Yes, I'm actually starting a 'diary' thread!
In view of the ongoing and circular 'incontrovertible' thread debate (which never seems to get anywhere) I thought that a thread about 'inspiration' for the fake 'diary' might be interesting. 'Why Maybrick as a suspect?' and 'why Liverpool?' are questions that have been asked frequently in the past and the reasons are many. Just why would a Liverpool hoaxer decide upon the Maybrick case as an ideal basis for a journal by Jack the Ripper?
I believe there are several factors involved and one of the main ones, of course, is the close proximity in timing of the two cases. Jack the Ripper was the great criminal cause celebre of 1888 and the Maybrick case was the great criminal cause celebre of 1889. Indeed, there was a press overlap. For in July 1889 reports were appearing both of the Maybrick poisoning and the McKenzie murder, thought to possibly be a Ripper case.
A more modern inspiration has been suggested by the fact that 1988 marked the Ripper centenary, for which there was much media coverage, and 1989 marked the Maybrick case centenary for which, I was told, there was a mock re-trial of Florence Maybrick held at the original venue, St. George's Hall, Liverpool, at a time that the Ripper centenary was still very recent news.
In view of the ongoing and circular 'incontrovertible' thread debate (which never seems to get anywhere) I thought that a thread about 'inspiration' for the fake 'diary' might be interesting. 'Why Maybrick as a suspect?' and 'why Liverpool?' are questions that have been asked frequently in the past and the reasons are many. Just why would a Liverpool hoaxer decide upon the Maybrick case as an ideal basis for a journal by Jack the Ripper?
I believe there are several factors involved and one of the main ones, of course, is the close proximity in timing of the two cases. Jack the Ripper was the great criminal cause celebre of 1888 and the Maybrick case was the great criminal cause celebre of 1889. Indeed, there was a press overlap. For in July 1889 reports were appearing both of the Maybrick poisoning and the McKenzie murder, thought to possibly be a Ripper case.
A more modern inspiration has been suggested by the fact that 1988 marked the Ripper centenary, for which there was much media coverage, and 1989 marked the Maybrick case centenary for which, I was told, there was a mock re-trial of Florence Maybrick held at the original venue, St. George's Hall, Liverpool, at a time that the Ripper centenary was still very recent news.
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