To Bridewell
All of that is quite off-track.
You are repeating a stale paradigm of the secondary sources, not the primary sources, and now arguably redundant.
No, 'going like mother' more likely refers to going into a madhouse (Sims, 1907).
Why? Because on Friday, I argue, he had confessed to being the fiend to a priest and the clock was ticking on his being sectioned -- like his mother.
Your theory as to an innocent but tragic Druitt is exactly what his family and Macnaghten would have desperately considered at the time to get a family member and a fellow gent off the hook. They couldn't as the evidence that he was the Ripper was just too compelling.
In terms of the meagre sources the veiled version in Sims (1902, 1903, 1907) and the North Country Vicar tale of 1899, all point to family cognition of Montie as the fiend before he took his own life.
The timing of his suicide was not an unfortunate coincidence. In fact the timing of his death theoretically proved he was not the Ripper because of the subsequent Whitechapel murders.
As the new MP source shows, Farquharson remained 'adamant' and so did Macnaghten, once he was briefed and had to let go of Rose Mylett, Alice McKenzie, the Pinchin St. Torso and Frances Coles as victims of 'Jack'.
As he admitted in his memoirs the police had been -- embarrassingly -- chasing a phantom.
To Wickerman
Druitt especially resembles Lawende's Jack the Sailor.
To Hunter
With the Liberal government, Mac did not bother with the witnesses and just claimed nobody saw anything. What would Henry Asquith know about the Whitechapel horrors?
But with his literary pals, Griffiths and Sims -- both crime writers -- Mac had to be more careful. They might remember a witness, or simply look up and see Lawende in the press accounts. So he inverted the ethnicity of the witness and suspect, placing 'Kosminski', or a man who resembled him, into the 1888 investigation, now a sighting by a beat cop of a Jew.
On the other hand, Mac could humour Sims, who really did look like Druitt -- when much younger and thinner and just in that pamphlet pic -- because it would give the wrong impression to the public that the real murderer, the middle-aged doctor, sported a beard (Sims, 1907).
As Fred Wensley wrote about his patron Mac had a knack for keeping 'everyone satisfied' -- just not Ripperologists.
All of that is quite off-track.
You are repeating a stale paradigm of the secondary sources, not the primary sources, and now arguably redundant.
No, 'going like mother' more likely refers to going into a madhouse (Sims, 1907).
Why? Because on Friday, I argue, he had confessed to being the fiend to a priest and the clock was ticking on his being sectioned -- like his mother.
Your theory as to an innocent but tragic Druitt is exactly what his family and Macnaghten would have desperately considered at the time to get a family member and a fellow gent off the hook. They couldn't as the evidence that he was the Ripper was just too compelling.
In terms of the meagre sources the veiled version in Sims (1902, 1903, 1907) and the North Country Vicar tale of 1899, all point to family cognition of Montie as the fiend before he took his own life.
The timing of his suicide was not an unfortunate coincidence. In fact the timing of his death theoretically proved he was not the Ripper because of the subsequent Whitechapel murders.
As the new MP source shows, Farquharson remained 'adamant' and so did Macnaghten, once he was briefed and had to let go of Rose Mylett, Alice McKenzie, the Pinchin St. Torso and Frances Coles as victims of 'Jack'.
As he admitted in his memoirs the police had been -- embarrassingly -- chasing a phantom.
To Wickerman
Druitt especially resembles Lawende's Jack the Sailor.
To Hunter
With the Liberal government, Mac did not bother with the witnesses and just claimed nobody saw anything. What would Henry Asquith know about the Whitechapel horrors?
But with his literary pals, Griffiths and Sims -- both crime writers -- Mac had to be more careful. They might remember a witness, or simply look up and see Lawende in the press accounts. So he inverted the ethnicity of the witness and suspect, placing 'Kosminski', or a man who resembled him, into the 1888 investigation, now a sighting by a beat cop of a Jew.
On the other hand, Mac could humour Sims, who really did look like Druitt -- when much younger and thinner and just in that pamphlet pic -- because it would give the wrong impression to the public that the real murderer, the middle-aged doctor, sported a beard (Sims, 1907).
As Fred Wensley wrote about his patron Mac had a knack for keeping 'everyone satisfied' -- just not Ripperologists.
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