To Pinkmoon
But that is what happened?!
From 1898 Sir Melville Macnaghtenm anonymously, and from behind a wall of fiction, shared with the public via, not journalists, but two particular, reliable pals who were writers on crime of unimpeachable reputation--ecumenically a Tory and a Liberal--that the case was solved and, like it or lump it, it was an English gent of the professional classes.
In 1913, Sir Melville implictly took credit for identifying the killer and even more explicitly in his memoir of 1914.
To Roy
Yes, Macnaghten makes it seem as if this is a deparmental opinion.
Mind you, he does not try very hard at this. The book's preface and his 1913 comments hint that it his solo solution.
We know from other sources that not only was it not the opinion of CID or the Home Office, they had never heard of this suspect (unless it's a grabled version of Tumblety, the elss said about the better).
Plus his chapter is there to debunk Anderson's mad, Jewish murderer.
To all
I would argue that all this stuff about people in 1888 or later being paranoid or imaginative or hysterial, is fine as far as it goes.
But Macnaghten was there; he likely met with the Druitts, or a Druitt and therefore would he not have come away thinking: they have nothing but imagination and hysteria from grief, and so on?
Mac was of a temperament and a personal bias for the case not to be over, that he was too late, and for the Yard not to have been embarrassed and outwitted by the fiend, and to be seen to be fruitlessly chasing a phantom for years?!
In other words, if the evdience was anything less than devastating 'Good Old Mac' was going to reassure the family that they were quite wrong; Montie was, at worst, delusional--as mad people often are. After all, would Montie really savage a Whitechapel harlot and then calmly go and play cricket the same morning?!
Instead this competent, sympathetic, hands-on police chief felt he had no choice but to agree with their appaling and distressing conclusion.
Then it was a question, for him, of what to do with this unwanted solution ...
But that is what happened?!
From 1898 Sir Melville Macnaghtenm anonymously, and from behind a wall of fiction, shared with the public via, not journalists, but two particular, reliable pals who were writers on crime of unimpeachable reputation--ecumenically a Tory and a Liberal--that the case was solved and, like it or lump it, it was an English gent of the professional classes.
In 1913, Sir Melville implictly took credit for identifying the killer and even more explicitly in his memoir of 1914.
To Roy
Yes, Macnaghten makes it seem as if this is a deparmental opinion.
Mind you, he does not try very hard at this. The book's preface and his 1913 comments hint that it his solo solution.
We know from other sources that not only was it not the opinion of CID or the Home Office, they had never heard of this suspect (unless it's a grabled version of Tumblety, the elss said about the better).
Plus his chapter is there to debunk Anderson's mad, Jewish murderer.
To all
I would argue that all this stuff about people in 1888 or later being paranoid or imaginative or hysterial, is fine as far as it goes.
But Macnaghten was there; he likely met with the Druitts, or a Druitt and therefore would he not have come away thinking: they have nothing but imagination and hysteria from grief, and so on?
Mac was of a temperament and a personal bias for the case not to be over, that he was too late, and for the Yard not to have been embarrassed and outwitted by the fiend, and to be seen to be fruitlessly chasing a phantom for years?!
In other words, if the evdience was anything less than devastating 'Good Old Mac' was going to reassure the family that they were quite wrong; Montie was, at worst, delusional--as mad people often are. After all, would Montie really savage a Whitechapel harlot and then calmly go and play cricket the same morning?!
Instead this competent, sympathetic, hands-on police chief felt he had no choice but to agree with their appaling and distressing conclusion.
Then it was a question, for him, of what to do with this unwanted solution ...
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