I'd just like to respond to something Batman recently posted on another board.
It's not a question of my "not liking" anything, but my insistence on accuracy. You said that he "dressed like a sailor at his trial", but there is no evidence of this. He may have carried (what was described as) a nautical cap and wore (what was described as) a serge double-breasted sailor's suit, but that's not exactly cosplay is it?
What about his trousers... were they bell-bottomed? What about his footwear... was he wearing plimsolls? What about his shirt, his necktie, his overcoat?
The fact is that only two items of his attire were described as naval by a journalist, but this does not constitute "dressing like a sailor". And, as I've pointed out more than once, the descriptions in question relate to his pre-trial Police Court appearance, not the trial itself.
That was after Kłosowski had moved to the seaside town of Hastings in the late 1890s. What he looked like at his trial or, more importantly, in 1888 are entirely different matters. In respect of the latter, we don't know how he dressed during the time of the Ripper murders. The nearest we get is a description of what he looked like in Tottenham in 1894, where Woolf Levisohn apparently described him as "la di da, all high hat and umbrella". Hardly sailor-like by any stretch of the imagination.
I knew this before Helena's book came out, having conducted extensive research into Kłosowski myself, and gave a talk about him at the 2010 Ripper Conference. That aside, I'm not missing anything (deliberately or otherwise) but I am sticking carefully to the facts. This is important in general, of course, and certainly applies to the question of how Kłosowski dressed at the time of the Whitechapel Murders. How he dressed later is another matter entirely.
Originally posted by Batman
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What about his trousers... were they bell-bottomed? What about his footwear... was he wearing plimsolls? What about his shirt, his necktie, his overcoat?
The fact is that only two items of his attire were described as naval by a journalist, but this does not constitute "dressing like a sailor". And, as I've pointed out more than once, the descriptions in question relate to his pre-trial Police Court appearance, not the trial itself.
He even bought a boat. The Mosquito. Donned his nautical suit and P&O cap and boasted that he one day cross the Boulogue.
If you have read [Helena Wojtczak's] book then you are doing your best to miss all this.
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