Paul Begg, among others, argued very cogently in 'The Facts' that Sir Melville Macnaghten, in both versions of his Report, seems to be relying almost entirely on PC Moulson's Report about the Druitt's body's recovery, and perhaps a newspaper article which mentioned that the corpse looked about 40and that the dead man seemed to live with family.
That's pretty much what is in the Mac Reports, especially in the Aberconway version -- the draft or backdated rewrite -- including, for example, the tiny but correct detail about the season train pass.
Why on earth Macnaghten thought Druitt was also a doctor Begg could not fathom, speculating --very sensibly -- that perhaps some confusion over the third missing medical student has entered the equation.
However, I am challenging this paradigm for two reasons.
Firstly, the Tory MP Farquharson knew Druitt, and knew Macnaghten, therefore originally the Etonian Super-cop almost certainly did have access to an accurate source on Druitt in 1891.
Confirmation of this theory comes from George Sims' writings which have tended not to have been thoroughly analysed as probable insight into Macnaghten's further, and/or fading knowledge of Druitt.
In the article about the inquest it emtnions William Druitt's frantic attempts to find his brother. By 19103 and 1907 , in Sims, this has become frantic friends who are trying to locate the 'doctor' after he has vanished from where he lives. [A doctor who has been recently in a madhouse.]
This detail is not in PC Moulson's report.
Also, the Druitt parents have seemingly been subsumed into their son; the father a doctor and the mother being in a madhouse.
Is that really just a co-incidence?
This is, I argue, further confirmation that either Mac began to forget the facts about Druitt, and jumble them up in later years, or he was deliberately jumbling them up to be discreet. Either way, Macnaghten originally knew more than just the Bobbie's report on the contents of the water-logged corpse's pockets.
That's pretty much what is in the Mac Reports, especially in the Aberconway version -- the draft or backdated rewrite -- including, for example, the tiny but correct detail about the season train pass.
Why on earth Macnaghten thought Druitt was also a doctor Begg could not fathom, speculating --very sensibly -- that perhaps some confusion over the third missing medical student has entered the equation.
However, I am challenging this paradigm for two reasons.
Firstly, the Tory MP Farquharson knew Druitt, and knew Macnaghten, therefore originally the Etonian Super-cop almost certainly did have access to an accurate source on Druitt in 1891.
Confirmation of this theory comes from George Sims' writings which have tended not to have been thoroughly analysed as probable insight into Macnaghten's further, and/or fading knowledge of Druitt.
In the article about the inquest it emtnions William Druitt's frantic attempts to find his brother. By 19103 and 1907 , in Sims, this has become frantic friends who are trying to locate the 'doctor' after he has vanished from where he lives. [A doctor who has been recently in a madhouse.]
This detail is not in PC Moulson's report.
Also, the Druitt parents have seemingly been subsumed into their son; the father a doctor and the mother being in a madhouse.
Is that really just a co-incidence?
This is, I argue, further confirmation that either Mac began to forget the facts about Druitt, and jumble them up in later years, or he was deliberately jumbling them up to be discreet. Either way, Macnaghten originally knew more than just the Bobbie's report on the contents of the water-logged corpse's pockets.
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