If I may (and at risk of being accused of being Fisherman's secret double identity... again) I think Fisherman meant that while it is not hard to find people who lived in the East End in the late Victorian period (and indeed today) who adopted an alias, it was not the normal practice. The overwhelming majority did not adopt an alias.
Furthermore may I add that most people who adopted an alias did so because they lived on the other side of the law - prostitiutes, petty criminals, people who wished to mislead the police and so on. Normal law abiding people did not tend to adopt aliases - then or now.
Also the police tended to be aware of people's true identities. We know that various people adopted aliases primarily because we know their real or alternative name. And we nearly always know their real or alternative name because the authorities at the time discovered it.
Apart from in the case of Cross/Lechmere.
Furthermore may I add that most people who adopted an alias did so because they lived on the other side of the law - prostitiutes, petty criminals, people who wished to mislead the police and so on. Normal law abiding people did not tend to adopt aliases - then or now.
Also the police tended to be aware of people's true identities. We know that various people adopted aliases primarily because we know their real or alternative name. And we nearly always know their real or alternative name because the authorities at the time discovered it.
Apart from in the case of Cross/Lechmere.
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