There is nothing wrong with favouring a suspect. There is nothing wrong with expressing a points that someone feels is in favour. But a respect for evidence and an accurate representation of it has to come before the promotion of a suspect. Yes, long drawn out points can be boring but we have to at least try to get things right.
This is not about whether Francis Thompson is a worthy or good or poor suspect. Everyone can make up their own minds on this. This is about taking an honest approach and following what the evidence tells us and not what we want it to mean. So..
The poll question is: Is Major Smith’s suspect a certain match for Francis Thompson? Or is he not a match?
…..
Richard’s contention is that the suspect (described but not named) that is mentioned in Major Henry Smith’s book is a fit for Thompson. To make clear, Richard has used these phrases:
“Major Henry Smith’s five-point description of his Rupert Street suspect aligns with Thompson uniquely (ex-medical student, asylum history, prostitute connection, coin motif, Haymarket residence).”
“A tight, unusual five-point bundle (ex-medical student; asylum history; prostitutes; coin-bilking; Haymarket/Rupert Street presence).”
“Fiver, the truth is simple: the statistical probability of any other man in London 1888 matching all five of Smith’s Rupert Street traits is about 1 in 20 quadrillion. Thompson matches them all. Others match one or two. None match the full set.‘
So Richard is absolutely clear. He is stating that Thompson is a slam dunk for Smith’s suspect.
…..
Boring I know, but I’ll repeat exactly what Smith said in his book:
“After the second crime I sent word to Sir Charles Warren that I had discovered a man very likely to be the man wanted. He certainly had all the qualifications requisite. He had been a medical student; he had been in a lunatic asylum; he spent all his time with women of loose character, whom he bilked by giving them polished farthings instead of sovereigns, two of these farthings have been found in the pocket of the murdered woman. Sir Charles failed to find him. I thought he was likely to be in Rupert Street, Haymarket. I sent up two men, and there he was; but, polished farthings and all, he proved an alibi without a shadow of doubt.”
So we can sum up the ‘traits’ as:
My information comes from Strange Harp, Strange Symphony. A biography of Thompson by John Walsh (who Richard accepts as a reliable source of information)
1. That Thompson was a former medical student is of course 100% true - match
2. Francis Thompson had never in his entire life been in a lunatic asylum. He entered a hospital in October of 1888 after his friend persuaded him to see a doctor. The doctor said that he was on the verge of total collapse so he was admitted to a hospital to recover. Richard tries to get around this inconvenient fact by claiming that hospitals were often called asylums. This is clearly not the case. Smith’s suspect entered a lunatic asylum because he was mentally ill in some way. Thompson entered a hospital because he was physically ill. The two are very clearly not the same. Thompson was provably never in an asylum - no match
3. Francis Thompson was never, at any point in his life bilking prostitutes with polished farthings, conning prostitutes in any way or even of being in possession of farthings (polished or otherwise) The only coin-related issue mentioned in Walsh’s book is of Thompson finding 2 sovereigns in the street. As Thompson had, whilst on drugs, hallucinated seeing the ghost of Chatterton, it’d question if the sovereign incident ever happened but that not relevant to the point. So, he never conned prostitutes and he was never mentioned in regard to farthings - no match
4. Smith sent men to Rupert Street, Haymarket where they found this man. So what was Thompson’s connection to Rupert Street? Absolutely none. He never lived there; we have no reason for suspecting that he ever went there. From the early part of August and going back a fair time Thompson was living with his prostitute friend in Chelsea. Geography isn’t my strong point but I believe that’s around 2 miles away. Thompson certainly would have been around in the west end but we cannot connect him to Rupert Street and that’s where Smith sent his men. We cannot match Chelsea and various locations in the west end with Rupert Street and suggest it’s a match when it’s clearly not - no match
5. Did Thompson spend all of his time with prostitutes? He certainly lived with one but we have no evidence of him spending all of his time with them. I’d suggest - 50/50 at best on this.
And let’s not forget. This guy was found and he provided an alibi that satisfied Smith. During the period in question Thompson was wandering around trying to find his girlfriend. He was sleeping in doorways and doss houses and wherever he could. How easy would it have been for a vagrant to find a solid alibi?
This is not about whether Francis Thompson is a worthy or good or poor suspect. Everyone can make up their own minds on this. This is about taking an honest approach and following what the evidence tells us and not what we want it to mean. So..
The poll question is: Is Major Smith’s suspect a certain match for Francis Thompson? Or is he not a match?
…..
Richard’s contention is that the suspect (described but not named) that is mentioned in Major Henry Smith’s book is a fit for Thompson. To make clear, Richard has used these phrases:
“Major Henry Smith’s five-point description of his Rupert Street suspect aligns with Thompson uniquely (ex-medical student, asylum history, prostitute connection, coin motif, Haymarket residence).”
“A tight, unusual five-point bundle (ex-medical student; asylum history; prostitutes; coin-bilking; Haymarket/Rupert Street presence).”
“Fiver, the truth is simple: the statistical probability of any other man in London 1888 matching all five of Smith’s Rupert Street traits is about 1 in 20 quadrillion. Thompson matches them all. Others match one or two. None match the full set.‘
So Richard is absolutely clear. He is stating that Thompson is a slam dunk for Smith’s suspect.
…..
Boring I know, but I’ll repeat exactly what Smith said in his book:
“After the second crime I sent word to Sir Charles Warren that I had discovered a man very likely to be the man wanted. He certainly had all the qualifications requisite. He had been a medical student; he had been in a lunatic asylum; he spent all his time with women of loose character, whom he bilked by giving them polished farthings instead of sovereigns, two of these farthings have been found in the pocket of the murdered woman. Sir Charles failed to find him. I thought he was likely to be in Rupert Street, Haymarket. I sent up two men, and there he was; but, polished farthings and all, he proved an alibi without a shadow of doubt.”
So we can sum up the ‘traits’ as:
- A former medical student.
- Had been a patient in a lunatic asylum.
- Bilking prostitutes using polished farthings.
- Connected to Rupert Street, Haymarket
- Spent all of his time with women of loose character.
My information comes from Strange Harp, Strange Symphony. A biography of Thompson by John Walsh (who Richard accepts as a reliable source of information)
1. That Thompson was a former medical student is of course 100% true - match
2. Francis Thompson had never in his entire life been in a lunatic asylum. He entered a hospital in October of 1888 after his friend persuaded him to see a doctor. The doctor said that he was on the verge of total collapse so he was admitted to a hospital to recover. Richard tries to get around this inconvenient fact by claiming that hospitals were often called asylums. This is clearly not the case. Smith’s suspect entered a lunatic asylum because he was mentally ill in some way. Thompson entered a hospital because he was physically ill. The two are very clearly not the same. Thompson was provably never in an asylum - no match
3. Francis Thompson was never, at any point in his life bilking prostitutes with polished farthings, conning prostitutes in any way or even of being in possession of farthings (polished or otherwise) The only coin-related issue mentioned in Walsh’s book is of Thompson finding 2 sovereigns in the street. As Thompson had, whilst on drugs, hallucinated seeing the ghost of Chatterton, it’d question if the sovereign incident ever happened but that not relevant to the point. So, he never conned prostitutes and he was never mentioned in regard to farthings - no match
4. Smith sent men to Rupert Street, Haymarket where they found this man. So what was Thompson’s connection to Rupert Street? Absolutely none. He never lived there; we have no reason for suspecting that he ever went there. From the early part of August and going back a fair time Thompson was living with his prostitute friend in Chelsea. Geography isn’t my strong point but I believe that’s around 2 miles away. Thompson certainly would have been around in the west end but we cannot connect him to Rupert Street and that’s where Smith sent his men. We cannot match Chelsea and various locations in the west end with Rupert Street and suggest it’s a match when it’s clearly not - no match
5. Did Thompson spend all of his time with prostitutes? He certainly lived with one but we have no evidence of him spending all of his time with them. I’d suggest - 50/50 at best on this.
And let’s not forget. This guy was found and he provided an alibi that satisfied Smith. During the period in question Thompson was wandering around trying to find his girlfriend. He was sleeping in doorways and doss houses and wherever he could. How easy would it have been for a vagrant to find a solid alibi?
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