All accounts I have seen to date about the death of Lipman in 1900, whether in the UK or abroad, were practically verbatim versions of the same account.
The article, below, however, contains some claims that I had not seen before
Chris
Hampshire Telegraph
20 October 1900
NOT JACK THE RIPPER
A man named Julius Lipman has just died in the East End of drink, neglect, and semi starvation.
He was a cobbler by trade, and was known as "Leather Apron." He fell under suspicion of being Jack the Ripper, and although he completely proved his innocence the stigma never quite left him and his business dwindled away.
Lipman was peculiarly unfortunate in the matter. "Leather Apron" as a possible Jack the Ripper was invented by an imaginative journalist on a sensational paper. He did not suspect for a moment that there was a real man in the district known by that name.
The article, below, however, contains some claims that I had not seen before
Chris
Hampshire Telegraph
20 October 1900
NOT JACK THE RIPPER
A man named Julius Lipman has just died in the East End of drink, neglect, and semi starvation.
He was a cobbler by trade, and was known as "Leather Apron." He fell under suspicion of being Jack the Ripper, and although he completely proved his innocence the stigma never quite left him and his business dwindled away.
Lipman was peculiarly unfortunate in the matter. "Leather Apron" as a possible Jack the Ripper was invented by an imaginative journalist on a sensational paper. He did not suspect for a moment that there was a real man in the district known by that name.
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