Interesting considering Catherine Eddowes claimed she knew who JTR was and was arrested a few doors away from these premises!

                Comment

                • GBinOz
                  Assistant Commissioner
                  • Jun 2021
                  • 3240

                  #23
                  Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
                  I can’t think of any reason why he would have knowingly made this incorrect link so how did he come to make this error?
                  Hi Herlock,

                  Given the number of other errors that he made, might the reason just be that he was incompetent?

                  Cheers, George
                  I'm a short timer. But I can still think and have opinions. That's what I do.

                  Comment

                  • Herlock Sholmes
                    Commissioner
                    • May 2017
                    • 23357

                    #24
                    Originally posted by GBinOz View Post

                    Hi Herlock,

                    Given the number of other errors that he made, might the reason just be that he was incompetent?

                    Cheers, George
                    Hi George,

                    One issue though George is that no appears to g]have corrected him? So is it the case that others believed it too?
                    Herlock Sholmes

                    ”I don’t know who Jack the Ripper was…and neither do you.”

                    Comment

                    • Herlock Sholmes
                      Commissioner
                      • May 2017
                      • 23357

                      #25
                      Originally posted by Debra A View Post

                      Hi Herlock,
                      Sorry for the late reply. I was reminded of an old JTR Forums thread where I discovered an early fictional treatment, a story named "The Vampire" where the murders were attributed to a medical student in a book titled "The Devil's derelicts". The author had the surname Harcourt, reportedly a bit of a bounder, and for some reason the papers, when reporting on his past exploits, described him as a nephew of Sir William Harcourt, a prominent figure of the time. Both men denied the relationship because there was no such relationship. Perhaps when rare names cropped up there was an assumed relationship? It's a common occurrence.
                      Anyway... Fasham Venables, Cutbush's cousin had a woolen wa[rehouse] at 34 Aldgate High Street. Interesting considering Catherine Eddowes claimed she knew who JTR was and was arrested a few doors away from these premises!
                      Hi Debra,

                      No need to apologise, it’s easily done, especially as you don’t post on here every day. I do…and I still miss the occasional post. I think that someone should write a paper on ripper coincidences (the only problem with these though is they’re fuel for conspiracies). Or, someone should start a thread on here. I think I’ll do it and add your example.
                      Herlock Sholmes

                      ”I don’t know who Jack the Ripper was…and neither do you.”

                      Comment

                      • GBinOz
                        Assistant Commissioner
                        • Jun 2021
                        • 3240

                        #26
                        Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

                        Hi George,

                        One issue though George is that no appears to g]have corrected him? So is it the case that others believed it too?
                        Hi Herlock,

                        Good point, although would such corrections have been made public, or done in private? And how many people would have been sufficiently acquainted with the facts as to be able to make such corrections.

                        Cheers, George
                        Last edited by GBinOz; Today, 10:18 AM.
                        I'm a short timer. But I can still think and have opinions. That's what I do.

                        Comment

                        • Fiver
                          Assistant Commissioner
                          • Oct 2019
                          • 3488

                          #27
                          Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
                          Hi Debra,

                          Thinks for that information. Even after your excellent research I still couldn’t help wondering if there was some kind of difficult to trace familial link between the two that hadn’t been picked up on (you can tell that I’m not a genealogist) because I found it difficult to see how Mac could have made such an assumption. On reflection though perhaps it’s not so surprising - someone makes the error, Mac hears of it and it’s then assumed true and no big deal is made of it so it’s never questioned. We all know how something that isn’t true can become accepted until someone like you decides to check.
                          As an amateur genealogist, I wouldn't 100% rule out a very distant connection, but it's quite possible surnames have completely different origins. To use a more common example, people named Smith are descended from someone who worked as a smith, but they aren't descended from the same smith. That's before we get to immigrant names like Schmidt getting anglicized.

                          "The full picture always needs to be given. When this does not happen, we are left to make decisions on insufficient information." - Christer Holmgren

                          "Unfortunately, when one becomes obsessed by a theory, truth and logic rarely matter." - Steven Blomer

                          Comment

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