Originally posted by Richard Patterson
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Herlock,
I’ll be blunt. You have a habit of rephrasing what I’ve actually written into something easier for you to knock down. That isn’t honest debate, it’s distortion. Let me clear the record on three of your claims:
No Richard…what certainly is distortion
1. The coin issue.
I’ve never written that Thompson was literally “found with polished farthings.” What I’ve consistently said is that Major Henry Smith records his Rupert Street suspect as being associated with that coin trick, and that Thompson’s own biography (Walsh, Strange Harp, Strange Symphony) contains a separate coin anecdote — finding two sovereigns in the street, initially mistaking one for a halfpenny. The point is not that the two stories are identical in wording, but that Thompson’s life is threaded with unusual coin lore, which converges with Smith’s detail. To present my words as if I had said “Smith’s polished farthings = Thompson’s sovereigns” is simply misquoting me.
More flannel. Firstly, there is no such concept as ‘coin lore’ you have invented it to justify making things up. “Bilking prostitutes with polished farthings” and finding to sovereigns in the street cannot be connected in any way. This isn’t a match.
And while we are on this point - how is it that you’ve made the above ‘explanation when elsewhere you said this (which I’ve only just noticed) - “Thompson’s asylum files note that he once attempted to pass false coinage. Though minor in itself, this act is part of the exact suite of traits listed by Smith”
Walsh makes no mention of this as far as I can recall so could you provide us with the evidence of this please and you might tells why you have distanced yourself from it by not mentioning it in the above post?
2. The “asylum” point.
Again, you rewrite what I’ve said. Victorian terminology was not neat: “asylum,” “priory,” “hospital,” and “institutional care” were overlapping in use. Thompson’s uncle stated Francis suffered a nervous breakdown before leaving Manchester in 1882 and “never fully recovered.” We know he was absent from Owens’ summer session, then placed in the Priory at Storrington later that year. Whether you stamp “asylum” or “priory” on the door, it still fits the biographical pattern Smith noted. To say “he was never in an asylum” is a word game, not a rebuttal.
More flannel. You’ve made that up. Thompson was never in a hospital. I know it. You know it. Everyone knows it. This is another fail.
Ive just noticed further proof. Smith actually said: “…LUNATIC ASYLUM.” This cannot be confused with a normal hospital.
3. Rupert Street / Haymarket.
You say “no connection.” The record says otherwise. Thompson gave Charing Cross as his postal address, lodged with the Meynells off the Haymarket, and Panton Street is a two-minute walk from Rupert Street itself. When Smith describes his suspect as connected to Rupert Street, that geographical overlap matters. Pretending I’ve invented this “nexus” is another example of you altering my words.
Smith told Warren about the medical student just after the Chapman murder. Up until that point Thompson had been living with the woman in Chelsea. Smith would have had absolutely no reason to send a man to find this man SPECIFICALLY in Rupert Street and that it was Thompson. Rupert Street is in Soho, Thompson was living around couple of miles away in Chelsea.
Another fail.
You’re free to disagree with me on the significance of these convergences. But misquoting my phrases (“coin trickery” into “farthings in hand,” “asylum” into “never in asylum,” “Rupert nexus” into “making it up”) crosses the line from fair debate into rewriting.
Stick to what I actually write, not to caricatures of it.
Richard
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