The article below caught my interest. The brief description, admittedly fairly vague, and the mention of Griffith's theory about the doctor in the Thames, could point to Druitt as the man in the confessional.
Chris
Illustrated Police News
28 January 1899
IDENTITY OF "JACK THE RIPPER"
A SECRET OF THE CONFESSIONAL
To the long list of "solutions" of the great "Jack the Ripper" mystery, there is now added another - possibly the final one, possibly not.
It comes from a clergyman of the Church of England, a north country vicar, who claims to know with certainty the identity of the most
terrible figure in the the bloodstained annals of crime - the perpetrator of that horrible series of East end murders which ten years ago startled the whole civilised world.
The clergyman in question declines to divulge the name of the culprit, being unable to do so without violating the secrecy of the confessional. He states, however, that he obtained his information from a brother clergyman to whom the murderer made a full and complete confession.
The vicar writes:-
"I received information in professional confidence, with directions to publish the facts after ten years, and then with such alterations as might defeat identification.
The murderer was a man of good position and otherwise unblemished character, who suffered from epileptic mania, and is long since deceased.
I must ask you not to give my name, as it might lead to identification."
The ten years were completed on November 9 last year, the final murder of the "Ripper" series having taken place on November 9, 1888, in Miller's Court. There was a time when everybody had his pet theory as to the murders, but apart from speculation quite a number of solutions of the mystery have had a more or less substantial foundation of probability.
Major Arthur Griffiths, one of Her Majesty's Commissioners of Prisons, hints, in his new book, "Mysteries of Police and Crime," that the police
believe the assassin to have been a doctor, bordering on insanity, whose body was found in the Thames soon after the last murder of the series. He adds, however, that this man was one of three whom the police suspected. Then there was the madman who was traced to Broadmoor some five or six years ago, and against whom there was believed to be conclusive evidence; while Professor Bell of Edinburgh, who was a prominent figure in the investigation of the Ardlamont mystery, used to declare that he also had definitely "spotted" the culprit.
The clergyman who now comes forward with the latest identification declares that the assassin died shortly after the last murder of the
series.
Chris
Illustrated Police News
28 January 1899
IDENTITY OF "JACK THE RIPPER"
A SECRET OF THE CONFESSIONAL
To the long list of "solutions" of the great "Jack the Ripper" mystery, there is now added another - possibly the final one, possibly not.
It comes from a clergyman of the Church of England, a north country vicar, who claims to know with certainty the identity of the most
terrible figure in the the bloodstained annals of crime - the perpetrator of that horrible series of East end murders which ten years ago startled the whole civilised world.
The clergyman in question declines to divulge the name of the culprit, being unable to do so without violating the secrecy of the confessional. He states, however, that he obtained his information from a brother clergyman to whom the murderer made a full and complete confession.
The vicar writes:-
"I received information in professional confidence, with directions to publish the facts after ten years, and then with such alterations as might defeat identification.
The murderer was a man of good position and otherwise unblemished character, who suffered from epileptic mania, and is long since deceased.
I must ask you not to give my name, as it might lead to identification."
The ten years were completed on November 9 last year, the final murder of the "Ripper" series having taken place on November 9, 1888, in Miller's Court. There was a time when everybody had his pet theory as to the murders, but apart from speculation quite a number of solutions of the mystery have had a more or less substantial foundation of probability.
Major Arthur Griffiths, one of Her Majesty's Commissioners of Prisons, hints, in his new book, "Mysteries of Police and Crime," that the police
believe the assassin to have been a doctor, bordering on insanity, whose body was found in the Thames soon after the last murder of the series. He adds, however, that this man was one of three whom the police suspected. Then there was the madman who was traced to Broadmoor some five or six years ago, and against whom there was believed to be conclusive evidence; while Professor Bell of Edinburgh, who was a prominent figure in the investigation of the Ardlamont mystery, used to declare that he also had definitely "spotted" the culprit.
The clergyman who now comes forward with the latest identification declares that the assassin died shortly after the last murder of the
series.
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