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  • DVV
    replied
    Originally posted by Roy Corduroy View Post
    David, do you think he murdered only Mary Kelly for unrequited love, or do you suspect him to be the Ripper? After all, you started this excellent thread, I would value your opinion.

    Roy
    Hi Roy,
    sorry for so late a reply, I may have missed the post.
    I'm sincerely not sure that my opinion is of any value, but I clearly see MK as a Ripper victim. A possible scenario discussed above (the Kemper scenario in fact) seems plausible to me, in which case we have not to choose between a domestic affair and the whole ripper's case.
    Then the answer of this thread's title would be: both.

    Amitiés,
    David

    Leave a comment:


  • DVV
    replied
    Hi Sam,
    I see what you mean, but I'm not really talking about the census. I'm just saying that Fleming certainly knew his age but decided, God knows why, to give 37 years of age to "James Evans" in 1892, when he was caught by the authorities. In the 1891 census, he had given his name as Fleming, aged 32, which was correct. One year later, he said he was 37 and called Evans.
    The later documents that mention "James Evans", or "Fleming otherwise Evans", and that systematically make the man about 4 years older than he was, are simply based on how Fleming introced himself when found mad.
    Curiously, the false name and the false age did survive Fleming's identification by his mother.

    Amitiés,
    David

    Leave a comment:


  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by DVV View Post
    questions about the age: why did he make himself 4 years older?
    Hi David,

    4 years is really nothing, at a time when some people weren't really sure how old they were anyway. The variations in age from census to census and other records (see, for example, the Whitechapel Infirmary registers) can be much greater than four years.

    Leave a comment:


  • DVV
    replied
    4 years older

    2years ago, on the thread "Alias Fleming and Hutch?", a poster pointed out that the man called "Fleming otherwise Evans" who died in 1920 couldn't be "Mary's" Fleming, whose birth certicate proves that he was born in 1859, and not in 1855.
    It was answered that such a discrepancy was meaningless. That was a fair answer, but the problem, in fact, is elsewhere.
    First, we know that the lunatic who called himself James Evans (when he was caught at the end of June 1892) was, without doubt, Joseph Fleming born in Bethnal Green in 1859, his mother Henrietta having visited and identified him at Stone.
    Simply, when Fleming was found insane, he presented himself as "James Evans, aged 37".
    Beside questions about the name (why an alias? why "James Evans"?), questions about the age: why did he make himself 4 years older?
    I don't know the reason, but at least we see that James Evans was probably a little bit more than an alias. Something like a character.
    Indeed, James Evans didn't vanish, although Henrietta Fleming had long recognised her son. In the 1901 census, there is no Fleming, but one "James Evans, aged 45".
    In 1920, the death certificate still gives to Fleming the age of Evans (65).
    Does that mean that the medical team or the other patients would have always called him James, or Mr Evans, during 28 years ?
    Maybe...
    And no wonder if he never recovered!

    Amitiés,
    David

    Leave a comment:


  • Ben
    replied
    Hi Caz,

    Perhaps someone like Stewart could advise on police practice in the 1880s, but would they not have sought to confirm Hutchinson's personal particulars, even if they considered him to be a perfectly truthful witness, given the importance they felt compelled to attach to his account, at least initially?
    They may well have "sought" to make inquiries in that regard, but they could only have occured after Abberline penned his 12th November approval missive and, in any case, the likelihood of any inquiries establishing the identity of the witness beyond any reasonable doubt was very remote indeed. They just didn't have the "checking" power that a modern police force will undoubtedly have at their disposal. The best they could have acheived in 1888 was an inquiry at the Victoria Home as to his identity and character, and if the response was simply that, yes, he was known to the deputies as "George Hutchinson", and no, he wasn't of known bad character, that's all they had to go on.

    Of course, if Hutchinson wasn't his real name, it's potentially rather useful and convenient that he was currently unemployed, with no boss to vouch for him, and yet he can't have been out of work for very long at all if he "usually" slept in the fourpence a night Victoria Home.

    Best regards,
    Ben

    Leave a comment:


  • caz
    replied
    Hi All,

    Perhaps someone like Stewart could advise on police practice in the 1880s, but would they not have sought to confirm Hutchinson's personal particulars, even if they considered him to be a perfectly truthful witness, given the importance they felt compelled to attach to his account, at least initially? I mean, if he had not been able to prove who he was, or they had got the slightest whiff, while investigating his story, that he could have come to them using an alias, and then found he had given the papers an enhanced and altered version, surely that would have led to a shedload more questions that they would have wanted to put to this VIW (very important witness) when he failed to find 'chummy' again.

    Love,

    Caz
    X

    Leave a comment:


  • Roy Corduroy
    replied
    David, do you think he murdered only Mary Kelly for unrequited love, or do you suspect him to be the Ripper? After all, you started this excellent thread, I would value your opinion.

    Roy

    Leave a comment:


  • DVV
    replied
    Hi Roy,
    an interesting link, thank you.

    Amitiés,
    David

    Leave a comment:


  • Roy Corduroy
    replied
    Originally posted by DVV View Post
    Hi Roy, concerning Fleming, that's hearsay, it's true, but corroborated hearsay, and I honestly see nothing to suspect a mythomania. Do you?
    Hello, David

    Part of it is corroborated. Ill-used stands alone. But I agree with you, Fleming is interesting.

    There is a connection, however small, to the murder of Martha Tabram. From the Met Police report of Aug 24 by Insp Reid: "Henry Turner, Victoria Working Men's Home, Commercial St East, proved living with the deceased about 12 years, until about three weeks prior to her death when he left her."

    So it seems both Turner and Fleming were recently hanging their hat at the Vic.

    Roy

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  • DVV
    replied
    Hi Ben,
    Jack stills lucky, it seems.
    Maybe they keep something about Hutchinson...

    Amitiés,
    David

    Leave a comment:


  • Ben
    replied
    Hi David,

    I'm pretty sure they're legit, but it's still rather annoying that Claybury seems to be one of the only asylums in and around London that hasn't retained its individual patient records for the period we're interested in!

    All the best,
    Ben

    Leave a comment:


  • DVV
    replied
    Hi Fish and Sam,
    ...feel like being caught by Ackford and judged by Dooley (unless Dooley was the cop and Ackford the judge...can't remember!)

    Ben,
    are their files empty or do you suspect them of trying to get rid of you?


    Amitiés,
    David

    Leave a comment:


  • Ben
    replied
    Thanks, Fisherman!

    I'll let you know of any developments along those lines.

    Best regards,
    Ben

    Leave a comment:


  • Ben
    replied
    I did wonder...!

    I think I'll have to go there in person and create a gunpowder diversion of the order carried out to perfection by Johnny Depp's Abbo in From Hell when he needed access to mason-suppressed records!

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    My sympathies, Ben!

    Hope you are able to extract interesting items from that contact of yours, though!

    All the best,
    Fisherman

    Leave a comment:

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