Mike Covell recently discovered a press report, published on 2 April 1892 in response to the speculation that Frederick Deeming might have committed the Whitechapel Murders, which stated that the "the Scotland-yard authorities" considered that the real murderer was in Portland Prison - apparently referring to Charles Le Grand:
It's interesting that a few days later, in response to further speculation about Deeming, the Daily Telegraph reported a quite different police theory, according to which the murderer was not in a prison, but in an asylum.
What provoked the Telegraph's story was the following report in The Globe and Traveller of 7 April 1892 (p. 4):
DEEMING AND THE WHITECHAPEL MURDERS.
A GIRL'S STRANGE STORY.
The theory that Deeming committed two or more of the "Jack the Ripper" murders in Whitechapel is to-day strengthened by an extraordinary statement which has reached us. It appears that a respectable girl, a dressmaker resident in the East-end, identified the portrait published in a weekly paper last Sunday as that of a man she knew by the name of Lawson in 1888. She states that she kept company with him in the autumn of that year, and on the evening of September 29 they went for a walk. Soon after 11 p.m. they parted at Portland-road railway station, and she returned home by train. On the following morning, shortly before one o'clock, the body of Elizabeth Stride was discovered with the throat cut, outside the International and Educational Club in Berner-street, Aldgate. An hour later a constable found the mutilated body of Mrs. Eddowes in Mitre-square, a short distance from the scene of the first tragedy.
The same afternoon the girl - who desires her name to be suppressed for the present - met the man Lawson by appointment and went for a walk with him. His conversation was mostly of the murders, and she says he spoke with an intimate knowledge of the details of the tragedies. During their walk Lawson purchased a newspaper, in which it was stated that the murders were probably perpetrated soon after midnight. This passage he pointed out to her, exclaiming, "Look at the time! I couldn't have committed them, could I?" This remark the girl declares she remembers distinctly, it being made quite voluntarily, but at that time it did not occur to her that the circumstances were suspicious. She says that Lawson was on that afternoon greatly agitated, and betrayed an earnest desire to read the newspaper comments upon the crimes. A few days later, however, he disappeared, and they have not since met. Some little time afterwards she thought over the circumstances, and although she regarded them as extraordinary, she refrained from communicating with the police. It was not until she saw the portrait of Deeming that she resolved to make the statement, for she has no doubt whatever that the man she knew as Lawson was the original of the published portrait. His general bearing coincided exactly with that of Deeming; he always made an ostentatious display of his rings, and spoke of his travels abroad.
It is a somewhat extraordinary fact that although the police have succeeded in generally tracing Deeming's career under the names of Lawson, Swanston, and Williams since 1880, there is a period unaccounted for, namely, from the end of 1887 until 1889, when he appeared in South Africa, returning to Liverpool in August of that year. The above facts will probably be communicated to the Scotland-yard authorities to-day, and no doubt a searching inquiry into the girl's statement will be made.
It's interesting that a few days later, in response to further speculation about Deeming, the Daily Telegraph reported a quite different police theory, according to which the murderer was not in a prison, but in an asylum.
What provoked the Telegraph's story was the following report in The Globe and Traveller of 7 April 1892 (p. 4):
DEEMING AND THE WHITECHAPEL MURDERS.
A GIRL'S STRANGE STORY.
The theory that Deeming committed two or more of the "Jack the Ripper" murders in Whitechapel is to-day strengthened by an extraordinary statement which has reached us. It appears that a respectable girl, a dressmaker resident in the East-end, identified the portrait published in a weekly paper last Sunday as that of a man she knew by the name of Lawson in 1888. She states that she kept company with him in the autumn of that year, and on the evening of September 29 they went for a walk. Soon after 11 p.m. they parted at Portland-road railway station, and she returned home by train. On the following morning, shortly before one o'clock, the body of Elizabeth Stride was discovered with the throat cut, outside the International and Educational Club in Berner-street, Aldgate. An hour later a constable found the mutilated body of Mrs. Eddowes in Mitre-square, a short distance from the scene of the first tragedy.
The same afternoon the girl - who desires her name to be suppressed for the present - met the man Lawson by appointment and went for a walk with him. His conversation was mostly of the murders, and she says he spoke with an intimate knowledge of the details of the tragedies. During their walk Lawson purchased a newspaper, in which it was stated that the murders were probably perpetrated soon after midnight. This passage he pointed out to her, exclaiming, "Look at the time! I couldn't have committed them, could I?" This remark the girl declares she remembers distinctly, it being made quite voluntarily, but at that time it did not occur to her that the circumstances were suspicious. She says that Lawson was on that afternoon greatly agitated, and betrayed an earnest desire to read the newspaper comments upon the crimes. A few days later, however, he disappeared, and they have not since met. Some little time afterwards she thought over the circumstances, and although she regarded them as extraordinary, she refrained from communicating with the police. It was not until she saw the portrait of Deeming that she resolved to make the statement, for she has no doubt whatever that the man she knew as Lawson was the original of the published portrait. His general bearing coincided exactly with that of Deeming; he always made an ostentatious display of his rings, and spoke of his travels abroad.
It is a somewhat extraordinary fact that although the police have succeeded in generally tracing Deeming's career under the names of Lawson, Swanston, and Williams since 1880, there is a period unaccounted for, namely, from the end of 1887 until 1889, when he appeared in South Africa, returning to Liverpool in August of that year. The above facts will probably be communicated to the Scotland-yard authorities to-day, and no doubt a searching inquiry into the girl's statement will be made.
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