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The "Canonical Group" defines the Ripper...but accurately?
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Last edited by Simon Wood; 06-25-2010, 05:43 PM.Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.
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The suspect described in the Western Mail article posted by Simon is, of course, Charles Le Grand, although the reporter got a bit garbled in his facts. It doesn't at all blow Druitt or anybody out of the water. The reporter is merely saying that if his detective sources who suspect Le Grand are correct in their suspicions, then obviously Farquarson's theory is incorrect, which stands to reason. Of course the opposite would apply as well, or neither suspects may have been the Ripper.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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explicit
Hello Simon. Say, this is rather explicit. If what is said is true, then, of course, Farquaharson must be in error.
There were many stories floating about concerning people being watched day and night. I wonder if:
1. They have a common origin?
2. They were inspired by Kosminski?
I wonder further if SY's considered opinion in the article sheds light on the contemporary view of the canonical 5?
Thanks for posting this.
The best.
LC
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Hi Lynn,
This is probably just one of those annoying coincidences in the WM, but on January 7th 1892, just five days after the Rocky Mountain News reported a royal commission into the Whitechapel murders, Chief Inspector Frederick George Abberline tendered his resignation from the Metropolitan Police.
Regards,
SimonNever believe anything until it has been officially denied.
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Originally posted by Simon Wood View PostHi Lynn,
This is probably just one of those annoying coincidences in the WM, but on January 7th 1892, just five days after the Rocky Mountain News reported a royal commission into the Whitechapel murders, Chief Inspector Frederick George Abberline tendered his resignation from the Metropolitan Police.
Regards,
SimonWe are all born cute as a button and dumb as rocks. We grow out of cute fast!
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Simon, Phil, Lynn,
What's all the 'wink, wink' about? Too bad AP and Mike Richards aren't here, you guys could team up and find Atlantis and the man on the grassy knoll while you're at it.
I noticed you guys lost all interest in the Western Mail report once I pointed out it's about Le Grand. Did that thwart some new conspiracy theory? Incidentally, It was discovered by Mike Covell and included in my Examiner essay. At least to my knowledge. If Simon had previously posted it, please let me know when/where so I can properly credit him.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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To Hunter
Regarding the C-5 I think we are somewhat at cross-purposes.
I do not mean that Mac was the first person, on record, to ever think of this theory.
I mean that he was the first to lock it in as a Scotland Yard fact -- or so he claimed. He did this initially with his internal report of 1894, official version, which rewrote the Ripper mystery of 1888 to 1891.
These 'only five' murders being by 'Jack' are treated as fact; 'to give the Devil his due'. What he buries in that Report is that this information, rightly or wrongly, came from the Druitts themselves: who 'believed', not 'suspected'.
Mac then publicly disseminated this 'fact' via Griffiths, in 1898, with his COVERTLY semi-fictional story of a supposedly contemporaneous doctor suspect.
This was only months ahead of a North Country Vicar's revelation, who was going to do the same with an OVERTLY, admittedly semi-fictional story which locked in Kelly as the last victim, and is also about a Gentile Gentleman -- and not a contemporaneous police suspect -- who was 'at one time a surgeon', or is that fiction too?
Because 'doctor' sure is a fictional detail in Mac's tale about Druitt fed to Griffiths, the latter further fictionalizing it by turning his 'family' into 'friends'.
By the time George Sims gets going Druitt further spins off into the realms of fiction -- is, in my opinion, made even more libel-proof.
In Sims the un-named Druitt -- who diligently held down two demanding jobs -- is both so rich and so mentally unstable that he does not even work for a living at all! Just idles his time at cafes and on public transport, somehow monitored by concerned chums, until the next homicidal eruption ...
Therefore the rendering-in-concrete of the C-5, as a fact as opposed to a theory by Bond or anybody else, resides with Macnaghten.
I appreciate that you subscribe to the theory that Macnaghten was a hopelessly amateur Sherlock, just putting together bits and pieces. Obviously, my interpretation is diametrically opposed -- for what that is worth -- as I am creating a new Mac. The Top Cop who solved the Ripper mystery, albeit posthumously.
To Lynn
Andy Spalleck tried to hunt down the Vicar but came up empty.
He and I thought that it might be the cleric Charles Druitt, the Ripper's cousin, as he worked in a parish called Whitechurch and the Vicar piece is headed with the mistake: 'The Whitechurch Murders'.
I do not think the Vicar is a relative at all, but he is connected enough to the Druitts that his name will give away their identity in Dorset circles. That is also why the detail about 'suicide' was not mentioned either.
I think that the piece about a Catholic confession might be a garbled leak about Montie's confessing to an Anglican minister?
Or just a coincidence.
To Tom
I agree. If the MP is wrong then that's that for Druitt.
On the other hand this source -- in my opinion -- solved the Ripper mystery as it identified the blabber-mouthed politician, and thus conclusively linked him to Druitt. For the first time we had a source on druitt which predated the Mac Report of 1894.
This meant that Macnaghten probably did have access to a contact with accurate information about this suspect, torpedoing the previously reasonable, perplexed argument by Odell and Begg, and others, that Mac knew nothing accurate about Druitt.
Of course know about the 'son of a surgeon' -- and changed those details, to make his chief suspect both libel-proof and [falsely] contemporaneous to the 1888 investigation.
Also, a tabloid source like that, in which the police are portrayed as on the job, on the ball, closing in, is an attempt to bury embarrassment about a long dead suspect. That the MP is excruciatingly correct, and the tale of another suspect which surrounds it, is false.
My evidence for that is the way Mac commits himself to the MP's suspect for the rest of his life, yet is aware of the embarrassment of a long dead suspect by the way he pretends in his official Report that Druitt was contemporaneous but minor, pretends with his literary cronies that Druitt was contemporaneous and yet major, and finally in his memoirs admits that the un-named Druitt was major and yet not contemporaneous.
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January 1892
Originally posted by Jonathan H View PostI think that the piece about a Catholic confession might be a garbled leak about Montie's confessing to an Anglican minister?
Or just a coincidence.
Roy
*Prince Albert Victor died that day, too.Sink the Bismark
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