Originally posted by Cogidubnus
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Upon what basis did the Druitt family suspect Montague?
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Three things in life that don't stay hidden for to long ones the sun ones the moon and the other is the truth
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Originally posted by Mayerling View PostHi Caz,
I like that phrase (and you are not the only one who uses it) of "innocent slumming". Think of the situation - in a normally dangerous neighborhood for middle class types not usually found there - in an especially dangerous period with a horrendous serial killer on the loose - in a geographic area known for "penny a dozen" prostitutes - after dark (presumably 10 P.M. to 4 A.M. or so). What would be innocent about being there for somebody like Montie or my imaginary straw man "X"? Are they admiring the architecture or the design of the various streets? Doing research for sociological papers ("The Sex Lives of East End Socialists and Communists in a Time of Panic - An Answer to Mr. Charles Booth")? "Innocent slumming" indeed.
Love,
Jeff
There are accounts (Fishman?) of middle-class types who would rent a room in Whitechapel for a few days to sample the night life. Not all of them may have appreciated the danger they exposed themselves to. Some may have been lucky, and others found out the hard way.
The fact remains, outsiders did choose to 'doss' among the dregs of humanity for the 'thrill' and cheap sex.Regards, Jon S.
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Originally posted by pinkmoon View Postwe need to remember that a lot of people who were in the area at the time of the murders we up to no good themselves.I have always thought that some one might well have seen killer at work or even disturbed him and not gone to the police.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostHi Jeff.
There are accounts (Fishman?) of middle-class types who would rent a room in Whitechapel for a few days to sample the night life. Not all of them may have appreciated the danger they exposed themselves to. Some may have been lucky, and others found out the hard way.
The fact remains, outsiders did choose to 'doss' among the dregs of humanity for the 'thrill' and cheap sex.
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Maybe Druitt's family did genuinely wonder if Monty was the Ripper, but I wonder how many other families thought likewise concerning their absentee or behaving-strangely sons, grandsons, nephews, cousins and so forth.
GrahamWe are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze
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Originally posted by Graham View PostMaybe Druitt's family did genuinely wonder if Monty was the Ripper, but I wonder how many other families thought likewise concerning their absentee or behaving-strangely sons, grandsons, nephews, cousins and so forth.
Graham
Given his position as Chief Constable, he would naturally be aware of the numerous false accusations wasting police time and causing unnecessary paperwork.
Which then begs the question, why was this instance deserving of Mac's attention?Regards, Jon S.
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Which then begs the question, why was this instance deserving of Mac's attention?
On the old boards, I posed the question that the cheque, season-ticket, etc., found on Druitt's corpse seemed to be in relatively pristine and readable condition for perishable items that had been in the cess-pit known as The Thames for 'upwards of a month'. In other words, had Druitt's body really been in the river for that length of time? What condition was his body in? I never really got an answer to these questions.
Maybe someone did tip Mac the wink that Druitt was not your ordinary, everyday suicide; we'll never know. I'm only slightly concerned that Mac got Druitt's profession wrong, and such a basic detail does, for me at least, somewhat blur his, Mac's, reliability.
Donald McCormick (Mr Reliable himself) wrote that he had heard that Druitt was being blackmailed by some unknown person accusing him of being The Ripper, and this is why Druitt went slightly bonkers. Sickert also wrote of a Ripper suspect he had heard of as being Drewitt, or Hewitt, and that he had mentioned this to Mac when they met (or so Sickert claimed) at the Garrick Club. However, Sickert described 'his' Druitt as a 'veterinary student'. It must also be taken into account that Mac claimed he had personally destroyed a lot of documents pertaining to the Ripper Case, and that although he claimed to know who the Ripper was he would never reveal the identity, and further that what he destroyed was 'secret information', and gone forever.
I sometimes get the impression that Mac, who was what Dr Johnson would have described as a 'clubbable man', also liked his readers to think that he knew more than he actually let on, perhaps thinking that a slight air of mystery would do him no harm. Maybe.
Thanks as ever to the good old A-Z for some of the above information.
GrahamLast edited by Graham; 09-08-2013, 01:29 PM.We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze
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There is nothing tin the extant record to even suggest that Druitt was considered a Ripper suspect by the police before he died, when he died, after he died--not until some years after. Not until it leaked out of Dorset in 1891.
This belief was initially harboured only by the family, or at least certain mebers of the family.
Even then there is nothing in the police records outside of Mac's Report(s) that even hint that he was known to anybody else at the Yard. The exception is Abberline in 1903 but he gets so much wrong about the 'medical student' and is, furthermore, anxious to dismiss that story in favour of his Chapman solution that he is arguably very unreliable.
The first time anybody in the public, the police force (excepting Mac) and the Home Office were informed about this allegedly strong suspect, a doctor who had drowned himself in the Thanes at just the right time, was in 1898 in Major Griffiths' "Mysteries of Police and Crime". And that this susp-ect was known to the police at the time of his death and resrufacing in the river.
Actually, an unidentified police officer told a newspaper the year before that a murderer of a woman on a train (Elizabeth Camp) had been so overcome by what he did that he rushed to the Thames and drowned himself.
There is nothing in the other sources on the Camp murder about such a police notion.
I think this is Macnaghten leaking a story, one he knew to be a mixture of fact and fiction, as a dry run to see if it would fly.
The following year he used it again with the un-named Druitt and mostly got away with it. By then I think he had told Abberline that medical studnt suspect of 1888, John Sanders, had drowned himself, had told Jack Littlechild that Tumblety was believed to have taken his own life in France, had told Divall that the murderer died in an asylum in the States, and told Anderson and/or Swanson that the Polush suspect had died in an asylum soon after being sectioned in early 1889.
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Acording to his second daughter and his colleagues Macnaghten had a superb memory.
If Mac really is the arhictect of so much disinformation, and most here think this is extremely far-fetched, then I imagine it was carried out with relative ease because certain police had retired, others were in different lines of communication and rank, and so on.
It wasn't luck.
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Originally posted by Mayerling View PostHi Caz,
I like that phrase (and you are not the only one who uses it) of "innocent slumming". Think of the situation - in a normally dangerous neighborhood for middle class types not usually found there - in an especially dangerous period with a horrendous serial killer on the loose - in a geographic area known for "penny a dozen" prostitutes - after dark (presumably 10 P.M. to 4 A.M. or so). What would be innocent about being there for somebody like Montie or my imaginary straw man "X"? Are they admiring the architecture or the design of the various streets? Doing research for sociological papers ("The Sex Lives of East End Socialists and Communists in a Time of Panic - An Answer to Mr. Charles Booth")? "Innocent slumming" indeed.
Love,
Jeff
I take your point, but I was merely observing that from any third party point of view, given your scenario, the two men - Monty and "X" - would have been in exactly the same position, with "X" having to explain himself no less than our Monty.
It would be like Monty worrying about "X" having recognised him in bed in a West End brothel. Both in the same pickle if one tried to make something of it.
Love,
Caz
X"Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov
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Originally posted by Graham View PostMaybe Druitt's family did genuinely wonder if Monty was the Ripper, but I wonder how many other families thought likewise concerning their absentee or behaving-strangely sons, grandsons, nephews, cousins and so forth.allisvanityandvexationofspirit
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