Lady Christabel Aberconway was the daughter of Sir Melville Macnaghten.
It often seems to me that Macnaghten minimised the street stabbings,after which Thomas Cutbush was placed in Broadmoor.
I wonder how Sir Melville Macnaghten would have reacted,for example,had it been his daughter,Lady Christabel Aberconway, who had been stabbed from behind with a bowie knife with a six inch blade, when walking in a London street? And when she found herself to be bleeding profusely and traumatised as a result would Sir Melville have said to her,"Oh Christabel,please calm down,it was only poor demented Thomas ,not long out of the loony bin,he was just being playful with his toy dagger.And let us not forget that his Uncle Charlie is our very own dear old Charlie Cutbush from the Commissioners Office at Scotland Yard.....why all it amounts to is that he was
" merely prodding a girl behind "
[the above words, in parenthesis, were Sir Melville Macnaghten"s own words when he was later comparing in his 1894 memorandum the malicious wounding of Florence Grace Johnson and another young woman by Thomas Cutbush in a Kennington Street in 1891 with the work of Jack The Ripper in 1888].
It often seems to me that Macnaghten minimised the street stabbings,after which Thomas Cutbush was placed in Broadmoor.
I wonder how Sir Melville Macnaghten would have reacted,for example,had it been his daughter,Lady Christabel Aberconway, who had been stabbed from behind with a bowie knife with a six inch blade, when walking in a London street? And when she found herself to be bleeding profusely and traumatised as a result would Sir Melville have said to her,"Oh Christabel,please calm down,it was only poor demented Thomas ,not long out of the loony bin,he was just being playful with his toy dagger.And let us not forget that his Uncle Charlie is our very own dear old Charlie Cutbush from the Commissioners Office at Scotland Yard.....why all it amounts to is that he was
" merely prodding a girl behind "
[the above words, in parenthesis, were Sir Melville Macnaghten"s own words when he was later comparing in his 1894 memorandum the malicious wounding of Florence Grace Johnson and another young woman by Thomas Cutbush in a Kennington Street in 1891 with the work of Jack The Ripper in 1888].
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