My interpretation of Macnaghten in his 1913 comments, his shaping of the narrative via Sims in 1907, and his memoris of 1914, is that he was very much quashing the notion that the best suspect to be the Ripper was a Polish Jew (or a Russian doctor, or an American medico) and that there was only one 'Jack': an English suicide, though a posthumous suspect.
Consider this also:
In the primary sources between 1891 and 1917 the suicided suspect is the paramount suspect according to Macnaghten and his cronies.
Whereas the Polish Jew suspect is a sideshow.
How do the sources stack up, balanced like that? Why aren't Macnaghten and Anderson in equipoise?
Because, arguably, Macnaghten and co. specifically mention both suspects, whereas Anderson seems oblivious about the drowned doctor (understandably).
This is purely from an historical point of view, not legal or forensic.
The drowned doctor is ascendant, and the Polish Jew is sidelined in the Edwardian era.
Later research will cut both ways about the real figures who lay behind the top cops' prognostications: Druitt was not a middle-aged doctor, or a rich recluse, or an asylum veteran. But Aaron Kosminski was also not 'safely cgaed' mere 'weeks' after the autumn of terror, not is it likely that once once he was forever sectioned that he was confronted with an eyewitness.
And Mac's memoirs do not confirm, in fact pointedly distance themselves from the 'drowned doctor' profile, and he also -- in a mixture of sources -- knows that 'Kosminski' wasn't dead and was out and about for years after Kelly.
the theory of many excellent secondary sources that the Polish Jew was actually the better suspect is a reasonable theory to argue.
But it it a revisionist take on the primary sources left to us.
To reverse the clock back to 1898, to Druitt being the best suspect and Macnaghten as the policeman who is the most reliable source -- by a country mile -- is thus a restoration of the original balance of the primary sources.
It's just an observation, as I often loosely throw around the word 'revisionist' when arguably I am seeking to restore an historical paradigm.
With Aaron Kosminski as the best suspect, secondary sources have arguably and understandably elevated and trumped a number of more reliable primary sources, and that perhaps this is not as strong an argument as it may have first appeared over twenty years ago?
Consider this also:
In the primary sources between 1891 and 1917 the suicided suspect is the paramount suspect according to Macnaghten and his cronies.
Whereas the Polish Jew suspect is a sideshow.
How do the sources stack up, balanced like that? Why aren't Macnaghten and Anderson in equipoise?
Because, arguably, Macnaghten and co. specifically mention both suspects, whereas Anderson seems oblivious about the drowned doctor (understandably).
This is purely from an historical point of view, not legal or forensic.
The drowned doctor is ascendant, and the Polish Jew is sidelined in the Edwardian era.
Later research will cut both ways about the real figures who lay behind the top cops' prognostications: Druitt was not a middle-aged doctor, or a rich recluse, or an asylum veteran. But Aaron Kosminski was also not 'safely cgaed' mere 'weeks' after the autumn of terror, not is it likely that once once he was forever sectioned that he was confronted with an eyewitness.
And Mac's memoirs do not confirm, in fact pointedly distance themselves from the 'drowned doctor' profile, and he also -- in a mixture of sources -- knows that 'Kosminski' wasn't dead and was out and about for years after Kelly.
the theory of many excellent secondary sources that the Polish Jew was actually the better suspect is a reasonable theory to argue.
But it it a revisionist take on the primary sources left to us.
To reverse the clock back to 1898, to Druitt being the best suspect and Macnaghten as the policeman who is the most reliable source -- by a country mile -- is thus a restoration of the original balance of the primary sources.
It's just an observation, as I often loosely throw around the word 'revisionist' when arguably I am seeking to restore an historical paradigm.
With Aaron Kosminski as the best suspect, secondary sources have arguably and understandably elevated and trumped a number of more reliable primary sources, and that perhaps this is not as strong an argument as it may have first appeared over twenty years ago?
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