Originally posted by Iconoclast
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1. The photograph you highlight has not been proven to be Fred Abberline. This was a suggestion made by Donald Rumbelow (a decent one, but he didn't insist on it), but since there is no known photo of Abberline, it's only a suggestion. Two other men in the same photograph (the man to your man's left and another man behind him) also have their supporters.
2. Abberline's pension papers list him as 5' 9 1/2" which was not short by Victorian standards. I don't know if there's a legitimate height for Maybrick, but is there any evidence that Abberline was shorter than Maybrick? How would Maybrick know how tall Abberline was? What is your contemporary source for his belief?
3. If the hoaxer wanted to really ridicule someone's height, and was as sophisticated as you seem to think she was, the obvious choice would have been the local H-Division Inspector, Edmund Reid, who was literally the shortest man in the Metropolitan Police at 5' 6" (which was below the regulation minimum).
4. You won't like this last bit. Years ago, Rick Cobb gave his own suggestion about why the diary refers to Abberline as a "little man."
The Little Man was a stock phrase in the Michael Caine mini-series, based on Sir William Gull telling Abberline that the Ripper would be a little man (ie., an insignificant man).
"Convince a Little Man," Gull states, "that he is serving some great cause...and he'll do practically anything for you..." Even murder. He tells this to Abberline after looking at the photograph of Mary Kelly.
Cobb's idea was that the hoaxer remembered this from the mini-series and turned the tables on Abberline, making HIM the "(funny) little man."
Jack The Ripper : Convince A Little Man (youtube.com)
Jack The Ripper : The Little Man (youtube.com)
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