Originally posted by John Wheat
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why respond if you only read the first sentence? I'm fine with being ignored.
I asked the simple question of what advantage was there in using Cross over Lechmere?
The question was not one of Lechmere trying to fool authorities about his identity.
Since 2012?, the argument by Christer and a few others has been that Lechmere was trying to conceal his identity from his wife and neighbors
in newspaper accounts. He most certainly didn't present himself to his neighbors on Doveton street as Charles Cross: his wife, children and patrilineal descendents all go by Lechmere. And his wife had the strange habit of signing an 'X' on her marriage certificate and other documents, so her literacy is gravely in question. If you wish to give me an example of males who made a choose between using a different name in our enlightened age from that of his children, please enlighten me. In Victorian England, I suspect that it would be considered weird and in great contradiction to morays.
So the question is not whether using Cross is a sign of guilt or innocence;
the question is, between Lechmere or Cross, why did he choose Cross, feeling that it better served him during the proceedings?
It is not a whimsical thing.
And yes, he also had the option of telling authorities that his name is Lechmere, but that he was known administratively at Pickfords as Cross.
I don't know if the latter part was true after more than 20 years of service,
but there is always the possibility that he never bothered to inform Pickford administrators.
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