Here's one for John and Christine, which I noticed some time back. I think my work here is done, so enjoy.
This was a game of cricket held at Winchester College on 14 June 1883.
M. J. Druitt was a Wykehamist, of course, and sometimes the alumni would return and play a game of cricket against the boys.


Who was out on the pitch that day?
M. J. Druitt's name for the Butterflies is obvious enough, but who was his opponent, H. G. Majendie?
This was none other than the Queen's Explosives expert, Colonel Majendie's, only son, Henry Gryllis Majendie.
Why did Majendie send his son to Winchester College?
The answer isn't too obscure. As discovered by Christine, one of the fixtures at Winchester College was none other than the Rev. J.T.H. du Boulay. He knew Druitt from his school days, and it was his niece, Isabel Majendie Hill, who married Druitt's cousin Charles.
Christine also traced a photograph showing the Rev. du Boulay sitting in a group photograph very near Majendie's son, in front of the Du Boulay House at Winchester, 1882.
This is none too surprising because if you consult the 1881 UK Census for Winchester, you will find Henry G. Majendie, age 15, living in the Du Boulay House with the Reverend and his wife and family. The idea that the Majendies didn't know of the Druitts is a doubtful one. In fact, it is provably wrong.
There are other links between the Druitts and the Majendie/Du Boulay clan, but I'll leave that for others.
This is not to suggest that Colonel Majendie was Sims' informant, though he certainly could have been one of them.
					This was a game of cricket held at Winchester College on 14 June 1883.
M. J. Druitt was a Wykehamist, of course, and sometimes the alumni would return and play a game of cricket against the boys.
Who was out on the pitch that day?
M. J. Druitt's name for the Butterflies is obvious enough, but who was his opponent, H. G. Majendie?
This was none other than the Queen's Explosives expert, Colonel Majendie's, only son, Henry Gryllis Majendie.
Why did Majendie send his son to Winchester College?
The answer isn't too obscure. As discovered by Christine, one of the fixtures at Winchester College was none other than the Rev. J.T.H. du Boulay. He knew Druitt from his school days, and it was his niece, Isabel Majendie Hill, who married Druitt's cousin Charles.
Christine also traced a photograph showing the Rev. du Boulay sitting in a group photograph very near Majendie's son, in front of the Du Boulay House at Winchester, 1882.
This is none too surprising because if you consult the 1881 UK Census for Winchester, you will find Henry G. Majendie, age 15, living in the Du Boulay House with the Reverend and his wife and family. The idea that the Majendies didn't know of the Druitts is a doubtful one. In fact, it is provably wrong.
There are other links between the Druitts and the Majendie/Du Boulay clan, but I'll leave that for others.
This is not to suggest that Colonel Majendie was Sims' informant, though he certainly could have been one of them.

, but I thought we were talking about the last day Druitt was seen alive, not the day he died.
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