The following information in the A-Z (pp. 479, 480) was new to me.
Someone has evidently traced some of Smith's descendants. It seems that on his retirement in 1910 he emigrated to Canada with his family. He died in 1951. A photograph of him (and his wife?) in old age is included. There are two interesting statements:
(1) "According to his family, he was very disillusioned and bitter over the way he was treated in the Ripper case."
(2) He "would not be drawn to talk about the case, but eventually opened up and his son formed the impression that there had been a royal connection and some kind of cover-up, which had left a bad taste in his father's mouth."
Someone has evidently traced some of Smith's descendants. It seems that on his retirement in 1910 he emigrated to Canada with his family. He died in 1951. A photograph of him (and his wife?) in old age is included. There are two interesting statements:
(1) "According to his family, he was very disillusioned and bitter over the way he was treated in the Ripper case."
(2) He "would not be drawn to talk about the case, but eventually opened up and his son formed the impression that there had been a royal connection and some kind of cover-up, which had left a bad taste in his father's mouth."
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