Here is the next piece of evidence, relating to the picture people had of being middle-aged back in 1888. It is from the Frederick News, November 10 1888:
“The first Whitechapel murder occurred a year ago last month in that section of London where the scum of the vile dens of vice are let loose upon the streets in the early morning, when the police close up the brothels infested by them. The victim was a fallen woman past middle age and her body was found horribly and peculiarly mutilated. But it was supposed to be only a murder common among her class. No effort was made to discover the murderer, and the body was buried in Potter's field unidentified and the case forgotten.
The second murder did not occur until Aug 7 last, but it was unmistakeable the work of the same hand. The victim was again a fallen and dissolute woman, Martha Turner…”
This points us to the first Whitechapel murder, perpetraded against Emma Smith. She was 45, and is described as being “past middle age”!
And this is from Walter Dews memoirs:
“Why did the Ripper choose them as his victims? I do not know. This is one of the questions which will never now be answered.
Few of them were pretty or young. Indeed, with one exception, all the women lured by the killer to their deaths were approaching or past middle age.”
And there we are: if Marshall had had his man down as being of his own age, he would have regarded him as an old man, and not as middle-aged. Middle age was OVER in the mid forties, according to contemporary sources! And that tallies very well with todays perception of the middle age, given that we live so much longer. Today we place it around 35-58, but back then it ENDED around 45, meaning that we may have to stretch it to somewhere between perhaps 28-45. It would have been a shorter period of time than we can allow for today, at any rate.
This is the beauty of having the sources to go back to - whenever an untenable suggestion is thrown forward, we can always go back to them and find the truth.
We may also ponder the fact that Walter Dew was a whopping 75 when his memoirs were published - and that means that a 75-year old man described 45 as being "past middle age"! If we were to work by Tom Wescott´s line of thought, he would probably have suggested that Dew would have regarded 45 as youngish...
The best,
Fisherman
“The first Whitechapel murder occurred a year ago last month in that section of London where the scum of the vile dens of vice are let loose upon the streets in the early morning, when the police close up the brothels infested by them. The victim was a fallen woman past middle age and her body was found horribly and peculiarly mutilated. But it was supposed to be only a murder common among her class. No effort was made to discover the murderer, and the body was buried in Potter's field unidentified and the case forgotten.
The second murder did not occur until Aug 7 last, but it was unmistakeable the work of the same hand. The victim was again a fallen and dissolute woman, Martha Turner…”
This points us to the first Whitechapel murder, perpetraded against Emma Smith. She was 45, and is described as being “past middle age”!
And this is from Walter Dews memoirs:
“Why did the Ripper choose them as his victims? I do not know. This is one of the questions which will never now be answered.
Few of them were pretty or young. Indeed, with one exception, all the women lured by the killer to their deaths were approaching or past middle age.”
And there we are: if Marshall had had his man down as being of his own age, he would have regarded him as an old man, and not as middle-aged. Middle age was OVER in the mid forties, according to contemporary sources! And that tallies very well with todays perception of the middle age, given that we live so much longer. Today we place it around 35-58, but back then it ENDED around 45, meaning that we may have to stretch it to somewhere between perhaps 28-45. It would have been a shorter period of time than we can allow for today, at any rate.
This is the beauty of having the sources to go back to - whenever an untenable suggestion is thrown forward, we can always go back to them and find the truth.
We may also ponder the fact that Walter Dew was a whopping 75 when his memoirs were published - and that means that a 75-year old man described 45 as being "past middle age"! If we were to work by Tom Wescott´s line of thought, he would probably have suggested that Dew would have regarded 45 as youngish...
The best,
Fisherman
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