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  • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
    Amazing.

    Under a wall lamp, next to Millers Court passage, it was bright enough to see a red handkerchief - that is all that matters.
    Crikey,he can also see through gaiters to the buttons on the boots.

    Also,according to at least one newspaper, Mary's companion had a seal on the gold chain.

    Anyone checked Ancestry for Clark Kent!

    Still reckon Hutchinson was a lookout for Jack the Ripper and that his description of "A Man" was a not too subtle way of reminding Abberline etc that he was untouchable.

    When Phillips sought a pardon,they dropped Hutchinson like a hot potato.

    Incidentally,who changed the hotel in Hutchinson's Police statement from the Ten Bill (sic) to the Queens Head Public House without initialing it?
    My name is Dave. You cannot reach me through Debs email account

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    • Originally posted by DJA View Post
      Crikey,he can also see through gaiters to the buttons on the boots.
      Not familiar with Victorian mens wear?

      There was a wide range of styles of Gaiters, some had a stirrup fitting at the bottom that looped under the instep. This style did not cover the instep.
      Also, men's buttoned boots tend to button up from the bottom of the instep, which means, if worn with the afore mentioned gaiter the buttons would be visible at the front.


      When Phillips sought a pardon,they dropped Hutchinson like a hot potato.
      A pardon was issued before Hutchinson came forward.

      Incidentally,who changed the hotel in Hutchinson's Police statement from the Ten Bill (sic) to the Queens Head Public House without initialing it?
      Back in the archives someone claimed that the correction was made by Abberline. I'm not sure the person was qualified to judge.
      Regards, Jon S.

      Comment


      • Originally posted by DJA View Post
        Crikey,he can also see through gaiters to the buttons on the boots.

        Also,according to at least one newspaper, Mary's companion had a seal on the gold chain.

        Anyone checked Ancestry for Clark Kent!

        Still reckon Hutchinson was a lookout for Jack the Ripper and that his description of "A Man" was a not too subtle way of reminding Abberline etc that he was untouchable.

        When Phillips sought a pardon,they dropped Hutchinson like a hot potato.

        Incidentally,who changed the hotel in Hutchinson's Police statement from the Ten Bill (sic) to the Queens Head Public House without initialing it?
        What has what Hutchinson saw (the red handkerchief) by the light of the lamp in the Millers Court passage got to do with what he saw directly under the lamp at the Queen's Head? Hutchinson reported that he was very close to the couple then, and was therefore able to furnish a full description. He'd hardly be standing next to Mary and AM while they were kissing and chatting at the entry to Millers Court! He saw what he saw from a distance.

        Comment


        • "Not familiar with Victorian mens wear?"

          I am actually.

          Hutchinson was describing gaiters with white buttons ie spats,which cover the instep and any boot buttons.

          I've worn both gaiters and spats,the latter with a Gordon Highlanders kilt.

          "A pardon was issued before Hutchinson came forward."

          I am obviously referring to the pardon Phillips sought immediately after Hutchinson came forward.

          Firstly,given Hutchinson's superhuman observations,confusing those two pubs is remarkable.
          Does not look like Abberline's handwriting.
          Last edited by DJA; 07-15-2015, 09:58 PM. Reason: Spelling
          My name is Dave. You cannot reach me through Debs email account

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          • Originally posted by Rosella View Post
            What has what Hutchinson saw (the red handkerchief) by the light of the lamp in the Millers Court passage got to do with what he saw directly under the lamp at the Queen's Head? Hutchinson reported that he was very close to the couple then, and was therefore able to furnish a full description. He'd hardly be standing next to Mary and AM while they were kissing and chatting at the entry to Millers Court! He saw what he saw from a distance.
            If he saw the alleged red handkerchief from a distance in semi darkness.....try replicating that at 15 - 20 feet.

            Oddly Hutchinson said he saw Mr A at the Ten Bells Public House,until some unknown person changed the Police statement.

            OP was questioning the whereabouts of the red handkerchief after Mary Kelly's demise.
            My name is Dave. You cannot reach me through Debs email account

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            • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
              Not familiar with Victorian mens wear?

              There was a wide range of styles of Gaiters, some had a stirrup fitting at the bottom that looped under the instep. This style did not cover the instep.
              Also, men's buttoned boots tend to button up from the bottom of the instep, which means, if worn with the afore mentioned gaiter the buttons would be visible at the front.


              There are a number of pictures taken at different angles.




              Women's,however you get the idea.


              If the gas lamps outside the two different Public House were in the same spot as today's lamps,we have a "problem".
              The Queens Head lamp is up Fashion Street a bit.
              Ten Bells is pretty much on the streets corner.
              Last edited by DJA; 07-15-2015, 11:27 PM. Reason: Extra content
              My name is Dave. You cannot reach me through Debs email account

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              • Yes Ben, bending light causes a change in intensity. The intensity of light is the relationship of photons; the closer they are, the brighter the light. The property of glass is not going to slow every photon at the exact same rate, so photons that were never going to simulate the same path, now do.
                I confess that altruistic and cynically selfish talk seem to me about equally unreal. With all humility, I think 'whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might,' infinitely more important than the vain attempt to love one's neighbour as one's self. If you want to hit a bird on the wing you must have all your will in focus, you must not be thinking about yourself, and equally, you must not be thinking about your neighbour; you must be living with your eye on that bird. Every achievement is a bird on the wing.
                Oliver Wendell Holmes

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                • Hi Sleek,

                  Placing glass around a naked flame and expecting it to create anything other than a dim light (which is what Victorian gas lamps were well known for prior to 1891) is only marginally more effective than attaching a horn to the forehead of a horse and expecting it to fly. It would have improved the situation in the former case, yes, which is presumably why they did it, but a bright light would emphatically not have been the result.

                  Under a wall lamp, next to Millers Court passage, it was bright enough to see a red handkerchief - that is all that matters.
                  A very poor, circular argument, Jon; "It was bright enough to see a red handkerchief --> because Hutchinson says it was --> which means Hutchinson told the truth --> because it was bight enough to see a red handkerchief --> because Hutchinson said it was, and so on.

                  The chances of anyone making out the colour red on such a small object, produced for a fleeting moment in very dim artificial light, and from such a distance, were slim to non-existent. Try it yourself.

                  Hutchinson reported that he was very close to the couple then, and was therefore able to furnish a full description.
                  Actually, Rosella, it would only have enabled him to "furnish a full description" if the encounter had occurred in daylight, and the subject had been standing still for a much longer time. Otherwise, you can pretty much forget "linen collar", "horsehoe tie-pin" and "dark eyelashes".

                  Regards,
                  Ben

                  Comment


                  • Good pints, DJA.

                    I hadn't considered that the struck-through Ten Bells, corrected by Queen's Head, ought to have been initialled.

                    Cheers,
                    Ben

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                    • he knew it was red because he was wearing it the night of the double event.

                      Or if he wasn't the ripper, he knew it was red because he read about it in the papers.
                      "Is all that we see or seem
                      but a dream within a dream?"

                      -Edgar Allan Poe


                      "...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
                      quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."

                      -Frederick G. Abberline

                      Comment


                      • Among the hundreds of styles of Victorian gaiters, these which do not cover the instep.




                        And, among the hundreds of styles of button boots that have buttons down the instep



                        Buttons visible beneath the gaiter, imagine that.
                        Regards, Jon S.

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Ben View Post
                          A very poor, circular argument, Jon; "It was bright enough to see a red handkerchief --> because Hutchinson says it was --> which means Hutchinson told the truth --> because it was bight enough to see a red handkerchief --> because Hutchinson said it was, and so on.
                          Your words (in bold), not mine.

                          Think a little more about it, .....you have decided that the luminosity was "dim", my observation is, ...when compared to what?

                          Colours and objects CAN be seen in poor, bad, or "dim" light, it all depends on how bright the "dim" actually is. Seeing as how you cannot quantify the "dim", then you have not proven your point.
                          Therefore, so long as the dim light was sufficient for him to see the red handkerchief then your argument fails.

                          Have you lot decided yet whether this was red, blue, "pitch black", or just dim?
                          Regards, Jon S.

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
                            Among the hundreds of styles of Victorian gaiters, these which do not cover the instep.




                            And, among the hundreds of styles of button boots that have buttons down the instep



                            Buttons visible beneath the gaiter, imagine that.
                            Gaiters with white buttons are actually called spats.
                            Try reading Hutchinson's Police statement.

                            They are designed to cover the fastenings,whether lace or button up boots.
                            Think dress up, not riding or hiking gear.

                            I have worn both,although my spats had black buttons.
                            Never worn button up boots,as they went out with.....button up boots.
                            My name is Dave. You cannot reach me through Debs email account

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by DJA View Post
                              Gaiters with white buttons are actually called spats.
                              spat, n

                              [Abbreviation of SPATTERDASH]

                              1. A short gaiter worn over the instep and reaching only a little way above the ankle, usually fastened under the foot by means of a strap.
                              Try reading Hutchinson's Police statement.
                              I read the Oxford English Dictionary
                              Kind regards, Sam Flynn

                              "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
                                spat, n

                                [Abbreviation of SPATTERDASH]

                                1. A short gaiter worn over the instep and reaching only a little way above the ankle, usually fastened under the foot by means of a strap.
                                I read the Oxford English Dictionary
                                The spats I wore went up to the calf.

                                Your Dictionary describes what Mr A was almost certainly wearing.

                                Wickerman has actually shown half chaps.
                                Highly unlikely to see them as street wear.
                                Definitely lacking white buttons.
                                The riding boots have no buttons.
                                0/10. Fail!
                                Last edited by DJA; 07-16-2015, 10:47 AM. Reason: Addition.
                                My name is Dave. You cannot reach me through Debs email account

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