It is often argued by secondary sources that because Sir Melville Macnaghten had the timing of Druitt's suicide quite wrong -- within hours of the Kelly atrocity -- in his 1894 Report(s) that not only did he not have accurate information about his preferred Ripper suspect, but that the mistaken timing of the murder/self-murder misled the police chief into seeing culpability where there was none, as had the MP who also had perpetuated this error.
Acton, Chiswick & Turnham Green Gazette
United Kingdom
Saturday, 5 January 1889
FOUND DROWNED ... Witness [William Druitt] heard from a friend on the 11th of December that deceased had not been heard of at his chambers for more than a week ...
'The Bristol Times and Mirror' Feb 11th, 1891:
[the un-named MP Henry Farquharson] states that a man with blood-stained clothes committed suicide on the night of the last murder, and he asserts that the man was the son of a surgeon, who suffered from homicidal mania'.
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 ...
Certainly Griffiths and especially Sims, from 1898 to 1917, entrenched this notion of the incriminating conjunction; of the murder and self-murder within hours by the shrieking husk of what was left of the 'doctor' before his fateful plunge.
Yet here is Mac's memoirs 1914:
'... On the morning of 9th November, Mary Jeanette Kelly, a comparatively young woman of some twenty-five years of age, and said to have been possessed of considerable. personal attractions, was found murdered in a room in Miller's Court, Dorset Street ... I incline to the belief that the individual who held up London in terror resided with his own people ; that he absented himself from home at certain times, and that he committed suicide on or about the 10th of November 1888 ...'
Did Mac mis-remember the brother telling him, in 1891, that he had learned that his sibling was missing 'on the 11th' and thought Montie had killed himself on the 10th -- but of November, rather than December to which William to was actually referring?
I don't think so, but it's possible.
The overarching point is that Mac did not confirm what he had allowed his cronies to claim in public; that the murder and self-murder happened within hours. Druitt killed himself at least twenty-four hours later, Mac writes in his book -- perhaps longer?
Acton, Chiswick & Turnham Green Gazette
United Kingdom
Saturday, 5 January 1889
FOUND DROWNED ... Witness [William Druitt] heard from a friend on the 11th of December that deceased had not been heard of at his chambers for more than a week ...
'The Bristol Times and Mirror' Feb 11th, 1891:
[the un-named MP Henry Farquharson] states that a man with blood-stained clothes committed suicide on the night of the last murder, and he asserts that the man was the son of a surgeon, who suffered from homicidal mania'.
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 ...
Certainly Griffiths and especially Sims, from 1898 to 1917, entrenched this notion of the incriminating conjunction; of the murder and self-murder within hours by the shrieking husk of what was left of the 'doctor' before his fateful plunge.
Yet here is Mac's memoirs 1914:
'... On the morning of 9th November, Mary Jeanette Kelly, a comparatively young woman of some twenty-five years of age, and said to have been possessed of considerable. personal attractions, was found murdered in a room in Miller's Court, Dorset Street ... I incline to the belief that the individual who held up London in terror resided with his own people ; that he absented himself from home at certain times, and that he committed suicide on or about the 10th of November 1888 ...'
Did Mac mis-remember the brother telling him, in 1891, that he had learned that his sibling was missing 'on the 11th' and thought Montie had killed himself on the 10th -- but of November, rather than December to which William to was actually referring?
I don't think so, but it's possible.
The overarching point is that Mac did not confirm what he had allowed his cronies to claim in public; that the murder and self-murder happened within hours. Druitt killed himself at least twenty-four hours later, Mac writes in his book -- perhaps longer?
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