Hi Abby,
The one crucial detail is the timing of Israel Schwartz's story–12.45 am. I believe it is the reason why he wasn't summoned to attend the inquest, for his evidence would have made mincemeat of the widely-accepted legend that the "Ripper" was interrupted by Diemschutz at 1.00 am and thus did not go on to mutilate Stride.
Read Swanson's 19th October report in which he attempts to square this evidential anomaly by offering up the suggestion that Schwartz's man may not have been her murderer and that lightning struck Stride twice that morning.
Thank goodness one of Swanson's superiors had his head screwed on and in a marginal note described this double-whammy scenario as "rather confused", a comment which wins my award for the understatement of the 19th Century.
For reasons as yet unknown the evidence that Stride was part of a double event was manipulated to fit the nascent Jack the Ripper phenomenon, for it's impossible to promote the concept of a lone assassin stalking the East End if it is known that on the same night another woman had her throat slit by a different hand. It takes the gilt off the gingerbread.
Oh. And just in case anyone at the time wasn't completely buying into the "double-event", to seal the deal along came the very timely Saucy Jacky postcard.
As I wrote on another thread, the Whitechapel murders feature many conspiratorial ingredients. For the open-minded they're all there for the looking. Stride being a "Ripper" victim is just one of them.
Regards,
Simon
The one crucial detail is the timing of Israel Schwartz's story–12.45 am. I believe it is the reason why he wasn't summoned to attend the inquest, for his evidence would have made mincemeat of the widely-accepted legend that the "Ripper" was interrupted by Diemschutz at 1.00 am and thus did not go on to mutilate Stride.
Read Swanson's 19th October report in which he attempts to square this evidential anomaly by offering up the suggestion that Schwartz's man may not have been her murderer and that lightning struck Stride twice that morning.
Thank goodness one of Swanson's superiors had his head screwed on and in a marginal note described this double-whammy scenario as "rather confused", a comment which wins my award for the understatement of the 19th Century.
For reasons as yet unknown the evidence that Stride was part of a double event was manipulated to fit the nascent Jack the Ripper phenomenon, for it's impossible to promote the concept of a lone assassin stalking the East End if it is known that on the same night another woman had her throat slit by a different hand. It takes the gilt off the gingerbread.
Oh. And just in case anyone at the time wasn't completely buying into the "double-event", to seal the deal along came the very timely Saucy Jacky postcard.
As I wrote on another thread, the Whitechapel murders feature many conspiratorial ingredients. For the open-minded they're all there for the looking. Stride being a "Ripper" victim is just one of them.
Regards,
Simon
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