Versa:
"Can anyone supply the address of Lechmere's mother which is supposedly near to Berner Street? "
147 Cable Street - exactly positioned at the railway arch where the Pinchin Street torso was found in -89, if I´m correctly informed. Which is not uninteresting, I´d say – in spite of how other posters find the links to the murder places "tentative", I find that since Lechmere was found at Nichols´ murder spot, it is not uninteresting to notice that Chapman, Kelly and Tabram were all killed along his route to work, whereas Stride was killed on a street leading to his mother´s and daughter´s house. Equally interesting is that Stride was killed comparatively early on a night when he was reasonably not working, whereas the others were killed at the approximate time he went to work.
There is no other suspect that comes even close to this sequence of correspondance. Nowhere even near it, in fact.
Some of the suspects can be tied to ONE murder spot, and that´s it. Lechmere can be tied to four of the canonical spots, he can be tied to George Yard (off Old Montague Street), he can be tied to the railway arch at Pinchin Street, and he can be tied to Castle Alley which was along his approximate way to work too. Anybody who wishes to call that tentative is free to do so, but I would advice a look at what other suspects have to offer in this context before doing so.
I also very much agree with Lechmere when he says that there is still much of a rut thinking about when it comes to who and what the Ripper was. It has been thrown forward on this thread that we need to find a police record and instances of psychosises and such before we can speak of useful evidence, and that says just about everything!
Likewise, when Ben states that Lechmere does not seem "suspicious" enough, one can only say that it represents thinking along the same rough guidelines - if it does not howl at the moon, it is not the Ripper.
Here he is, for all to see - the inconspicious man who had a reason for being in the streets at the relevant hours, the nobody, the family man, the carman with two decades of dreary and uninteresting work behind him. A man who a cruel fate had placed in the East End, crammed with whores, thieves and low-lifes, a man descended from an ancestry that boasted wealthy landowners and an archbishop, landed among the lowest and poorest, two generations away from societys´pinnacle.
If he felt he did not belong there, would anybody be surprised? If he was disgusted by the prostitutes, would that be strange? If he felt entitled to some sort of revenge, who would be baffled by it?
There´s a strong, strong case to build around this man, make no mistake about it. He is extremely suspicious, contrary to what has been said here.
The best,
Fisherman
"Can anyone supply the address of Lechmere's mother which is supposedly near to Berner Street? "
147 Cable Street - exactly positioned at the railway arch where the Pinchin Street torso was found in -89, if I´m correctly informed. Which is not uninteresting, I´d say – in spite of how other posters find the links to the murder places "tentative", I find that since Lechmere was found at Nichols´ murder spot, it is not uninteresting to notice that Chapman, Kelly and Tabram were all killed along his route to work, whereas Stride was killed on a street leading to his mother´s and daughter´s house. Equally interesting is that Stride was killed comparatively early on a night when he was reasonably not working, whereas the others were killed at the approximate time he went to work.
There is no other suspect that comes even close to this sequence of correspondance. Nowhere even near it, in fact.
Some of the suspects can be tied to ONE murder spot, and that´s it. Lechmere can be tied to four of the canonical spots, he can be tied to George Yard (off Old Montague Street), he can be tied to the railway arch at Pinchin Street, and he can be tied to Castle Alley which was along his approximate way to work too. Anybody who wishes to call that tentative is free to do so, but I would advice a look at what other suspects have to offer in this context before doing so.
I also very much agree with Lechmere when he says that there is still much of a rut thinking about when it comes to who and what the Ripper was. It has been thrown forward on this thread that we need to find a police record and instances of psychosises and such before we can speak of useful evidence, and that says just about everything!
Likewise, when Ben states that Lechmere does not seem "suspicious" enough, one can only say that it represents thinking along the same rough guidelines - if it does not howl at the moon, it is not the Ripper.
Here he is, for all to see - the inconspicious man who had a reason for being in the streets at the relevant hours, the nobody, the family man, the carman with two decades of dreary and uninteresting work behind him. A man who a cruel fate had placed in the East End, crammed with whores, thieves and low-lifes, a man descended from an ancestry that boasted wealthy landowners and an archbishop, landed among the lowest and poorest, two generations away from societys´pinnacle.
If he felt he did not belong there, would anybody be surprised? If he was disgusted by the prostitutes, would that be strange? If he felt entitled to some sort of revenge, who would be baffled by it?
There´s a strong, strong case to build around this man, make no mistake about it. He is extremely suspicious, contrary to what has been said here.
The best,
Fisherman
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