What?
Let's get this old chestnut into context shall we?
I have been reading about, and later researching, the Whitechapel crimes for fifty years. Over those years, obviously, I have had 'preferred' suspects and have changed or modified my views many times, especially as new evidence emerged. Amongst my own 'preferred' suspects have been Druitt and Kosminski. An open mind, I have found, has always been the best way forward.
Thus I had more than thirty years of Ripper research and reading before I ever chanced upon the name of Tumblety. It is now eighteen years since I 'discovered' Tumblety. I remain convinced that we shall never know the identity of 'Jack the Ripper'.
So, imagine, here I am in 1993, an avid 'Ripperologist' with over thirty years of interest in the subject, when I chance upon a letter written by an ex-chief inspector of the Special Branch who was at Scotland Yard from 1883 to 1893. And in this letter he names a 'very likely' Ripper suspect who I had never heard of before, and he names the journalist(s) believed responsible for the 'Jack the Ripper' letter.
What do I do, do I give the name of this 'new' suspect to some author or other, do I merely get it quickly into print for everyone to research, or do I research it and write a book myself? I chose the latter option, despite the fact I had never envisaged writing a book about the subject. I was not naive enough to think that everyone in Ripperworld would agree that Tumblety was the Ripper, or even likely to be the Ripper.
If I had had a choice I would certainly preferred to write a reference work on the Ripper (which I didn't think I was capable of anyway) but given my material I obviously could write a suspect book and one that was based on a genuine contemporary suspect and not a fantasy suspect like most of the others. And it was not a suspect thought up by me, but one named by a contemporary police official.
You are repeating what I have said for many years, a suspect book must, of its nature, contain suppostition and conjecture; hypothesis and opinion. No hard evidence exists against any suspect. That said my book presented many new facts and was strongly based on the official files and factual reports. Also I had met Phil Sugden before I wrote the book and depended on his sage advice.
I don't know why you make the comment about 'being entitled' to put forward Tumblety's name. Anyone can (and they often do) put forward any name as Jack the Ripper. But in my case I was publishing a valid suspect's name put forward by a man in a position to know. I can't fully agree that people can justify the naming of a suspect 'plucked out of a hat' as it were, with not a jot of justification for naming that person as a murder suspect.
But, as is obvious, anyone writing a suspect-based book is obliged to be selective and look at anything they feel is relevant in building a hypothetical case against a suspect. But what has that to do with what I have been arguing on this thread? Hutchinson as a suspect is a modern interpretation and he does not appear as a serious contemporary suspect, but as a witness.
Originally posted by babybird67
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I have been reading about, and later researching, the Whitechapel crimes for fifty years. Over those years, obviously, I have had 'preferred' suspects and have changed or modified my views many times, especially as new evidence emerged. Amongst my own 'preferred' suspects have been Druitt and Kosminski. An open mind, I have found, has always been the best way forward.
Thus I had more than thirty years of Ripper research and reading before I ever chanced upon the name of Tumblety. It is now eighteen years since I 'discovered' Tumblety. I remain convinced that we shall never know the identity of 'Jack the Ripper'.
So, imagine, here I am in 1993, an avid 'Ripperologist' with over thirty years of interest in the subject, when I chance upon a letter written by an ex-chief inspector of the Special Branch who was at Scotland Yard from 1883 to 1893. And in this letter he names a 'very likely' Ripper suspect who I had never heard of before, and he names the journalist(s) believed responsible for the 'Jack the Ripper' letter.
What do I do, do I give the name of this 'new' suspect to some author or other, do I merely get it quickly into print for everyone to research, or do I research it and write a book myself? I chose the latter option, despite the fact I had never envisaged writing a book about the subject. I was not naive enough to think that everyone in Ripperworld would agree that Tumblety was the Ripper, or even likely to be the Ripper.
If I had had a choice I would certainly preferred to write a reference work on the Ripper (which I didn't think I was capable of anyway) but given my material I obviously could write a suspect book and one that was based on a genuine contemporary suspect and not a fantasy suspect like most of the others. And it was not a suspect thought up by me, but one named by a contemporary police official.
You are repeating what I have said for many years, a suspect book must, of its nature, contain suppostition and conjecture; hypothesis and opinion. No hard evidence exists against any suspect. That said my book presented many new facts and was strongly based on the official files and factual reports. Also I had met Phil Sugden before I wrote the book and depended on his sage advice.
I don't know why you make the comment about 'being entitled' to put forward Tumblety's name. Anyone can (and they often do) put forward any name as Jack the Ripper. But in my case I was publishing a valid suspect's name put forward by a man in a position to know. I can't fully agree that people can justify the naming of a suspect 'plucked out of a hat' as it were, with not a jot of justification for naming that person as a murder suspect.
But, as is obvious, anyone writing a suspect-based book is obliged to be selective and look at anything they feel is relevant in building a hypothetical case against a suspect. But what has that to do with what I have been arguing on this thread? Hutchinson as a suspect is a modern interpretation and he does not appear as a serious contemporary suspect, but as a witness.
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