Wickerman -A rich man might change his shirts and hats. I doubt if he had a large wardrobe of overcoats though. Don't forget that his clothes would almost certainly be made to measure.
The poor could change their clothes more easily by going into pawn shops. A rich man such as A Man would stick out like a sore thumb walking into a pawn shop to buy a disguise.
A Man was wearing a very distinctive alliance of jewellery. It was distinctive enough for Hutchinson to clock it in the dark. Lots of men may have owned a gold watch and chain, and lots of men might have owned a gold horseshoe tie pin. Far fewer men would have owned a watch chain with a red stone
and even fewer both a watchchain with a red stone, and a gold horseshoe tie pin.
It is plainly ridiculous to imagine that A Man would have only put his jewellery on when 'slumming' in the Dorset Street. It cannot have been fetish jewellery that he only put on when murdering either, since Lawende's man clearly wasn't wearing it.
No man lives in a total vacuum, and A Man would have had a maid, even if he didn't have a wife. He would have come into contact with other people in
his daily life. It is inconceivable that no one would have recognised the description of his watch and pin.
A Man would have been readily identifiable from Hutchinson's description -had he existed, of course.
The poor could change their clothes more easily by going into pawn shops. A rich man such as A Man would stick out like a sore thumb walking into a pawn shop to buy a disguise.
A Man was wearing a very distinctive alliance of jewellery. It was distinctive enough for Hutchinson to clock it in the dark. Lots of men may have owned a gold watch and chain, and lots of men might have owned a gold horseshoe tie pin. Far fewer men would have owned a watch chain with a red stone
and even fewer both a watchchain with a red stone, and a gold horseshoe tie pin.
It is plainly ridiculous to imagine that A Man would have only put his jewellery on when 'slumming' in the Dorset Street. It cannot have been fetish jewellery that he only put on when murdering either, since Lawende's man clearly wasn't wearing it.
No man lives in a total vacuum, and A Man would have had a maid, even if he didn't have a wife. He would have come into contact with other people in
his daily life. It is inconceivable that no one would have recognised the description of his watch and pin.
A Man would have been readily identifiable from Hutchinson's description -had he existed, of course.
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