Jane Coram:
"This really demonstrates why Dew can't be used as anything more than a bit of background colour to the case. Dew was taking a somewhat dubious press report, mixing it with the truth and getting it all arse upwards. Mr Reeves did not go down to investigate because his wife had been having the jitters, he went down because he was on his way to work and just happened to chance upon her. Although she claims after the event that she had the spooks, she did not tell her husband to go and find out what was causing it. Dew picked up on a press report, which has no firm basis in fact and stated it was fact. Not good."
Excuse me for asking, but how do we know that this was what happened? How do we know that Dew did not speak to Louise Reeves himself? Why must we surmise that this "somewhat dubious press report" was somewhat dubious? And if it WAS dubious, what is there to say that Dew did not get his picture from one of the Reeves´himself - or hear about it from a colleague? And maybe Mrs Reeves urged her husband to go down the stairs somewhat earlier than usual, since she had been spooked?
I think, Jane, that your proposition that we should take for granted that Dew messed up a press report instead of having had access to the true material from the outset, is one that is founded on the loosest of grounds. I am very sorry - and somewhat disappointed, to be perfectly honest.
I read your added comment:"I should have said, 'there is no supporting evidence that Mrs Reeves told her husband to go down and investigate, other than the press report.'
Have you pondered that there was in fact also a policeman, involved in the investigation that said the same...? Why must we conclude that HIS view was grounded on the Echo´s article? Did he read all newspapers, and opt for this one when confabulating? This, Jane, is a very thin ice you are trying to make a stance on, is it not?
And what is this: "The woman was lying to the left of the door and close to the fence. Her injuries, although these men didn't know it, were exact duplicates of those which had been suffered by Mary Nicholls."
Are we to accept that Dew meant that each and every cut to Chapman´s body was also present on Nicholls? Does he mean that Nicholls had the exact same amounts of flesh attached to a cut-away uterus as Chapman had? That there were the exact same amount of nicks to the vertebrae in both cases? Is that what he tries to say? That two frenzies with a knife had produced carbon copy wounds?
I am baffled by the very suggestion that this was Dew´s aim!
Why do we ascribe Polly Nicholls and Annie Chapman to the same killer? Exactly: because they were killed by a man that inflicted damages that produced victims of a type that was more or less unique. Other women were killed horrificly too in that period, like the Thames Torso victims. But what tied the Ripper´s victims together was that they suffered the same type of damages: A cut throat and an eviscerated stomach. In THAT respect, they WERE exactly the same.
And is it not far more credible that this is what Dew says, than to suggest that he knew NOTHING about it and guessed - and guessed wrong? Really, Jane!
And look at what he says of Chapman: "The head had been almost severed from the body and, for some mysterious reason, was being kept in position by a tightly tied, coloured handkerchief."
He does NOT do the press mistake of saying that the head would have rooled away if it had not been for the handkerchief. He apparently knew that the head was only ALMOST severed!
I will look into your quotation about Cross and Paul, but not tonight - I´ve got too much to do right now. But a quick glance tells me that there may be contentious elements involved.
As for the rest of the so called mistakes, I invest nothing in them myself, I must say. I hope you can see my points about it.
The best,
Fisherman
"This really demonstrates why Dew can't be used as anything more than a bit of background colour to the case. Dew was taking a somewhat dubious press report, mixing it with the truth and getting it all arse upwards. Mr Reeves did not go down to investigate because his wife had been having the jitters, he went down because he was on his way to work and just happened to chance upon her. Although she claims after the event that she had the spooks, she did not tell her husband to go and find out what was causing it. Dew picked up on a press report, which has no firm basis in fact and stated it was fact. Not good."
Excuse me for asking, but how do we know that this was what happened? How do we know that Dew did not speak to Louise Reeves himself? Why must we surmise that this "somewhat dubious press report" was somewhat dubious? And if it WAS dubious, what is there to say that Dew did not get his picture from one of the Reeves´himself - or hear about it from a colleague? And maybe Mrs Reeves urged her husband to go down the stairs somewhat earlier than usual, since she had been spooked?
I think, Jane, that your proposition that we should take for granted that Dew messed up a press report instead of having had access to the true material from the outset, is one that is founded on the loosest of grounds. I am very sorry - and somewhat disappointed, to be perfectly honest.
I read your added comment:"I should have said, 'there is no supporting evidence that Mrs Reeves told her husband to go down and investigate, other than the press report.'
Have you pondered that there was in fact also a policeman, involved in the investigation that said the same...? Why must we conclude that HIS view was grounded on the Echo´s article? Did he read all newspapers, and opt for this one when confabulating? This, Jane, is a very thin ice you are trying to make a stance on, is it not?
And what is this: "The woman was lying to the left of the door and close to the fence. Her injuries, although these men didn't know it, were exact duplicates of those which had been suffered by Mary Nicholls."
Are we to accept that Dew meant that each and every cut to Chapman´s body was also present on Nicholls? Does he mean that Nicholls had the exact same amounts of flesh attached to a cut-away uterus as Chapman had? That there were the exact same amount of nicks to the vertebrae in both cases? Is that what he tries to say? That two frenzies with a knife had produced carbon copy wounds?
I am baffled by the very suggestion that this was Dew´s aim!
Why do we ascribe Polly Nicholls and Annie Chapman to the same killer? Exactly: because they were killed by a man that inflicted damages that produced victims of a type that was more or less unique. Other women were killed horrificly too in that period, like the Thames Torso victims. But what tied the Ripper´s victims together was that they suffered the same type of damages: A cut throat and an eviscerated stomach. In THAT respect, they WERE exactly the same.
And is it not far more credible that this is what Dew says, than to suggest that he knew NOTHING about it and guessed - and guessed wrong? Really, Jane!
And look at what he says of Chapman: "The head had been almost severed from the body and, for some mysterious reason, was being kept in position by a tightly tied, coloured handkerchief."
He does NOT do the press mistake of saying that the head would have rooled away if it had not been for the handkerchief. He apparently knew that the head was only ALMOST severed!
I will look into your quotation about Cross and Paul, but not tonight - I´ve got too much to do right now. But a quick glance tells me that there may be contentious elements involved.
As for the rest of the so called mistakes, I invest nothing in them myself, I must say. I hope you can see my points about it.
The best,
Fisherman
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