Originally posted by David Orsam
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostNeedless to say, I have never stated anywhere, directly or indirectly, that I believe I can "just look at an item and understand it without interpretation". So we have here yet another catastrophic failure of comprehension on Pierre's part.
He is the great scientist, sociologist, historian genius.
or
That he's full of it and has no idea what he's talking about.
I know which I think it is, especially when I show real historians his reasoning and the response in "This kid needs some lessons in basic historical methodology".G U T
There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.
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Originally posted by Simon Wood View PostHi David,
Two things.
The house-to-house search took place after Anderson returned from where ever he had been during September and the first few days of October. He was to leave London again soon afterwards for the funeral of his father.
Interesting that on 23rd October 1888 Anderson counted five victims [I am assuming he was including Tabram], but two days later only sent Dr Bond medical evidence from four victims—Nichols, Chapman, Stride and Eddowes.
Two responses.
Anderson says in his memoir that, "During my absence abroad the Police had made a house-to-house search for him" and I'm essentially dealing with what Anderson described in his book, i.e. the message he conveyed to his readers, which is what Pierre seems to be concerned with. Going onto matters of known fact, the memo of 23 October in which Anderson admits that the police had not the slightest clue was certainly written after the house-to-house search so, in reality, the conclusion that the killer was not found as a result of any house-to-house search is unchanged.
What Anderson says in his note to the Home Secretary is that there had been five successive murders without any clue and there is no doubt, on any view, that Tabram was a murder victim in a Whitechapel killing. So it was a fact that five successive murders had been committed in the area. What Dr Bond was being asked was to indicate the surgical skill and anatomical knowledge possessed by the person or persons known as the Whitechapel Murderer (or Jack the Ripper). While there was only throat cutting in the case of Stride (this needed to be compared to the throat cutting in the other cases) but in the case of Tabram there was only stabbing which would not have left much room for comparison. It may also be that Dr Killeen did not prepare notes of his post-mortem examination so there was nothing to provide to Dr Bond - or, I would add, that the notes were not in a form suitable to be provided to Dr Bond or perhaps that Anderson did not have those notes in his possession because they were not originally provided to the police back in August 1888 - but I could only be speculating about this.
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Hi David,
Anderson left London on 8/9 September.
Anderson, TLSOMOL—"On the night of my arrival in the French capital two more victims fell to the knife of the murder-fiend; and next day’s post brought me an urgent appeal from Mr. Matthews to return to London; and of course I complied.”
Four days passed.
On 5th October 1888 in a PS to a letter to Sir Charles Warren, Henry Matthews wrote—“I shall be very glad to hear whether Mr. Anderson’s health has permitted him to resume his duties.”
In a letter to Ruggles-Brise dated 6th October 1888 Matthews closed by remarking— “Anderson was to return today.”
I was wrong. The house-to-house search started on 3rd October.
Daily News, 4th October 1888—“Yesterday the large force of police and detectives drafted into Whitechapel made a house-to-house visitation and left a handbill.”
Anderson's father, Matthew, died in Ireland on 11th October. His funeral was on 15th October, and on 17th October 1888 the Dublin Daily Express reported Anderson leaving Kingstown.
You could speculate about what Anderson wrote until the cows come home and still be none the wiser. Anderson was not the most reliable of chroniclers.
Regards,
SimonNever believe anything until it has been officially denied.
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Originally posted by Simon Wood View PostIn a letter to Ruggles-Brise dated 6th October 1888 Matthews closed by remarking— “Anderson was to return today.”
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Hi David,
Said to be in Switzerland.
If Anderson was in Switzerland I'll eat your hat.
Regards,
SimonLast edited by Simon Wood; 09-08-2016, 03:53 PM.Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.
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Originally posted by Simon Wood View PostHi David,
Said to be in Switzerland.
If Anderson was in Switzerland I'll eat your hat.
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Hi David,
I would suggest it was on or after 6th October, but not as late as 8th October.
Please carry on believing Anderson travelled to Switzerland and then Paris.
There is a story somewhere that Anderson was in Paris at around the same time as the forger Richard Pigott [around 4th October, I believe, if memory serves]. Trouble is, Pigott was back in Ireland at this time.
Anyway, not too much salt on your hat, please. The doctor says it's bad for me.
Regards,
SimonNever believe anything until it has been officially denied.
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