Hi RJ,
I'm glad you noted that my Horse Feather Detector is patented.
George R. Sims was a horse feather merchant. He talked a good game, but knew nothing other than that which he was vouchsafed by Macnaghten. I bet he longed to be invited to one of his Corinthian Dinners.
Almost from the start, Sims cast a mordant eye over the Whitechapel murders and its attendant hoopla, but on January 22nd 1899, following the second edition of Major Griffiths’ book, his tone changed and he first began to champion the drowned doctor as Jack the Ripper.
Eight years later, on 11th February 1907 Macnaghten wrote in a letter to Sims—
“. . . It may also save you the trouble of research if I give you the times & places of Jack the Ripper’s pleasantries.”
There followed the locations, dates and names of the five canonical victims.
It seems incredible that, nineteen years after events in Whitechapel, Macnaghten thought that Sims had not yet got these basic facts to hand.
Regards,
Simon
I'm glad you noted that my Horse Feather Detector is patented.
George R. Sims was a horse feather merchant. He talked a good game, but knew nothing other than that which he was vouchsafed by Macnaghten. I bet he longed to be invited to one of his Corinthian Dinners.
Almost from the start, Sims cast a mordant eye over the Whitechapel murders and its attendant hoopla, but on January 22nd 1899, following the second edition of Major Griffiths’ book, his tone changed and he first began to champion the drowned doctor as Jack the Ripper.
Eight years later, on 11th February 1907 Macnaghten wrote in a letter to Sims—
“. . . It may also save you the trouble of research if I give you the times & places of Jack the Ripper’s pleasantries.”
There followed the locations, dates and names of the five canonical victims.
It seems incredible that, nineteen years after events in Whitechapel, Macnaghten thought that Sims had not yet got these basic facts to hand.
Regards,
Simon
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