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  • Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post
    OK, I'll be more precise.

    The conventional wisdom is of course not monolithic.

    There are different camps.

    Which falls into two streams: credible and plausible followed by the incredible and ludicrous.

    In the first category are Aaron Kosminski, David Cohen, 'Dr.' Tumblety and George Chapman.

    In the second, to name only a few, are Matter's vengeful medico, Le Queux's de-facto novel about the Czarist Secret Service (thanks Rasputin!), all the convulsions of the Royal Watergate, the hoax diary (and hoax watch) and the brilliant though sleazy artist-as-killer.

    And then there's Montague Druitt, a suspect 'debunked', to differing degress depending on the secondary source, because the only police chief who seems to know about him knows hardly anything accurate about him -- so that takes care of that.

    These different camps, therefore, are in a loose alliance that Macnaghten is not a reliable source, to put it mildly for some. That he cannot be accepted at face value regarding his 1913 comments and 1914 memoirs (both sources often excluded) that he had 'laid' to rest the 'ghost' of a long-dead fiend who was -- professionally speaking as a sleuth -- 'remarkable', and 'fascinating', and 'Protean'.

    The identification of Farquhrason was an extraordinary breakthrough, as it bridged the 1889 obits with his reappearance in Mac's Report, therefore 'belief' in Druitt as 'Jack' precedes Macnaghten -- whether he was later sly or forgetful.
    Jonathan,
    Whilst appreciating that Kosminski sits atop the suspects totem pole and occupies the position once held by Druitt, Druitt still occupies second place and snaps at Kosminski's heels. But neither need have been Jack the Ripper and the cynical among us probably feel that neither of them were. What distinguished Kosminski, however, is not so much Macnaghten's reliability as the fact that Anderson apparently gains corroboration of sorts from Swanson, and Anderson is definite whilst Macnaghten is conjectural (although I suspect they were both conjectural). Now, in saying that anyone is at the top of the totem pole, what we mean is in terms of prioritisation of time and resources. Thus a statement of fact (irrespective of it ultimately probably being conjectural) based on presumed evidence and a claimed positive eye-witness identification, tacit probable corroboration from another source, and both sources being senior, informed officers active in the investigation at the time, must inevitably put it ahead of a policeman who was senior and informed, but not active in the investigation, who was openly conjectural, and was basing his conclusion on second-hand information received from an unknown source.

    But that doesn't undercut Macnaghten or diminish Druitt. As I repeatedly say, we don't really know the evidence on which either conclusion was based, so we can't assess it. In that respect they are equal suspects, both worthy of investigation. There is no competition. A argument that Druitt was Jack the Ripper does not depend on eradicating Kosminski first. Or vice cersa.

    Comment


    • Originally posted by Jeff Leahy View Post
      Thats an interesting point. Has anyone ever checked the Grande Hotel register?

      Probably teaching grand mother here but I could drop them an email an see if it still exists?

      Thanks for clarification

      Yours Jeff
      You'd have to check hotels existing there in 1891 and I doubt any of them would have hotel registers going back that far, but one never knows!

      Comment


      • Well big men tell big lies.Only ever met one person who I believed would never lie.His comment was that he would if the occasion demanded it.As to the identification,comments suggest other police than Anderson and Swanson attended,and as Trevor has pointed out,police procedures were such that written reports would undoubtably have been submitted.I would also,a ccepting Trevor's police experience over those without.was that a police silence on what was the biggesr story in years, was very unlikely to have remained the years it has.

        Comment


        • Originally posted by PaulB View Post
          You'd have to check hotels existing there in 1891 and I doubt any of them would have hotel registers going back that far, but one never knows!
          The Grande Hotel Brighton was built in 1864. It was designed for the well to do.

          How many Hotels existed in Brighton at this time? Well we probably require a local Historian.

          Yours jeff

          Comment


          • Originally posted by harry View Post
            Well big men tell big lies.Only ever met one person who I believed would never lie.His comment was that he would if the occasion demanded it.As to the identification,comments suggest other police than Anderson and Swanson attended,and as Trevor has pointed out,police procedures were such that written reports would undoubtably have been submitted.I would also,a ccepting Trevor's police experience over those without.was that a police silence on what was the biggesr story in years, was very unlikely to have remained the years it has.
            Thank you for beliveing in a common sense approach but now stand back and wait for the barrage of usual comments i.e well all of these reports could have been "lost stolen or destroyed"

            and I say again why didnt anyone directly involved talk about it or discuss it over the ensuing years ?

            Comment


            • To PaulB

              I think that is a generous and ecumenical summation, and much of it I agree with.

              The Polish Jew was believed by the top cop(s) who was there for the entire investigation, who was himself a complex person, but one of integrity.

              You also repeat elements of a paradigm, now arguably redundant.

              Macnaghten was just as certain as Anderson as his memoirs show.

              'Conjections' and 'I incline to the belief' and 'that remarkable man' are all Old Etonian/upper class understatement for totally convinced.

              Sims wrote of the 'drowned doctor' as the one and only solution and Macnaghten did not correct him when he spoke to him, or for himself in 1913 and wrote for himself in 1914.

              You can draw a straight line as strong as a main-circuit cable, regarding that theme of certainty, from the '1891 West of England' MP sources (thanks Paul), Mac's filed Report (family's certainty) 'Aberconway' (Mac's certainty) Griffiths, the Vicar, Sims, Mac's 1913 comments and the 1914 memoirs.

              Also, Macnaghten was there to posthumously investigate Druitt 'some years after' via Farquharson and the family. Why wouldn't he talk to the brother? why wouldn't he, the 'action man', at the very least look up the 1889 press reports?

              We also do have a source that, if about Druitt as seems likely, does provide us with the gist of the secret info: some kind of tormented implosion causing him to confess to a priest.

              The mythical version has a confession in deed, via an insane, impulsive, penitential act of suicide, whereas the truth was much more messy and appalling: a confession in word and then a cold, clinical suicide.

              Finally, Macnaghten is arguably more reliable about 'Kosminski' because he knew two very critical things about this 'suspect' which Anderson and/or Swanson did not: he was not dead and he was not sectioned soon after the final murder, but out and about for a considerable length of time.

              Right on both counts.

              The theory that Anderson weighed up the evidence against Druitt, or something like that, is not backed in the extent record. There is nothing to indicate that he knew anything about that suspect at all.

              We have one source(s), Mac, which evaluates two suspects -- pushing for one and dumping the other -- and we have another source(s), Anderson, which pushes for only one, the one who was dumped. That arguably makes the former stronger than the latter, as an historical source.

              Comment


              • Water off a duck's back,Trevor.

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post
                  To PaulB

                  I think that is a generous and ecumenical summation, and much of it I agree with.

                  The Polish Jew was believed by the top cop(s) who was there for the entire investigation, who was himself a complex person, but one of integrity.

                  You also repeat elements of a paradigm, now arguably redundant.

                  Macnaghten was just as certain as Anderson as his memoirs show.

                  'Conjections' and 'I incline to the belief' and 'that remarkable man' are all Old Etonian/upper class understatement for totally convinced.
                  True. But he nevertheless stated it was conjectural - "if my conjectures be correct" - which Anderson didn't. But it's only one of several reasons which put Druitt atop the totem pole. That said, it is a totem pole of prioritization, not a suspect hit parade. If the researcher wants to give over their time to someone else then all power to them.

                  Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post
                  Sims wrote of the 'drowned doctor' as the one and only solution and Macnaghten did not correct him when he spoke to him, or for himself in 1913 and wrote for himself in 1914.
                  Sims is a secondary source who may not have been so fully informed by Macnaghten as you think because he was arguably fishing from further information from Littlechild. But it doesn't make any difference. It's all part of the "evidence" against Druitt. As said, this isn't a competition.

                  Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post
                  You can draw a straight line as strong as a main-circuit cable, regarding that theme of certainty, from the '1891 West of England' MP sources (thanks Paul), Mac's filed Report (family's certainty) 'Aberconway' (Mac's certainty) Griffiths, the Vicar, Sims, Mac's 1913 comments and the 1914 memoirs.

                  Also, Macnaghten was there to posthumously investigate Druitt 'some years after' via Farquharson and the family. Why wouldn't he talk to the brother? why wouldn't he, the 'action man', at the very least look up the 1889 press reports?
                  No reason at all. He was in a position to know the facts, albeit a good delal of it at second or third hand and reflectively, but why do you think Macnaghten/Druitt is rated so highly?

                  Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post
                  We also do have a source that, if about Druitt as seems likely, does provide us with the gist of the secret info: some kind of tormented implosion causing him to confess to a priest.

                  The mythical version has a confession in deed, via an insane, impulsive, penitential act of suicide, whereas the truth was much more messy and appalling: a confession in word and then a cold, clinical suicide.

                  Finally, Macnaghten is arguably more reliable about 'Kosminski' because he knew two very critical things about this 'suspect' which Anderson and/or Swanson did not: he was not dead and he was not sectioned soon after the final murder, but out and about for a considerable length of time.
                  Ah, there you go and spoil it all. Tormented implosions, mythical versions, and Macnaghten knowing more about Kosminski than Anderson. All contentious and unnecessary to your thesis.

                  Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post

                  The theory that Anderson weighed up the evidence against Druitt, or something like that, is not backed in the extent record. There is nothing to indicate that he knew anything about that suspect at all.

                  We have one source(s), Mac, which evaluates two suspects -- pushing for one and dumping the other -- and we have another source(s), Anderson, which pushes for only one, the one who was dumped. That arguably makes the former stronger than the latter, as an historical source.
                  I don't recall anyone saying that Anderson did know about Druitt, although I suggest that his fury would have known no bounds if he discovered that a subordinate officer had been withholding crucial information about the Ripper case. In some respects the idea that Macnaghten did not convey his private information to Anderson casts doubt on him and it, whereas Anderson knowing all about it and rejecting it in favour of his own conclusion is well in-keeping.

                  And sadly I have to strongly disagree with your final paragraph. Simply because Macnaghten chose to name three suspects and pushed his favoured candidate means little. Similarly, why does Anderson's reference to one suspect, Kosminski, preclude him having given full consideration to other ones? The point is that if any weight is to be attached to the three named suspects, that is to say if they were more than just more likely to have been the Ripper than Cutbush, then there were many circs which made Kosminski a good suspect. The fact that Macnaghten gave greater weight to Druitt isn't really surprising. We can't tell whether he was right to do so or not.

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
                    Thank you for beliveing in a common sense approach but now stand back and wait for the barrage of usual comments i.e well all of these reports could have been "lost stolen or destroyed"

                    and I say again why didnt anyone directly involved talk about it or discuss it over the ensuing years ?
                    Can you read? If you can, why can't you get it into your head that nobody is saying the reports may have been lost, stolen or destroyed. They are saying that you can't say they never existed when most of the documentation on the case has been destroyed and none of what survives refers to suspects.

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by harry View Post
                      Well big men tell big lies.Only ever met one person who I believed would never lie.His comment was that he would if the occasion demanded it.As to the identification,comments suggest other police than Anderson and Swanson attended,and as Trevor has pointed out,police procedures were such that written reports would undoubtably have been submitted.I would also,a ccepting Trevor's police experience over those without.was that a police silence on what was the biggesr story in years, was very unlikely to have remained the years it has.
                      So, if I understand your position correctly you are saying that if the identification had taken place then documentation would have been generated and as no documentation exists then the identification ever took place. And you believe this despite the fact that the existing documentation is a fraction of what once existed and despite the fact that it doesn't mention any suspects at all, even known suspects like Tumblety about whom we're told a file existed. Is that what you think?

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post
                        We have one source(s), Mac, which evaluates two suspects -- pushing for one and dumping the other -- and we have another source(s), Anderson, which pushes for only one, the one who was dumped. That arguably makes the former stronger than the latter, as an historical source.
                        Hi JH

                        Please don't fall into the trap of thinking that Anderson was actually referring to Kosminski.

                        He names no names. Whoops, a double negative
                        allisvanityandvexationofspirit

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by PaulB View Post
                          Can you read? If you can, why can't you get it into your head that nobody is saying the reports may have been lost, stolen or destroyed. They are saying that you can't say they never existed when most of the documentation on the case has been destroyed and none of what survives refers to suspects.
                          People are continually saying this and using it as an excuse to prop up the belief that this nonesenesical ID parade ever took place anyhwhere else other than perhaps in the case of sadler.

                          You can dress your answers up in any way choose but the end result is still the same. If the reports existed as you say what happened to them, oh excuse me I think I have already answered that

                          So what explantaion have you got for the fact that if it ever did take place someone from those involved would have talked or given a press interview in the ensuing years. The silence speaks volumes.

                          Comment


                          • As ever we agree to disagree, without being disagreeable.

                            Thanks for going to all that trouble, Paul, and for treating me as if I am on the same level as yourself -- as a published writer/researcher on this subject -- when I am not. You do this with everybody, and with a complete lack of airs and graces.

                            I would just round it off by writing that the mythical version of Druitt is not my invention; it is Sims' profile, which I believe came from Mac because each exaggerated, deflective element is inspired by the real Druitt.

                            The tormented element comes from both Macnaghten and Sims too.

                            Sims, is, by the way, a primary source about Mac's opinion.

                            It is Macnaghten who dumped 'Kosminski' (and the hapless Ostrog), and I am trying to theorise as to why (everybody now agrees with him about Ostrog).

                            And that I think that Macnaghten's information on Druitt was only once removed. He never met the killer himself, obviously, but I believe he met with the priest, quite possibly Montie's cousin, to whom 'Jack' had confessed. From that cleric he learnt of the bizarre time-bomb which has going to go off in the media in seven or so years: that Montie wanted the ghastly truth to all come out in a decade?!

                            The family (or the priest) were going to meet their deceased's wish, but they would veil the truth to protect their own reps by openly disseminating 'substantial truth in fictitious form'.

                            Three years later Mac wrote about Druitt in exactly the same way in a Report (though hedged in the official version) then, years later, on the eve of the Vicar's tale he artfully disseminated his own veiled version -- but that it is also a mixture of fact and fiction ('family' morphed into 'friends') is concealed from the public.

                            Mac even had the entire Yard take credit for nearly arresting the 'drowned doctor'.

                            I think that this was deceit, and that such an M.O. on this case extended to what he told and did not tell his despised superior.

                            Otherwise we have a rolling set of coincidences which strain credulity.

                            Consider finally that Mac believes that his Ripper is deceased. He is. Anderson believes that his Ripper is also deceased. He isn't. And the former knew that too.

                            Comment


                            • [QUOTE=Cogidubnus;213615]
                              But why would a copper express recognition but then fail to come up for the start?

                              Now that's a very good question.

                              So it's the Jewish Convalescent Seaside Home? Is that what you're suggesting Bridewell?

                              I was going with the notion that what was meant was a Police Convalescent Home, but i wouldn't rule out other possibilities.

                              Regards, Bridewell.
                              I won't always agree but I'll try not to be disagreeable.

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
                                People are continually saying this and using it as an excuse to prop up the belief that this nonesenesical ID parade ever took place anyhwhere else other than perhaps in the case of sadler.

                                You can dress your answers up in any way choose but the end result is still the same. If the reports existed as you say what happened to them, oh excuse me I think I have already answered that

                                So what explantaion have you got for the fact that if it ever did take place someone from those involved would have talked or given a press interview in the ensuing years. The silence speaks volumes.
                                Apart from Cox and Sagar you mean

                                Hey perhaps that missing paper work is sitting next to your supposed re-examination of the Marginalia. Created by your mysterious doctor of hand writing

                                Jeff

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