Ben:
"I suspect he never mentioned Kelly's clothing for the same reason - he didn't know what she was wearing before she retired for the night."
I fail to see that no questions were asked about this, Ben. Of course, we do not have it on record, but we all know that the interrogation would have brought up many a point that we have not on record. Do you really think that Abberline would have overlooked to ask about it?
The best,
Fisherman
Topping Hutchinson - looking at his son's account
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Ben:
"I’m not excluding the “possibility”, Fisherman. I’m dismissing the suggestion as improbable, because it relies on the discredited evidence being correct and the police-endorsed evidence, given under oath, being mistaken. I’m glad we seem to be in agreement over this, because to argue otherwise would very much undermine your published theory."
Once again, Ben, I donīt anticipate any personal defeat should my theory be wrong. A theory is a theory, nothing else, and if I was to invest my personal mental health in peddling the view that I must be correct, Iīd be doing myself and the boards an injustice. Therefore, I have no problems at all to argue along other lines than the one representing my main thinking - which is why I immediately point out that nobody ever took any oath to press the point that Mary Kelly did not venture out after 3 AM. Nor is there any evidence that conclusively tells us that this was so.
And if we were to accept that the evidence does allow for us to say that the book was closed on this particular errand, we still need to realize that we are faced with more questions afterwards. If she could not possibly have sobered up in the manner Hutchinson implied, then he is either lying about it or mistaken about it. And if we disallow a mistake as to how drunk she really was, then the only mistake we can argue is one of timing - if it is not possible to go from much drunk to spreeish in two hours, then some other time passage lay inbetween the sightings.
So, if we must have a longer passage of time, allowing for the sobering up, then that time passage either lies behind 2AM - and it could not, since it would take us past the moment when she reasonably died - or IN FRONT OF IT, due to Hutchinson mistaking the days.
And if he DID, then we should go searching for corroboration in the material. We should look for things like discrepancies in the weather and a failure to point out things we know occured at the time and place he believed himself to have been present in Dorset Street. For instance, although we KNOW that Sarah Lewis passed through that street and walked up the court, we also realize that what it takes for a suggestion of a mistaken day to be viable is that George Hutchinson did NOT see Lewis. And whaddoyouknow...?
Once again, I am not saying that this is correct. It is, though, the best suggestion, given the material we have. This is not something that will hinder me from recognizing that Kelly could have been alive and well, merely spreeish, and out on the East End streets after 3 AM that morning. I donīt THINK she was, but I KNOW she may have been.
The best,
FishermanLast edited by Fisherman; 03-10-2011, 12:46 PM.
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Hi Roy
Originally posted by Roy Corduroy View PostGeorge Hutchinson is discussed as though he were a real person. But if he was not Toppy, who was he? Because at some point, you have to wonder, if he can't be found, was George Hutchinson an alias.
Any help would be appreciated.
Roy
All the best
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Lechmere
DVV
Venturney said someone called Joe (who may or may not have been Flemming) gave Kelly money (but this may have been a mix up with Barnett).
Flemming may have lived at the Victoria Home a year after the murders
Sources tell us that he moved to Whitechapel/Spitalfields in September 1888, and his only known address there is the Victoria Home.
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“So, it seems possible that he did give a statement to Abberline and then testified.”
Absolutely impossible, Mike.
Hutchinson was not known to the police until after the inquest, when he approached the Commerical Street police station at 6.00pm on the 12th November.
I realise what you’re getting confused about, though:
“Many articles say that Hutchinson gave his account to a reporter which matched with what he gave the police”
This is because the police circulated the Hutchinson description to the press in time for the morning papers on 13th November, at which time no name was given, and the full account of his alleged activities that night was withheld. It was simply the description in isolation from anything else, and the likely intention behind this early release was to prevent a possible murderer’s trail from growing cold. The following day, Hutchinson himself communicated with the press and delivered his full account. The press then had both a name and an account to go with the description that had appeared the previous day. It seems likely to me that Hutchinson’s direct communication with “a reporter” was against the wishes of the police.
But there’s certainly no suggestion whatsoever that Hutchinson “testified” at the inquest. Fookin 'ell!
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Hi Roy,
An alias remains a compelling possibility as far as Hutchinson is concerned, certainly. I've always considered it very unusual that Hutchinson appended three decidedly different signatures to his statement. One had a conspicuously florid capital "H" which was completely absent from the other two, and another had the abbreviated "Geo" as a substitute for the full "George". Clearly this was someone quite unaccustomed to writing "George Hutchinson" as a standardized signature.
That said, there are several other George Hutchinsons from the East End who appear in earlier census records who haven't been investigated yet.
All the best,
BenLast edited by Ben; 03-10-2011, 06:03 AM.
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Good evening Ben,
George Hutchinson is discussed as though he were a real person. But if he was not Toppy, who was he? Because at some point, you have to wonder, if he can't be found, was George Hutchinson an alias.
Any help would be appreciated.
Roy
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“Habitual drinkers often get drunk and sober up quickly. I believe such imbibers are known as topers.”
“do you think that there would be scant trade for a prostitute after 3am?”
“If Hutchinson was there at 2.30 am are you suggesting he noticed Kelly going in with Blotchy at midnight?”
“But after reaching through the broken window pane and pulling aside the curtain, he saw by the flickering firelight a blotchy-faced man lying beside her on the bed. Both were sleeping. Cursing his misfortune, Hutchinson withdrew from the court and installed himself on the opposite side of Dorset Street.”
This from his excellent book, Person or Persons Unknown:
This would imply that he entered the court itself in advance of Lewis arriving on the scene. Clearly he would not have been required to “break in” in order to ascertain whether or not Kelly had company, as the broken window pane would have aided him in the expedient of checking from outside the room.
“After that she could have gone out at any time in the morning to find her last client.”
“Flemming may have lived at the Victoria Home a year after the murders”Last edited by Ben; 03-10-2011, 05:36 AM.
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Habitual drinkers often get drunk and sober up quickly. I believe such imbibers are known as topers. Kelly may have been a toper.
This is not to be confused with Toppy.
Mr Ben - do you think that there would be scant trade for a prostitute after 3am? I am interested in your opinion on this matter.
I find it difficult to reconcile Hutchinson’s loitering outside Miller’s Court with Hutchinson waiting for Blotchy to leave – before going in either hoping to kill or to kip.
Blotchy went in before midnight. If Hutchinson was there at 2.30 am are you suggesting he noticed Kelly going in with Blotchy at midnight? This probably discounts the possibility that he went to Romford or if he did he got back much earlier than he said. Would he then have loitered around knowing he would miss the Victoria Home curfew?
If he got there later (i.e. at 2 ish) and didn’t witness Blotchy with Kelly, then how would he have known whether Kelly was alone in her lodgings? If he was a stalker and broke in he could have found another bloke in there. Barnett could have been back there for all he knew.
This is another weakness in the Hutchinson case. If Kelly did not come back out after she was seen with Blotchy, then you have to assume Hutchinson saw Blotchy leave. 13 Miller’s Court seems to have fallen silent before 1 am. This suggests that Hutchinson was loitering a lot earlier than 2 am – if he was the person seen by Lewis at 2.30 am.
Or did he knock on Kelly’s door on the off chance? That would have been a risk. There could have been a bloke in there or she may have been spark out.
Or perhaps Blotchy went in at midnight and left at 3am and was seen by Hutchinson leaving. If so when did Hutchinson began his vigil? Surely not at midnight? Other people were in and out and didn’t report a loiterer at an earlier hour, although such a negative does not prove no one was about. That would mean he was lurking outside a quiet address wondering what was inside when luckily Blotchy emerges, so telling him that the coast was clear.
None of it really fits.
I am sure she was picked up in the street and took her killer back there.
I am not sure whether Hutchinson was there at all that night. I believe she was certainly spotted with Blotchy. After that she could have gone out at any time in the morning to find her last client.
She was supposedly behind in her rent and may have been trying to get some money together.
DVV
Venturney said someone called Joe (who may or may not have been Flemming) gave Kelly money (but this may have been a mix up with Barnett).
Flemming may have lived at the Victoria Home a year after the murders
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What about the Watergate Plumbers? They almost kept a secret.
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Mike, the only plumber I trust is my friend Pasquali. We've played rugby together.
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David,
Yes they are, but just so you remember that Fleming and Hutchinson are different men. One was a nutcase, the other a young man in pre-plumber stage. That you can bank on.
Mike
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Originally posted by Rubyretro View Post-but there are maybe some starting points to find the real person ? (not Toppy !).
Hutch said to Abberline that he had occasionally given Kelly a few shillings.
In 1888, Fleming would have known Kelly for about 3 years.
Hutch said he knew Kelly for about 3 years.
Fleming dossed in the VH.
So did Hutch.
My conclusion is that Fleming could well be the real McCoy.
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