Hi Fisherman,
I have no idea what Toppy made of the description when he presumably read about it in the papers, but there’s certainly no evidence that the real George Hutchinson ever sought to depict Astrakhan man as an individual who shared the same "status" as Lord Randolph Churchill or any member of the royal family, or else he would not have identified him as an individual believed to be living in the same district as the impoverished masses, where many of whom dwelt in what were widely regarded as some of the worst streets in London, famed for their “vicious, semi-criminal” element.
But that doesn’t enervate the implausible and outlandish coincidence of Toppy’s “embellishments” just happening to coincidence with the Royal Conspiracy theories that had been doing the rounds for a few decades; the same conspiracy theory being unashamedly touted by the individual interviewing Reg (who also evidently supplied him with more than the barebones of said conspiracy theory BEFORE interviewing him!).
Again, whatever Hutchinson believed (or was intending to convey) Astrakhan man enjoyed in terms od "status", it clearly was not on a par with Lord Randolph Churchill or any member of the Royal family. The original Hutchinson makes that very clear, and yet years later, Reg and/or Toppy are telling a couple of royal conspiracists that the latter group were not only involved (or someone “like” them, but they were observed at the crime scene. It doesn’t bear any resemblance to the already tall tale supplied by Hutchinson in 1888.
But there’s no evidence that Hutchinson was attempting to implicate the “top class” anything.
Toppy might have said that.
The Hutchinson from 1888 neither said nor intimated that the man he claimed to have seen was anything like Churchill. Someone like that (and anyone involved with the Royal Family) would not have lived in the neighbourhood, thus invalidating Churchill as a useful comparison. That’s not to say he didn’t consider the man wealthy, but by identifying him as a resident in the district, we’re clearly not talking about aristocracy or anything like it here.
He could have done, but I’d find that a bit odd in light of the coincidence as discussed above – that the embellishment just happened to coincide with the latest infestation into ripper lore, and in particular, the nonsensical nature of Fairclough’s own royal conspiracy.
I’m afraid I disagree. If Churchill and “more to do with the royal family that ordinary people” crept into Toppy’s version of events, I’m afraid that hinders his second-hand claim to ripper fame rather seriously, in my view.
All the best,
Ben
“He may not have been a mismatch in Toppys eyes when it comes to status - flashing the horse-shoe pin and the red seal stone”
“Why would anybody at any time embellish on a story? To seem a bit more important, perhaps?”
Again, whatever Hutchinson believed (or was intending to convey) Astrakhan man enjoyed in terms od "status", it clearly was not on a par with Lord Randolph Churchill or any member of the Royal family. The original Hutchinson makes that very clear, and yet years later, Reg and/or Toppy are telling a couple of royal conspiracists that the latter group were not only involved (or someone “like” them, but they were observed at the crime scene. It doesn’t bear any resemblance to the already tall tale supplied by Hutchinson in 1888.
“When we want to point to topp-class wealth and such things, we do not compare with the local well-off grocer - we compare with the richest of them all.”
“And indeed, nor did he say so - what Toppy said was that it was someone LIKE Churchill.”
The Hutchinson from 1888 neither said nor intimated that the man he claimed to have seen was anything like Churchill. Someone like that (and anyone involved with the Royal Family) would not have lived in the neighbourhood, thus invalidating Churchill as a useful comparison. That’s not to say he didn’t consider the man wealthy, but by identifying him as a resident in the district, we’re clearly not talking about aristocracy or anything like it here.
“And even if he DID think him of lesser wealth than Churchill, who is to say that he could not have polished somewhat on the story - and Astrakhan mans possible wealth - over the years?”
“And then it all becomes a measure of stupidity combined with a core of truth, and nothing much else - and certainly nothing that allows us to speak of proven malicious intents and lies”
All the best,
Ben
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