In The Trial of George Chapman By Hargrave Lee Adam, 1930. HL Adam seems to want to build a case against Chapman. So he concludes that Alice Mackenzie was a victim, saying - In his official capacity of wholesale murderer nothing more was heard of the Whitechapel murderer until July 1889. Also [after a description of the castle alley murder] - This was the last murder of the series. The police were baffled, the Ripper finally and completely victorious. And in his summing up of the coincidences of Chapman/JTR - Last murder in London, July 1889. Chapman still in the vicinity. No Ripper murders in England, but similar murders in America, in the locality of Jersey City. Chapman and his wife left in May 1890, for America, where Chapman opened a barber's shop at Jersey City. And about Hutchinson - Description is given of the man seen with the woman Kelly: "Height, 5 ft. 6in.; age, 34 or 35; dark complexion, with moustache curled at ends." This is a most faithful description of Chapman.
The point of all this is HL Adam himself seems to be building the case. If he took great stock on what Abberline or Anderson for that matter believed, he would discount Alice, or at least be cautious of including her because both Abberline and Anderson believed the killings stopped with Mary. Seems to me he is including Hutchinson's description because of the likeness towards the known photo's of Chapman. As many people, including people who do not believe what Hutch saw, have noticed.
The point of all this is HL Adam himself seems to be building the case. If he took great stock on what Abberline or Anderson for that matter believed, he would discount Alice, or at least be cautious of including her because both Abberline and Anderson believed the killings stopped with Mary. Seems to me he is including Hutchinson's description because of the likeness towards the known photo's of Chapman. As many people, including people who do not believe what Hutch saw, have noticed.
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