For those who have missed it, there is a new source on the 'West of England' MP source, which I have moved from another thread.
Paul Begg found this before Christmas, 2011, and was kind enough to pass it on to me. It forms the basis of an article I have in issue #3 of 'The New Independent Review'.
I am placing it on here for anybody interested to read and assess.
In my opinion, it is a major find and further strengthens the historical case for Druitt as the paramount suspect, and it pre-dates sources by Macnaghten, or by his proxies.
From 'The York Herald' and 'The Yorkshire Herald', Feb 18th 1891:
'The member of Parliament who recently declared that 'Jack the Ripper' had killed himself on the evening of the last murder, adheres to his opinion. Even assuming that the man Saddler [sic] is able to prove his innocence of the murder of Frances Coles, he maintains that the latest crime cannot be the work of the author of the previous series of atrocities, and this view of the matter is steadily growing among those who do not see that there is any good reason to suppose that 'Jack the Ripper' is dead. So far as Saddler is concerned, there is a strong feeling that the evidence will have to be very much strengthened against him by next Tuesday, if he is to be committed for trial. His manner in the Thames Police-court was consistent with any theory.'
Notice that even though the police are seriously investigating Coles as a 'Jack' murder, the un-named Farquharson remains serene in his certainty.
A certainty which Mac would come to share, in 1891, and perpetuate for the rest of his life.
Notice that the other police are coming round to the same opinion about Sadler, but not that the fiend is deceased.
Yet both Macnaghten and Anderson came to believe -- when exactly for the latter? -- that their separate prime suspects were deceased. But one was, and the other was not.
The indiscreet Farquarson is way ahead of the cops: they too will come to see Coles as not a 'Jack' murder even if they do not agree (or know?) about the dead Druitt as the solution.
The MP has the timing of Druitt's death quite wrong, an element of the tale not confirmed in Mac's memoirs, which are closer to the true historical figure.
Why post all this again?
Because I just saw the biggest load of biased balderdash about Druitt being regurgitated on the other site ...
Paul Begg found this before Christmas, 2011, and was kind enough to pass it on to me. It forms the basis of an article I have in issue #3 of 'The New Independent Review'.
I am placing it on here for anybody interested to read and assess.
In my opinion, it is a major find and further strengthens the historical case for Druitt as the paramount suspect, and it pre-dates sources by Macnaghten, or by his proxies.
From 'The York Herald' and 'The Yorkshire Herald', Feb 18th 1891:
'The member of Parliament who recently declared that 'Jack the Ripper' had killed himself on the evening of the last murder, adheres to his opinion. Even assuming that the man Saddler [sic] is able to prove his innocence of the murder of Frances Coles, he maintains that the latest crime cannot be the work of the author of the previous series of atrocities, and this view of the matter is steadily growing among those who do not see that there is any good reason to suppose that 'Jack the Ripper' is dead. So far as Saddler is concerned, there is a strong feeling that the evidence will have to be very much strengthened against him by next Tuesday, if he is to be committed for trial. His manner in the Thames Police-court was consistent with any theory.'
Notice that even though the police are seriously investigating Coles as a 'Jack' murder, the un-named Farquharson remains serene in his certainty.
A certainty which Mac would come to share, in 1891, and perpetuate for the rest of his life.
Notice that the other police are coming round to the same opinion about Sadler, but not that the fiend is deceased.
Yet both Macnaghten and Anderson came to believe -- when exactly for the latter? -- that their separate prime suspects were deceased. But one was, and the other was not.
The indiscreet Farquarson is way ahead of the cops: they too will come to see Coles as not a 'Jack' murder even if they do not agree (or know?) about the dead Druitt as the solution.
The MP has the timing of Druitt's death quite wrong, an element of the tale not confirmed in Mac's memoirs, which are closer to the true historical figure.
Why post all this again?
Because I just saw the biggest load of biased balderdash about Druitt being regurgitated on the other site ...
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