I think it is perfectly possible for people to keep small events discrete … and not for them to talk about them all the time. Examples are legion and I don't think grandstanding about how 'memorable' certain events are gives any argument for or against Toppy's candidacy here.
Here, Claire, I feel that you may be overlooking certain contextual elements of Reg’s upbringing. In an era which predated television and even widespread radio ownership, storytelling was an integral part of everyday family life. People sat around the fire on long, cold winter nights and talked. Such was the salience of the Whitechapel Murders within the oral traditions of East London that Jack the Ripper was frequently a favourite topic of discussion. Dan Farson certainly tapped into this oral history during his Ripper researches, and I have come across a number of accounts describing how the exploits of Jack the Ripper were recounted in all their gory detail amongst those who crammed into East London underground stations during the Blitz.
Like Ruby, therefore, I have considerable difficulty in believing that Toppy enjoyed an intimate association with Mary Kelly, observed her with the man likely to have been Jack the Ripper, met and related his story to the near-legendary Inspector Abberline, viewed Kelly’s mutilated remains, and became part of the Ripper manhunt courtesy of his trawling the Whitechapel district in the company of detectives, yet made next to nothing of these extraordinary events in decades of interaction with his children and grandchildren – and all of this in a geographical area wherein even today the crimes of Jack the Ripper assume a special resonance.
You, of course, are entitled to make of this what you will. But to my way of thinking, it simply doesn’t ring true.
Regards.
Garry Wroe.
Comment