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  • Geddy2112
    Inspector
    • Dec 2015
    • 1460

    #106
    1) Anderson's Suspect
    2) Jacob Levy
    3) Bury
    4) Richardson
    5) Chapman

    But my real number 1 would be an unknown local man.
    Jack the Ripper - Double Cross

    Comment

    • Herlock Sholmes
      Commissioner
      • May 2017
      • 23317

      #107
      Originally posted by Geddy2112 View Post
      1) Anderson's Suspect
      2) Jacob Levy
      3) Bury
      4) Richardson
      5) Chapman

      But my real number 1 would be an unknown local man.
      Cheers Geddy

      No Cross?
      Herlock Sholmes

      ”I don’t know who Jack the Ripper was…and neither do you.”

      Comment

      • Geddy2112
        Inspector
        • Dec 2015
        • 1460

        #108
        Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
        No Cross?
        Chuff off...

        (oh and tell Gary I'm banned on the other forum so I can't reply to him )
        Jack the Ripper - Double Cross

        Comment

        • FISHY1118
          Assistant Commissioner
          • May 2019
          • 3767

          #109
          Originally posted by Doctored Whatsit View Post

          Yes I did.
          Didn't seem as if you did based on your follow up post.
          'It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is. It doesn't matter how smart you are . If it doesn't agree with experiment, its wrong'' . Richard Feynman

          Comment

          • FISHY1118
            Assistant Commissioner
            • May 2019
            • 3767

            #110
            Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

            Post #432 of The Mystery Finally Solved for a start Fishy:

            However, we know Thompson also spent ~6 weeks in a private hospital.”

            Ok, it’s betting time again folks. What will Fishy do next?

            a) Admit that he was wrong.
            b) Try to claim that he was asking something else.
            c) Try to change the subject.
            d) Just not respond.

            I favour c) or d) as they are the usuals.

            You mean this one . where context was completely lost on you . ?

            You’ve misunderstood both Walsh’s material and the timeline. The evidence is more nuanced than you’re suggesting.
            1. Providence Row attendance – John Walsh (1967) was clear that Thompson stayed at Providence Row, and Thompson himself described the harrowing queues in his own essay. The confusion came from Walsh misplacing Providence Row in the West End due to cartography, when in reality the refuge had moved to Crispin Street, Spitalfields in 1868 – directly opposite Dorset Street, where Mary Kelly lived and died. This wasn’t “miles away,” as Herlock suggests, but in the very heart of the Ripper’s hunting ground.
            2. Refuge entry conditions – Providence Row only opened for the winter months (November–May), with stays capped at six weeks. Entry required respectable clothing and a reference. For most of Thompson’s vagrancy (1885–1888) he couldn’t have qualified – he was in rags, cut off from family and friends. Only in November 1888 did circumstances align: his editor Wilfrid Meynell and Canon Carroll had given him money and clothes, and as a published poet with Catholic patrons, he could finally provide the needed reference.
            3. The timing – The Row reopened on 5 November 1888, allowing a potential six-week stay. However, we know Thompson also spent ~6 weeks in a private hospital (the exact dates unrecorded, Meynell’s margin note: “Six weeks, my son!”). He was later dispatched to Storrington before New Year. Reconciling these facts, the likeliest scenario is that Thompson entered the Row at its November opening, stayed briefly (perhaps 10 days), and was then placed in hospital around mid-November. That means he was at large in Whitechapel on 9 November, the date of Kelly’s murder, before his hospital confinement.
            4. Mary Kelly connection – A 1973 BBC interview with a nun recalled Kelly herself using Providence Row in the 1880s, pretending reform to get a bed. Robert Thurston Hopkins also hinted that a poet friend of Kelly’s may have known her. If true, that overlap deepens the link between Thompson and the final victim.
            So no, Lewis – the “hospital” argument doesn’t exonerate Thompson for Kelly’s murder. The Providence Row calendar, Walsh’s testimony, and Meynell’s note together place him in Spitalfields precisely when the murders peaked. The hospital stay only afterwards explains his sudden disappearanc
            'It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is. It doesn't matter how smart you are . If it doesn't agree with experiment, its wrong'' . Richard Feynman

            Comment

            • FISHY1118
              Assistant Commissioner
              • May 2019
              • 3767

              #111
              Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

              And that’s why you get so many people suggesting Gull as a suspect Fishy.
              Well i cant help it if you and other prefer to support suspects like Cutbush and Druitt that were BOTH dismissed by the police at the time, and then want to continue to make up and invent new post so they can remain relevant. .
              'It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is. It doesn't matter how smart you are . If it doesn't agree with experiment, its wrong'' . Richard Feynman

              Comment

              • Herlock Sholmes
                Commissioner
                • May 2017
                • 23317

                #112
                Originally posted by FISHY1118 View Post


                You mean this one . where context was completely lost on you . ?

                You’ve misunderstood both Walsh’s material and the timeline. The evidence is more nuanced than you’re suggesting.
                1. Providence Row attendance – John Walsh (1967) was clear that Thompson stayed at Providence Row, and Thompson himself described the harrowing queues in his own essay. The confusion came from Walsh misplacing Providence Row in the West End due to cartography, when in reality the refuge had moved to Crispin Street, Spitalfields in 1868 – directly opposite Dorset Street, where Mary Kelly lived and died. This wasn’t “miles away,” as Herlock suggests, but in the very heart of the Ripper’s hunting ground.
                2. Refuge entry conditions – Providence Row only opened for the winter months (November–May), with stays capped at six weeks. Entry required respectable clothing and a reference. For most of Thompson’s vagrancy (1885–1888) he couldn’t have qualified – he was in rags, cut off from family and friends. Only in November 1888 did circumstances align: his editor Wilfrid Meynell and Canon Carroll had given him money and clothes, and as a published poet with Catholic patrons, he could finally provide the needed reference.
                3. The timing – The Row reopened on 5 November 1888, allowing a potential six-week stay. However, we know Thompson also spent ~6 weeks in a private hospital (the exact dates unrecorded, Meynell’s margin note: “Six weeks, my son!”). He was later dispatched to Storrington before New Year. Reconciling these facts, the likeliest scenario is that Thompson entered the Row at its November opening, stayed briefly (perhaps 10 days), and was then placed in hospital around mid-November. That means he was at large in Whitechapel on 9 November, the date of Kelly’s murder, before his hospital confinement.
                4. Mary Kelly connection – A 1973 BBC interview with a nun recalled Kelly herself using Providence Row in the 1880s, pretending reform to get a bed. Robert Thurston Hopkins also hinted that a poet friend of Kelly’s may have known her. If true, that overlap deepens the link between Thompson and the final victim.
                So no, Lewis – the “hospital” argument doesn’t exonerate Thompson for Kelly’s murder. The Providence Row calendar, Walsh’s testimony, and Meynell’s note together place him in Spitalfields precisely when the murders peaked. The hospital stay only afterwards explains his sudden disappearanc
                Unless your memory is poor Fishy you said this:

                “Tell me Herlock Where does Richard say ''Thompson stayed for six weeks like Walsh did ? , you can admit you stuffed up it’s ok .“

                A very specific question from you to me.

                I then answered but showing you where Richard had said EXACTLY this 5 times.

                Are you going to admit that you were wrong. Go on Fishy…try it.
                Herlock Sholmes

                ”I don’t know who Jack the Ripper was…and neither do you.”

                Comment

                • Herlock Sholmes
                  Commissioner
                  • May 2017
                  • 23317

                  #113
                  Originally posted by FISHY1118 View Post

                  Well i cant help it if you and other prefer to support suspects like Cutbush and Druitt that were BOTH dismissed by the police at the time, and then want to continue to make up and invent new post so they can remain relevant. .
                  You appear not to understand the difference between ‘not being charged’ and being convicted. Just for once Fishy it would be really nice if you would read the evidence.
                  Herlock Sholmes

                  ”I don’t know who Jack the Ripper was…and neither do you.”

                  Comment

                  • Herlock Sholmes
                    Commissioner
                    • May 2017
                    • 23317

                    #114
                    Originally posted by FISHY1118 View Post


                    You mean this one . where context was completely lost on you . ?

                    You’ve misunderstood both Walsh’s material and the timeline. The evidence is more nuanced than you’re suggesting.
                    1. Providence Row attendance – John Walsh (1967) was clear that Thompson stayed at Providence Row, and Thompson himself described the harrowing queues in his own essay. The confusion came from Walsh misplacing Providence Row in the West End due to cartography, when in reality the refuge had moved to Crispin Street, Spitalfields in 1868 – directly opposite Dorset Street, where Mary Kelly lived and died. This wasn’t “miles away,” as Herlock suggests, but in the very heart of the Ripper’s hunting ground.
                    2. Refuge entry conditions – Providence Row only opened for the winter months (November–May), with stays capped at six weeks. Entry required respectable clothing and a reference. For most of Thompson’s vagrancy (1885–1888) he couldn’t have qualified – he was in rags, cut off from family and friends. Only in November 1888 did circumstances align: his editor Wilfrid Meynell and Canon Carroll had given him money and clothes, and as a published poet with Catholic patrons, he could finally provide the needed reference.
                    3. The timing – The Row reopened on 5 November 1888, allowing a potential six-week stay. However, we know Thompson also spent ~6 weeks in a private hospital (the exact dates unrecorded, Meynell’s margin note: “Six weeks, my son!”). He was later dispatched to Storrington before New Year. Reconciling these facts, the likeliest scenario is that Thompson entered the Row at its November opening, stayed briefly (perhaps 10 days), and was then placed in hospital around mid-November. That means he was at large in Whitechapel on 9 November, the date of Kelly’s murder, before his hospital confinement.
                    4. Mary Kelly connection – A 1973 BBC interview with a nun recalled Kelly herself using Providence Row in the 1880s, pretending reform to get a bed. Robert Thurston Hopkins also hinted that a poet friend of Kelly’s may have known her. If true, that overlap deepens the link between Thompson and the final victim.
                    So no, Lewis – the “hospital” argument doesn’t exonerate Thompson for Kelly’s murder. The Providence Row calendar, Walsh’s testimony, and Meynell’s note together place him in Spitalfields precisely when the murders peaked. The hospital stay only afterwards explains his sudden disappearanc
                    I’m quite happy to explain further why you are wrong Fishy but could you do it in one of the Thompson threads please and could you perhaps, just for once, use the evidence and not just the ‘Patterson version.’
                    Herlock Sholmes

                    ”I don’t know who Jack the Ripper was…and neither do you.”

                    Comment

                    • Trevor Marriott
                      Commissioner
                      • Feb 2008
                      • 9547

                      #115
                      Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

                      You appear not to understand the difference between ‘not being charged’ and being convicted. Just for once Fishy it would be really nice if you would read the evidence.
                      and may I remind you and others that there is also a big difference between a person of interest and a suspect. It seems some do not know the difference.


                      Comment

                      • Herlock Sholmes
                        Commissioner
                        • May 2017
                        • 23317

                        #116
                        Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post

                        and may I remind you and others that there is also a big difference between a person of interest and a suspect. It seems some do not know the difference.

                        On here there’s no difference whatsoever Trevor. This isn’t a police investigation. If someone suggests someone as a suspect then they are a suspect and remain a suspect until exonerated.

                        On here ‘suspect’ and ‘person of interest’ are the same thing.
                        Herlock Sholmes

                        ”I don’t know who Jack the Ripper was…and neither do you.”

                        Comment

                        • Trevor Marriott
                          Commissioner
                          • Feb 2008
                          • 9547

                          #117
                          Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

                          On here there’s no difference whatsoever Trevor. This isn’t a police investigation. If someone suggests someone as a suspect then they are a suspect and remain a suspect until exonerated.

                          On here ‘suspect’ and ‘person of interest’ are the same thing.
                          However, there must be some form of evidence for them to be classified or named as a suspect.

                          Thats why the suspect list is well over 100+ they cant all have been the killer

                          Comment

                          • Herlock Sholmes
                            Commissioner
                            • May 2017
                            • 23317

                            #118
                            Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post

                            However, there must be some form of evidence for them to be classified or named as a suspect.

                            Thats why the suspect list is well over 100+ they cant all have been the killer

                            www.trevormarriott.co.uk
                            I agree Trevor but it’s not easy to get to a point of agreement on who does or doesn’t justify consideration.
                            Herlock Sholmes

                            ”I don’t know who Jack the Ripper was…and neither do you.”

                            Comment

                            • Geddy2112
                              Inspector
                              • Dec 2015
                              • 1460

                              #119
                              Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

                              I agree Trevor but it’s not easy to get to a point of agreement on who does or doesn’t justify consideration.
                              Being alive in 1888 seems to be the only qualification unfortunately....
                              Jack the Ripper - Double Cross

                              Comment

                              • Lewis C
                                Inspector
                                • Dec 2022
                                • 1366

                                #120
                                Originally posted by Geddy2112 View Post

                                Being alive in 1888 seems to be the only qualification unfortunately....
                                alive, at least 14 years old, and caucasian

                                Comment

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