Please see my replies below.
You cannot be taken seriously. There is no such thing as a Salt and Pepper jacket. You are making it up.
It seems then that Lawende imagined it.
A ‘loose’ jacket isn’t a type of jacket.
A Victorian era Sailors cap - and please don’t try the cop out of mentioning the insignia, they can easily be removed. It doesn’t matter where it’s from either. A hat could be bought at any market or pawnshop.
A number of witness descriptions of suspects mentioned caps, but they did not mention sailor caps nor sailor hats, let alone naval insignia.
Lawende mentioned a cap.
That has no connection with sailors.
Your point is about as reasonable as the one where you said that any Jewish man would have been readily identifiable as a Jewish man even after we had posted dozens of examples of Jewish men that didn’t look remotely Jewish.
I intend to deal with that issue shortly.
I said that Jews and gentiles were easily distinguishable in Whitechapel in 1888 and I believe I can prove that.
Please don’t talk to me again on this subject. It’s barking mad, no one else will agree with you, but you keep on about it obsessively.
I repeat……it’s a non-point. With that…I’ll hand you over to anyone else who wants the headache.
I don't think that's a fair comment.
You challenged me to produce evidence when you wrote:
Strange then that I’ve looked at around 100 photographs to date of Victorian sailors and not one of them was wearing a loose jacket.
I have produced more than a dozen illustrations of sailors wearing waist-length, loose-fitting jackets, open at the front, as I had described them.
Your claim that Lawende's statement that the suspect had the appearance of a sailor was influenced by the fact that he was wearing a cap is, as I have stated, mistaken because it was an ordinary cap, not of the kind worn by sailors.
Moreover, the illustrations I uploaded do not even show sailors wearing caps.
You say that no-one will agree with me.
I think they will agree with me that Lawende reported that he saw a man wearing a pepper & salt colour loose jacket.
I do not think they will agree with you when you write:
You cannot be taken seriously. There is no such thing as a Salt and Pepper jacket. You are making it up.
The information about sailors wearing salt and pepper loose jackets comes from a Whitechapel resident.
I don't think you have a right to accuse anyone of making that up and I think most people would agree with me about that too.
Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes
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You cannot be taken seriously. There is no such thing as a Salt and Pepper jacket. You are making it up.
It seems then that Lawende imagined it.
A ‘loose’ jacket isn’t a type of jacket.
A Victorian era Sailors cap - and please don’t try the cop out of mentioning the insignia, they can easily be removed. It doesn’t matter where it’s from either. A hat could be bought at any market or pawnshop.
A number of witness descriptions of suspects mentioned caps, but they did not mention sailor caps nor sailor hats, let alone naval insignia.
Lawende mentioned a cap.
That has no connection with sailors.
Your point is about as reasonable as the one where you said that any Jewish man would have been readily identifiable as a Jewish man even after we had posted dozens of examples of Jewish men that didn’t look remotely Jewish.
I intend to deal with that issue shortly.
I said that Jews and gentiles were easily distinguishable in Whitechapel in 1888 and I believe I can prove that.
Please don’t talk to me again on this subject. It’s barking mad, no one else will agree with you, but you keep on about it obsessively.
I repeat……it’s a non-point. With that…I’ll hand you over to anyone else who wants the headache.
I don't think that's a fair comment.
You challenged me to produce evidence when you wrote:
Strange then that I’ve looked at around 100 photographs to date of Victorian sailors and not one of them was wearing a loose jacket.
I have produced more than a dozen illustrations of sailors wearing waist-length, loose-fitting jackets, open at the front, as I had described them.
Your claim that Lawende's statement that the suspect had the appearance of a sailor was influenced by the fact that he was wearing a cap is, as I have stated, mistaken because it was an ordinary cap, not of the kind worn by sailors.
Moreover, the illustrations I uploaded do not even show sailors wearing caps.
You say that no-one will agree with me.
I think they will agree with me that Lawende reported that he saw a man wearing a pepper & salt colour loose jacket.
I do not think they will agree with you when you write:
You cannot be taken seriously. There is no such thing as a Salt and Pepper jacket. You are making it up.
The information about sailors wearing salt and pepper loose jackets comes from a Whitechapel resident.
I don't think you have a right to accuse anyone of making that up and I think most people would agree with me about that too.
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