Originally posted by JeffHamm
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"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
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
No, I hear you. I just cant fathom why he would remain Lechmere, if he could change or keep his name cross, seeing that his Dad Lechmere was such a jerk and among other things, abandoned him and his mother.
I don't know what would be involved for him to legally change his name. If it involved some expense, he may just not have bothered? Without knowing what would be involved at the time I can't even begin to imagine reasons that are worth considering.
- Jeff
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
No, I hear you. I just cant fathom why he would remain Lechmere, if he could change or keep his name cross, seeing that his Dad Lechmere was such a jerk and among other things, abandoned him and his mother.G U T
There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.
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>>Charles Cross was accompanied by a legal representative of Pickfords and during the proceedings, the legal representative advised Cross not to answer a certain question because doing so would not be in his best interests.<<
Happy to be corrected, but this reads like you may be confusing Cross's R.T.A. with the case of a young lad named William Whitaker's R.T.A. which Gary Barnett and I debated recently elsewhere. In that case his employer advised him not to answer a question.
dustymiller
aka drstrange
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>>I just cant fathom why he would remain Lechmere, if he could change or keep his name cross, seeing that his Dad Lechmere was such a jerk and among other things, abandoned him and his mother.<<
The same reason for so many actions are undertaken in life ... money.Last edited by drstrange169; 10-29-2022, 10:51 PM.dustymiller
aka drstrange
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>>Lechmere's walk to work took him right past the scene of Nichols' murder, but none of the others.<<
There a debate to be had about the suitability of the timing and Cross, with regards to Mrs Chapman's murder, but there is no debate that his known route to work took him past 29 Hanbury Street.dustymiller
aka drstrange
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Originally posted by drstrange169 View Post>>Lechmere's walk to work took him right past the scene of Nichols' murder, but none of the others.<<
There a debate to be had about the suitability of the timing and Cross, with regards to Mrs Chapman's murder, but there is no debate that his known route to work took him past 29 Hanbury Street.
- Jeff
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Originally posted by drstrange169 View Post>>Charles Cross wahas accompanied by a legal representative of Pickfords and during the proceedings, the legal representative advised Cross not to answer a certain question because doing so would not be in his best interests.<<
Happy to be corrected, but this reads like you may be confusing Cross's R.T.A. with the case of a young lad named William Whitaker's R.T.A. which Gary Barnett and I debated recently elsewhere. In that case his employer advised him not to answer a question.
I was researching Lechmere at the time!
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Originally posted by drstrange169 View Post>>Lechmere's walk to work took him right past the scene of Nichols' murder, but none of the others.<<
There a debate to be had about the suitability of the timing and Cross, with regards to Mrs Chapman's murder, but there is no debate that his known route to work took him past 29 Hanbury Street.
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Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post
Hi Abby,
I think the issue is that his use of Lechmere is documented on legal documents, where he would be required to put his legal name, whether he liked it or not. The question is what name he used in every day life, such as at work, etc. What has come to us through the years are only the legal documents, because they get preserved, while use of the name Cross would not (unless we came across, say, a collection of personal letters that he wrote). This is what would be referred to as a "biased sample" in research, and given the possibility that description may get misconstrued as to my intention, what calling a sample biased means is we're only looking at information from a restricted range of sources. Other examples of a "biased sample" would be testing a medicine only on males, or only on females, or only on people aged 20-25, etc. While the conclusions may generalise to other "males/females/young adults", there always remain the possibility that the medicine may produce different results when used outside the tested group.
So because we only have access to legal documents, our sample of his name usage is limited to his name use on legal documents, not his name use in other situations.
Now, at the inquest, all we have documented is that he used Cross, which appears at odds with his use of Lechmere on other legal documents. However, it has been pointed out by some that it would have been entirely acceptable for him to identify himself as "Cross" if that were the name he was generally known by, even if it was not his legal name. I don't know enough about the laws around this to evaluate that argument, but if that is the case then going by Cross at this inquest, as well as the previous one, would suggest that Cross was the name by which he was commonly known and Lechmere is the name that he is registered under with gov't institutions. So the census, and tax office, marriage licences, births, etc "know" him as Lechmere but everyone else calls him Cross. Now whether or not everyone else also knew he had the name Lechmere associated with him is an open question. It may be people knew he had two names, one "formal" and one "informal" and that he generally went by his informal name (Cross), but this is a question for which we have no answer because we only have the records from the gov't offices to examine, but not records of his name use from elsewhere (other than the one other inquest he was involved in, where again he went by Cross).
- Jeff
(I suppose I ought to have written, 'When the man whom we know as Lechmere approached him, Mizen gathered that he was a carman, which suggests IMHO that Lechmere had identified himself as a carman').
Can you imagine Lechmere introducing himself merely as a carman?
I have a hunch that he identified himself as an employee of Pickfords.
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Originally posted by drstrange169 View Post>>Can you please provide the evidence?<<
"The other man left witness (Cross) at the corner of Hanbury-street and turned into Corbett's court."
The Times 4/9/88
They went there only in order to find a policeman.
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Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post
Something has just occured to me: Mizen testified that when Lechmere approached him, he identified himself as a carman.
(I suppose I ought to have written, 'When the man whom we know as Lechmere approached him, Mizen gathered that he was a carman, which suggests IMHO that Lechmere had identified himself as a carman').
Can you imagine Lechmere introducing himself merely as a carman?
I have a hunch that he identified himself as an employee of Pickfords.
- Jeff
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Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post
I don't understand why the fact that, after leaving the body, Lechmere and Paul went to the corner of Hanbury Street and Baker's Row is bring taken to have any bearing on the question of which route he took to work.
They went there only in order to find a policeman.
- Jeff
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