Memory
Anderson wrote his The Lighter Side of my Official Life articles and book in 1909-10 when he was 68 years old. Swanson was seven years younger.
We have seen references in this thread as to Anderson's mental faculties at that time. Although he had been referring to his 'safely caged in an asylum' theory for many years, most notably in 1901 and 1907, it was not until the 1910 publication that the 'Polish Jew' and 'definitely ascertained fact' enlargements were made. Anderson's claim that the identity of the murderer was known to the police might lead you to think that this would be the consensus of opinion amongst the police officers involved. Unfortunately, as we all know, this is not the case. The only support we have is Swanson's annotations. True Macnaghten mentions 'Kosminski' in 1894 but that carries the qualifiers that 'no one ever saw the Whitechapel Murderer' and 'no shadow of proof could be thrown on any one'.
H. L. Adam noted that Anderson 'was sometimes rather mysterious' and noted that 'His memory also apparently began to fail him, and he fell into the error of mixing cases. For instance, in reference to the Penge murder which I was discussing with him, he said, or rather wrote, "I am too tired to-night to recall it. But I think it was a nightdress that the officer was put to watch - its hiding place having been discovered, and when he awoke it was gone, carried off, they supposed, by Alice Rhodes." He was clearly mixing up the Penge case with that of the Road murder, in which a woman's nightdress figured prominently.'
This might have been a bad example for Adam to use given the fact that Anderson was self-admittedly tired and recalling cases that had not fallen under his purview. But the point remains that Adam had noted that Anderson's memory had begun to fail at that time. These are all considerations that should be taken into account.
Anderson wrote his The Lighter Side of my Official Life articles and book in 1909-10 when he was 68 years old. Swanson was seven years younger.
We have seen references in this thread as to Anderson's mental faculties at that time. Although he had been referring to his 'safely caged in an asylum' theory for many years, most notably in 1901 and 1907, it was not until the 1910 publication that the 'Polish Jew' and 'definitely ascertained fact' enlargements were made. Anderson's claim that the identity of the murderer was known to the police might lead you to think that this would be the consensus of opinion amongst the police officers involved. Unfortunately, as we all know, this is not the case. The only support we have is Swanson's annotations. True Macnaghten mentions 'Kosminski' in 1894 but that carries the qualifiers that 'no one ever saw the Whitechapel Murderer' and 'no shadow of proof could be thrown on any one'.
H. L. Adam noted that Anderson 'was sometimes rather mysterious' and noted that 'His memory also apparently began to fail him, and he fell into the error of mixing cases. For instance, in reference to the Penge murder which I was discussing with him, he said, or rather wrote, "I am too tired to-night to recall it. But I think it was a nightdress that the officer was put to watch - its hiding place having been discovered, and when he awoke it was gone, carried off, they supposed, by Alice Rhodes." He was clearly mixing up the Penge case with that of the Road murder, in which a woman's nightdress figured prominently.'
This might have been a bad example for Adam to use given the fact that Anderson was self-admittedly tired and recalling cases that had not fallen under his purview. But the point remains that Adam had noted that Anderson's memory had begun to fail at that time. These are all considerations that should be taken into account.
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