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Did the Seaside Home ID happen?

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  • Anderson, Swanson and Monro were likely not present at the Seaside Home Identification event, wherever and whenever it was. It was conducted reluctantly by the City Police (Smith and others) with no expected positive outcome.

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    • Originally posted by harry View Post
      Monty,
      Monroe it was.Check Jeff's post 821.
      So lets leave aside the terminology,and get back to the heading of the thread.Did the seaside home ID happen.Were Anderson,Swanson and Monroe present at that ID as claimed by Jeff.Now I do not worry if you care not to answer,it is after all not your claim,but your intervention suggests you might have an opinion.
      Jeff doesn't seem inclined to further add anything,the provenence of which would put beyond doubt Swanson's claim of an ID at a seaside home.A pity,because it is the only information that connects Kosminski to the murders.
      Makes the claim of Kosminski being the best suspect laughable.
      I've checked the post. And I was giving a simple brake down. I believe that Swanson Anderson and Monroe were the only people who 'knew' about the ID following the Crawford letter. I don't think Monroe attended. My apologises if the wording is unclear.

      I think it quiet possible that Swanson did possibly even Anderson, largely because it seems likely Anderson witnessed Kozminski first hand given his comments 'levels lower than a brute'

      I also think it possible Smith at least learned something of the ID, although I don't believe he was directly involved or that Anderson would have fully briefed him. But Smith may have learned or been privie to something via Sagar.

      As Monty has pointed out, if it was done in secret it would still have left a paper trial as this sort of opporation would have cost money.

      Yours Jeff

      Comment


      • Originally posted by harry View Post
        Monty,
        Monroe it was.Check Jeff's post 821.
        So lets leave aside the terminology,and get back to the heading of the thread.Did the seaside home ID happen.Were Anderson,Swanson and Monroe present at that ID as claimed by Jeff.Now I do not worry if you care not to answer,it is after all not your claim,but your intervention suggests you might have an opinion.
        Jeff doesn't seem inclined to further add anything,the provenence of which would put beyond doubt Swanson's claim of an ID at a seaside home.A pity,because it is the only information that connects Kosminski to the murders.
        Makes the claim of Kosminski being the best suspect laughable.
        I see humour is wasted here Harry.

        Im glad that you aren't worried, for that makes two of us. However, you asked my opinion...

        ...you seek providence, beyond doubt? Anyone who has studied the case knows that, as this moment, is beyond reach. However, the event was possible logistically, and within the known workings of unofficial procedure.

        I wount say it makes Kosminski a laughable, best suspect, he is a contender, however best suspect, I agree, he is not. He is a mere suspect.

        To be honest, neither Swanson, Anderson nor Macnaghten makes that claim....only Jeff.

        Monty
        Monty

        https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...t/evilgrin.gif

        Author of Capturing Jack the Ripper.

        http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/1445621622

        Comment


        • Jeff,
          The ID was done in secret by Anderson,Swanson and Monroe.
          That was your one line claim.Nothing ambiguous in the meaning.Of course the possibility exists.Nothing to stop you or anyone else for thinking or believing an ID took place,but thinking,believing or expressing a possibility does not constitute a provenence,and that is what is needed if Kosminski is to be considered suspect.
          Now I believe Anderson lied,as did Swanson,if he wrote the marginella,and I have as much chance of proving that,as you have of proving the ID,but that is what I believe.You may think that unfair,perhaps it is,but isn't thinking Kosminski a murderer also unfair

          Comment


          • Originally posted by Monty View Post
            I see humour is wasted here Harry.

            Im glad that you aren't worried, for that makes two of us. However, you asked my opinion...

            ...you seek providence, beyond doubt? Anyone who has studied the case knows that, as this moment, is beyond reach. However, the event was possible logistically, and within the known workings of unofficial procedure.

            I wount say it makes Kosminski a laughable, best suspect, he is a contender, however best suspect, I agree, he is not. He is a mere suspect.

            To be honest, neither Swanson, Anderson nor Macnaghten makes that claim....only Jeff.

            Monty
            Hi Monty,

            But doesn't the evidence suggest that Anderson, at least, believed the murderer had been discovered, and the Whitechapel murders were therefore solved? I mean, consider what he's quoted as saying in Blackwood's: "Having regard to the interest attaching to this case, I should almost be tempted to disclose the identity of the murderer..."

            Comment


            • Monty,
              I think the whole idea of Kosminski being suspect slightly hilarious,but didn't S wanson in the marginella, write of him as such.(suspect I mean,not hilarious)Sure unofficial procedures probably happened,but the idea of Anderson and Swanson and Monro( to give him his proper spelling)tugging and pulling a naughty difficult Kosminski to a seaside home for someone to have a look at him,amuses me.As does the suggestion they then let the murderous fellow free.
              Rather like my mother trying to get me to school on the first day,all of 83 years ago.They let me go back home too,But I hadn't murdered anyone.
              Regards,
              Harry.
              Who never was an author.

              Comment


              • Originally posted by Paddy View Post
                Can anbody tell me where the Model Lodging house was?
                Thanks
                Pat.............
                Hi Pat,

                While the Whitechapel murders were being perpetrated his place of business was in a certain street...

                We had the use of a house opposite the shop of the man we suspected, and, disguised, of course, we frequently stopped across in the role of customers...

                I watched him from the house opposite one night... I saw him come forth from the door of his little shop...I followed him to Lehman Street, and there I saw him enter a shop... He made his way down to St George's in the East End, and there to my astonishment I saw him stop and speak to a drunken woman...

                As I passed the woman she laughed and shouted something after me, which, however, I did not catch... I had the greatest difficulty in keeping behind him.

                I had to work my way along, now with my back to the wall, now pausing and making little runs for a sheltering doorway. Not far from where the model lodging house stands he met another woman, and for a considerable distance he walked along with her... he pushed her away from him and set off at a rapid pace...

                In the end he brought me, tired, weary, and nerve-strung, back to the street he had left where he disappeared into his own house...

                For me, it seems that the suspect crossed the Whitechapel High Street near George Yard and went into the Leman Street and after he left the shop in Leman Street he made his way down to St. George´s in the East End. There he met the first woman. From that point on, it seems to me, that the suspect went faster (I had the greatest difficulty... I had to work my way along) and back to the street where he came from, and then (on his way back), after he met the second woman he set off at a rapid pace... In my opinion not far from his place of business, the shop of the man, his little shop, his own house...

                I can well imagine that the model lodging house was the George Yard Building in George Yard.

                And this is near Brick Lane. Was there, near Brick Lane, a street with many tailors and capmakers (Cox)?

                Comment


                • Originally posted by harry View Post
                  Jeff,
                  The ID was done in secret by Anderson,Swanson and Monroe.
                  Hi Harry, I've just clarified this statement and apologised for the wording. I never believed that Monroe attended only that he was aware of its existence.

                  I believe that Swanson knew "was taken by us with difficulty' and that Anderson might have attended "reduced to a level lower than a brute"

                  Originally posted by harry View Post
                  That was your one line claim.Nothing ambiguous in the meaning.
                  I was recapping my position and worded the sentence badly, I think I've clarified my position

                  Originally posted by harry View Post
                  Of course the possibility exists.Nothing to stop you or anyone else for thinking or believing an ID took place,but thinking,believing or expressing a possibility does not constitute a provenence,and that is what is needed if Kosminski is to be considered suspect.
                  I'm not certain that your using the word provenance in its correct form here.

                  What I'm doing is looking at the 'sources', and listening to what they actually say. I don't believe anyone would have lied, become forgetful or miss-remembered. There is no requirement for anyone to do so as both MacNAughten and cox say Kozminski went into the Asylum in March 1889

                  So thats what happened. Cox says a Private Asylum in Surrey. So thats what happened. Anderson said the ID happened in an Asylum, so thats what happened. Swanson called it a Seaside Home, so thats what it was called.

                  Originally posted by harry View Post
                  Now I believe Anderson lied,as did Swanson,if he wrote the marginella,and I have as much chance of proving that,as you have of proving the ID,but that is what I believe.You may think that unfair,perhaps it is,but isn't thinking Kosminski a murderer also unfair
                  Yes but your argument requires bending twisting and re-interpreting what people say..

                  My theory requires no such problems it simply says that all the experts to date have made the incorrect assumption that MacNaughten and Anderson are describing the same event and one or 'tuther' must be incorrect.

                  I'm simply saying they are describing different events. One in March 1889 the other between July 1890 and Feb 1891

                  I hope that clarify's further

                  Yours Jeff

                  PS All 'sources' have Provinance. Sometimes the provenance is good sometimes not so good. But the 'source' says what it says.
                  Last edited by Jeff Leahy; 06-13-2015, 03:28 AM.

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                    • Originally posted by John G View Post
                      Hi Monty,

                      But doesn't the evidence suggest that Anderson, at least, believed the murderer had been discovered, and the Whitechapel murders were therefore solved? I mean, consider what he's quoted as saying in Blackwood's: "Having regard to the interest attaching to this case, I should almost be tempted to disclose the identity of the murderer..."
                      Hey John,

                      Anderson had books to sell. As a Barrister, Anderson would know how the power of words could influence, in this case, sales. His bluff is called by Smith.

                      Swanson, to me, remains focused on the incident itself.

                      Monty
                      Monty

                      https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...t/evilgrin.gif

                      Author of Capturing Jack the Ripper.

                      http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/1445621622

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by harry View Post
                        Monty,
                        I think the whole idea of Kosminski being suspect slightly hilarious,but didn't S wanson in the marginella, write of him as such.(suspect I mean,not hilarious)Sure unofficial procedures probably happened,but the idea of Anderson and Swanson and Monro( to give him his proper spelling)tugging and pulling a naughty difficult Kosminski to a seaside home for someone to have a look at him,amuses me.As does the suggestion they then let the murderous fellow free.
                        Rather like my mother trying to get me to school on the first day,all of 83 years ago.They let me go back home too,But I hadn't murdered anyone.
                        Regards,
                        Harry.
                        Who never was an author.
                        I agree.

                        Anderson and Monro had no reason to be there due to Swansons remit,, Swanson did, obviously for the same reason. Doesn't mean he was, however out of the three, his attendance wouldn't surprise me.

                        Kosminski's name it out there, and put out there by senior and experienced members, one a front line constable.

                        Monty
                        Monty

                        https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...t/evilgrin.gif

                        Author of Capturing Jack the Ripper.

                        http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/1445621622

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Monty View Post
                          Hey John,

                          Anderson had books to sell. As a Barrister, Anderson would know how the power of words could influence, in this case, sales. His bluff is called by Smith.

                          Swanson, to me, remains focused on the incident itself.

                          Monty
                          Hi Monty,

                          Yes, and Anderson, of course, could be pretty intransigent once his mind was made up: he was still insisting, in The Lighter Side of My Official Life, that Rose Mylett's death was not one of murder, despite the fact that four doctors, Bond dissenting, thought that it was; coupled with an inquest verdict of wilful murder.

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by S.Brett View Post
                            Macnaghten:

                            "This man in appearance strongly resembled the individual seen by the City PC near Mitre Square."

                            Sims:

                            "'The policeman who got a glimpse of Jack in Mitre Court said, when some time afterwards he saw the Pole, that he was the height and build of the man he had seen on the night of the murder."

                            Sagar:

                            "a police-constable met a man of Jewish appearance hurrying out of the court."

                            "A police officer met a well-known man of Jewish appearance coming out of the court near the square"

                            "A police officer met a well dressed man of Jewish appearance coming out of the court"
                            MacNaghten, Sims and Sagar all refer either to a PC, a policeman, a police officer or a police constable, yet the only candidates to being Anderson's witness are adjudged to be Schwartz and Lawende. I realise that Sims' source is likely to be MacNaghten but I would still include Harvey in the list of candidates.
                            I won't always agree but I'll try not to be disagreeable.

                            Comment


                            • Have just seen this:



                              about the Royal Sea Bathing Hospital at Margate to which:

                              "Patients travelled by ferry (the Margate Hoy) to the hospital, a journey which could take two rough and noisy days."

                              i.e. with difficulty.
                              I won't always agree but I'll try not to be disagreeable.

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Bridewell View Post
                                MacNaghten, Sims and Sagar all refer either to a PC, a policeman, a police officer or a police constable, yet the only candidates to being Anderson's witness are adjudged to be Schwartz and Lawende. I realise that Sims' source is likely to be MacNaghten but I would still include Harvey in the list of candidates.
                                Hello Bridewell!

                                Watkins found the body! Mitre Street (Mitre Court) was his beat.

                                "and just before her body was discovered a police-constable met a man of Jewish appearance hurrying out of the court."

                                "A police officer met a well-known man of Jewish appearance coming out of the court near the square, and a few moments after fell over the body"

                                "A police officer met a well dressed man of Jewish appearance coming out of the court. Continuing on his patrol he came across the woman's body."


                                See here:

                                Comparison between four reports of Robert Sagar's retirement



                                At least for the moment I do not believe in Schwartz or Lawende anymore. I think it might be possible that there was (Jewish) witness all the time (end of 1888) who could not be used. A kind of "stand-by witness". It seems to me that someone changed his mind after a certain time and the witness came into play.

                                Macnaghten and Sagar stated that there was a witness in Mitre Square. So, they talked about Catherine Eddowes. But Anderson and Swanson did not refer to a victim or crime scene.

                                Most of us assume that the (Jewish) witness saw the suspect in connection with a C5 murder, and that is absolutely logical. But what about Goulston Street? Also a kind of crime scene, a extended crime scene (and Eddowes again). And what about victims who were not obliged to give evidence as witnesses?
                                Last edited by S.Brett; 06-13-2015, 11:19 AM.

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