Fleming/Hutchinson theory?

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  • Sally
    replied
    Originally posted by DVV View Post
    Hello Sally



    True. There are actually 2 "counter arguments". And look how poor :

    1 : Fleming was 6'7" (see his pic in the Guinness Book)

    2: Fleming called once himself....Fleming
    David - Of course, how silly of me - well, that's that then, eh?

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  • DVV
    replied
    Hello Sally

    Originally posted by Sally View Post
    That aside, I don't particularly consider the identification of Fleming with Hutchinson to be 'wildly improbable' (that dramatic phrase again). There are counter-arguments to all of those put forward on this thread - easy ones. I won't be going into it though - not as it stands - because I can't see the point in becoming embedded to no end in petty, circular arguments for which there is insufficient evidence to progress one way or the other.
    I'll leave all that to those who enjoy it.
    True. There are actually 2 "counter arguments". And look how poor :

    1 : Fleming was 6'7" (see his pic in the Guinness Book)

    2: Fleming called once himself....Fleming

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  • Rubyretro
    replied
    Originally posted by Lechmere View Post
    Ah Frau Retro,
    It would be foolish indeed for me to make capital out of your belated concurrence with my take on the likelihoods of the Whitechapel Murders. That would be a gauche as they say in those French farmhouses. So I won’t. No triumphalism here.
    (Whoop - whoop, next it will be Sally!)
    Provocation ! Don't push it, Lechmere, or I will frog march you off the edge of Tower bridge to join the other corpses I apparently leave in the water: I only concurred with one thing..

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  • Lechmere
    replied
    Ah Frau Retro,
    It would be foolish indeed for me to make capital out of your belated concurrence with my take on the likelihoods of the Whitechapel Murders. That would be a gauche as they say in those French farmhouses. So I won’t. No triumphalism here.
    (Whoop - whoop, next it will be Sally!)

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  • Lechmere
    replied
    Sally
    I really don’t want to engage in silly point scoring arguments with you – and if you have counter points to make in defence of Fleming’s candidacy as Hutchinson I wish you would set them down.

    However there is a big difficulty as I see it in presenting a case where as a resident at the Victoria Home under the name Fleming he could also pretend to be Hutchinson. Given what we know of the character of the Victoria Home.
    Then there is the 6 foot 7 business.

    By comparison the doubts over identifying Toppy as Hutchinson are minor. We can establish that it is almost certain he left the family home at the end of 1887. We know he had relatives in the East End that his parents had connections with. We know his father and uncle did not become plumbers immediately. We know that the plumbing business had become somewhat irregular and was not strictly regulated. We know that he went to live in at least one lodging house. We know he lived in some areas equally as bad as those found around Commercial Street, we know he ended up living in the East End with an East End girl who he seems to have met while hanging around the East End. We know that one family tradition makes him the Kelly witness. We know his writing style was not dissimilar to the witness’s.
    There are clearly some loose ends and I haven’t finished checking him out (I have been too busy lately to do more). But there is nothing to discount Toppy as Hutchinson in stark contrast to Fleming as Hutchinson (see above).
    If you have a valid counter argument then I am sure people will be interested to hear it.

    Incidentally I do not see Toppy as a saint – I see him as a bit of a chancer who embellished his tale and earned a quick buck out of a police force desperate for a lead.
    Last edited by Lechmere; 11-28-2011, 03:50 AM.

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  • Wickerman
    replied
    In Dorset-street, however, the fact of a man having been in the company of a woman would probably attract no notice from those who are accustomed to such an incident. The street is fairly lighted, and, late at night especially, is pretty well frequented.
    Daily Telegraph, 10 Nov.

    Dorset street is a fairly wide thoroughfare, and at night, owing to the lamps in the windows and over the doors of the numerous lodging-houses, it may be described as well-lighted.....
    Opposite the court is a very large lodging-house, of a somewhat inferior character. This house is well lighted and people hang about it nearly all night.

    Irish Times, 10 Nov.

    Regards, Jon S.

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  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by Malcolm X View Post
    no, S.Lewis does not describe the same man, at all, NONE OF THEM DO, the GH sighting is unique........and you know that !.... plus the times dont tally too, so something here is seriously wrong FACT!
    Well we do know it was the same 'man' because Lewis spoke of a couple walking up the passage to the Court while a loiterer was stood at the Dorset street end of the passage. Prettywell confirming who the couple were regardless of descriptions, assuming you accept the loiterer was Hutchinson.

    it's very suspicious simply because other Ripper authors have ignored this stuff over the years, this tells you that it's been dismissed as rubbish!
    What it suggests is that previous authors were not aware of this wealth of press reports we have assembled today.

    the street lighting ? well the only way to solve this is to see the oil lamps in action and until then this problem remains
    Gas lamps Malcolm, ....Gas lighting!
    :-)

    Regards, Jon S.

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  • Rubyretro
    replied
    As for the sides rubbish, perhaps it might be worth pointing the finger of blame at those who insist there are sides to begin with. It's very worthy to be in pursuit of the truth, but you won't get it by 'debating' with people who adhere to 'sides' in my view, because it demands an objectivity that they don't and can't have.
    Well, I don't pretend to be worthy of more than having the right to an opinion
    for myself.

    However those amongst us that do first hand research as opposed to googling (and I'm sincerely not accusing you, and it will never be me ) are probably more 'worthy' and worth reading than others. They probably spent time, money, and gave alot of themselves to a passion for detail that people like me benefit from in terms of knowledge or general culture. 'Enriched' is the word.

    People function on different levels though, and 'one' can have fun in debating
    just for entertainment. It doesn't mean that we can't learn things at the same time.

    fun -we can have fun at the same time. Why is it so difficult ?
    Last edited by Rubyretro; 11-27-2011, 06:43 PM.

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  • Malcolm X
    replied
    Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
    On the contrary, the killer needs to disappear like he did in all the other cases, there's nothing easier and more logical than that.



    I guess you've never been desperate for food & money.



    I don't understand #3 in view of your reply in #1, "just in case"?
    If he didn't mind being seen what do you mean by "just in case", ...just in case what?



    As Abberline & Co. did not raise a concern about this, and they often spent their nights in the streets looking for suspects, then I have no objection about seeing colours at night.
    We still have nights today and I have no trouble seeing colours :-)



    Well actually there was one close-by.

    " There is another well frequented lodging-house next door to M'Carthy's, and within a yard or two to the entrance to the court is a wall lamp, the light from which is thrown nearly on to the passage."
    Irish Times, 10 Nov.



    And the red neckerchief he wore too?

    Hutch did claim to have seen the same man in daylight on Sunday morning. Hutchinson may have supplemented his discription by adding what the man was wearing on that second occasion. Just because he was not so sure the first time, but some of the detail could have been embellishment.

    I'm not at all concerned about the depth of detail, my interest is that this "well-dressed" man did exist, Sarah Lewis saw him.

    Regards, Jon S.
    no, S.Lewis does not describe the same man, at all, NONE OF THEM DO, the GH sighting is unique........and you know that !.... plus the times dont tally too, so something here is seriously wrong FACT!

    finally, S.Lewis may not have seen LA DE DA, i'd be very careful about all of this kennedy/ Lewis crap from the 10th onwards, because it needs a much MORE careful look at, that i havent done yet.....it's very suspicious simply because other Ripper authors have ignored this stuff over the years, this tells you that it's been dismissed as rubbish!

    The rest of your comments are interesting, but you definitely can not detect colours at night so i stick by that.

    the street lighting ? well the only way to solve this is to see the oil lamps in action and until then this problem remains

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  • Malcolm X
    replied
    flipping heck, these two look similar, this is George Hutchinson and this other photo is Albert Fish
    Attached Files

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  • Sally
    replied
    You have often said that you are not on a particular 'side' -(I have never hidden the fact that I believe that Hutchinson was Jack)- but we're not actually ferociously defending a favourite football team. I assume that we want to find out the truth, and it's worth reading the results of other people's research
    Theoretically. In this specific instance, what research are we meant to be reading? I don't see any.

    All there is here is personal opinion. All very interesting, and, I expect, self-gratifying, but personal opinion - quite often unsupported by anything other than conjecture - is only that at the end of the day.

    As for the sides rubbish, perhaps it might be worth pointing the finger of blame at those who insist there are sides to begin with. It's very worthy to be in pursuit of the truth, but you won't get it by 'debating' with people who adhere to 'sides' in my view, because it demands an objectivity that they don't and can't have.

    That aside, I don't particularly consider the identification of Fleming with Hutchinson to be 'wildly improbable' (that dramatic phrase again). There are counter-arguments to all of those put forward on this thread - easy ones. I won't be going into it though - not as it stands - because I can't see the point in becoming embedded to no end in petty, circular arguments for which there is insufficient evidence to progress one way or the other.

    I'll leave all that to those who enjoy it.

    Leave a comment:


  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by Malcolm X View Post
    firstly there is no way that fleming at 6ft 7'' could be GH and definitely not JTR, he's a dead donkey non-starter, forget about him...he is the weakest suspect on our list!

    1........GH definitely has to suss out what to say, because he's JTR posing as an innocent person, he definitely needs to go to the inquest first...... just in case.
    On the contrary, the killer needs to disappear like he did in all the other cases, there's nothing easier and more logical than that.

    2........ i dont believe that MJK would have let someone like this into her room, no bloody way!
    I guess you've never been desperate for food & money.

    3....GH does not mind being seen, in fact; it's exactly what he wants
    I don't understand #3 in view of your reply in #1, "just in case"?
    If he didn't mind being seen what do you mean by "just in case", ...just in case what?

    4.....you agree that he embellished his description, good, because he DEFINITELY DID! i.e you can not see colours outside at night and especially in 1888 London..... FACT.... this embellishing in a court of law, i would describe as lieing like crazy! ..... he's lieing comprende' !
    As Abberline & Co. did not raise a concern about this, and they often spent their nights in the streets looking for suspects, then I have no objection about seeing colours at night.
    We still have nights today and I have no trouble seeing colours :-)

    5.... he saw LA DE DA going down the court only, he did not see those two standing underneath the lamp outside her room, and there is no lamp outside above the Millers court arch......i think !
    Well actually there was one close-by.

    " There is another well frequented lodging-house next door to M'Carthy's, and within a yard or two to the entrance to the court is a wall lamp, the light from which is thrown nearly on to the passage."
    Irish Times, 10 Nov.

    GH would have seen quite a lot yes, for sure, but only about half of what he said, he would have definitely been able to recall his face, but his clothing would have been very hard to recall, i mean, he even manages to describe his walk ...it's pathetic

    he would probably only recall his coat, trousers and maybe notice a shirt and wastecoat, but that's about it, a bit like Lawende
    And the red neckerchief he wore too?

    Hutch did claim to have seen the same man in daylight on Sunday morning. Hutchinson may have supplemented his discription by adding what the man was wearing on that second occasion. Just because he was not so sure the first time, but some of the detail could have been embellishment.

    I'm not at all concerned about the depth of detail, my interest is that this "well-dressed" man did exist, Sarah Lewis saw him.

    Regards, Jon S.

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  • Rubyretro
    replied
    Malcolm -I certainly agree with you on all of this.

    "a Dead Donkey non starter" is a perfect way to describe the Hutch/Fleming
    theory, and I wish I had thought of it...

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  • Malcolm X
    replied
    the contrary to all of this is, what if GH did indeed see JTR ?

    well you're still screwed, because he still lied about his description

    1... he went to the police way too late, for something that is so UTTERLY IMPORTANT AND AS VITAL AS THIS, considering that his description is so accurate, it's like a photo and he will easily be able to recognise JTR again

    FACT !

    he has no excuse for this, he is therefore highly suspicious, he went late because he DEFINITELY needed to know what others knew, before going to the police, this is as obvious as anything, because a true and caring person does not need to know what others saw, he rushes to the police as SOON AS HE KNOWS that she's dead the next day

    finally, JTR would never have gone to the police without disposing of all his evidence first and this includes Romford
    Last edited by Malcolm X; 11-27-2011, 05:18 PM.

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  • Rubyretro
    replied
    Sally -whilst it pains me to have to agree with Lechmere, and I will continue to think that the sketch of Hutch is probably not generic, and Toppy is not Hutch, yet I think it is silly to dismiss his post as a "disarticulated rant": It was perfectly limpid to me.

    In the end, if you want to consider each theory/bit of evidence on it's individual merits, then it is surely wildly improbable that Fleming and Hutch could be the same person -and Lechmere gave some eloquent reasons for
    taking that position.

    You have often said that you are not on a particular 'side' -(I have never hidden the fact that I believe that Hutchinson was Jack)- but we're not actually ferociously defending a favourite football team. I assume that we want to find out the truth, and it's worth reading the results of other people's research

    ps Lechmere -don't even think of making capital of that !
    Last edited by Rubyretro; 11-27-2011, 05:06 PM.

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