A poster asked me what I thought about the theory that Macnaghten seems to have made reference to the Ripper being connected to a putative Irish plot against the relevant Tory minister, Balfour, in 1888.
Could this is be -- at a stretch -- an oblique reference to police agitation over Dr. Tumblety?
In my opinion, the answer is a strong no.
The reference from Doug Browne ['The Rise of Scotland Yard', 1956] is so at odds with everything else Macnaghten wrote about the case, even though he is a topsy-turvy figure, I think this is a gyration too far.
In Browne's book he makes no reference to seeing classified Special Branch files to do with Mac. That's an assumption, and a good one, but perhaps unnecessary.
On the same page as the startling comment about Mac, Browne is writing about Anderson's memoirs [and his Polish Jew suspect] and then that another Assistant Commissioner 'identified' the fiend with the Balfour plot.
In my opinion Browne is misreading the last lines of Mac's memoirs about the Ripper 'knocking out an [un-named] police commissioner' and very nearly 'settling the hash' of an [un-named] sec. of state. Of course, Mac means Warren and Matthews.
Like an early writer on the case [Leonard Matters I recall?] Browne has mistakenly taken those metaphorical words of Mac literally. Therefore, Browne wondered which minister the Ripper was threatening, and finding only some sort of plot against Arthur Balfour in 1888, he has put the two together.
It seems that Browne never had access to the Mac Report, official version, which would have told him that perhaps M J Druitt was the same suicided suspect as the one Mac alludes to -- without details -- in 'Days of My Years'.
In other words, if it really was a reference to Mac, the Irish terrorists and the Ripper, one would expect Browne to discreetly mention that this Assistant Commissioner seemed to have changed his mind about the best Ripper suspect.
He does not ...
Now whether Mac was hiding Druitt-in-Tumblety, or Tumblety-in-Druitt via the 'Drowned Doctor' mythos is an entirely separate line of competing arguments.
Could this is be -- at a stretch -- an oblique reference to police agitation over Dr. Tumblety?
In my opinion, the answer is a strong no.
The reference from Doug Browne ['The Rise of Scotland Yard', 1956] is so at odds with everything else Macnaghten wrote about the case, even though he is a topsy-turvy figure, I think this is a gyration too far.
In Browne's book he makes no reference to seeing classified Special Branch files to do with Mac. That's an assumption, and a good one, but perhaps unnecessary.
On the same page as the startling comment about Mac, Browne is writing about Anderson's memoirs [and his Polish Jew suspect] and then that another Assistant Commissioner 'identified' the fiend with the Balfour plot.
In my opinion Browne is misreading the last lines of Mac's memoirs about the Ripper 'knocking out an [un-named] police commissioner' and very nearly 'settling the hash' of an [un-named] sec. of state. Of course, Mac means Warren and Matthews.
Like an early writer on the case [Leonard Matters I recall?] Browne has mistakenly taken those metaphorical words of Mac literally. Therefore, Browne wondered which minister the Ripper was threatening, and finding only some sort of plot against Arthur Balfour in 1888, he has put the two together.
It seems that Browne never had access to the Mac Report, official version, which would have told him that perhaps M J Druitt was the same suicided suspect as the one Mac alludes to -- without details -- in 'Days of My Years'.
In other words, if it really was a reference to Mac, the Irish terrorists and the Ripper, one would expect Browne to discreetly mention that this Assistant Commissioner seemed to have changed his mind about the best Ripper suspect.
He does not ...
Now whether Mac was hiding Druitt-in-Tumblety, or Tumblety-in-Druitt via the 'Drowned Doctor' mythos is an entirely separate line of competing arguments.
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