Originally posted by Ben
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Conclusions arrived at from speculation certainly is fringe thinking no matter how many are involved.
Lewis never described her man as well-dressed,
If you care to look this up, with respect to the Wednesday sighting Lewis actually said, "a Gentleman passed us..". Interestingly Lewis does not describe "Widewake" as a Gentleman, just a man.
Lewis said this was the same man she saw on Friday, " I met the same man with a female". Therefore it appears to be the man's appearance which caused her to assume he was a "Gentleman". That is to say "well-dressed" for this part of town.
With respect to Mrs Kennedy, you write..
No, she didn’t, because she was a liar and exposed as such.
Your own Star actually tells you what I have been telling you for months, Mrs Kennedy was an original source.
You will recall the 10th Nov. issue where we read:
"One woman (as reported below) who lives in the court stated that at about two o'clock she heard a cry of "Murder." This story soon became popular, until at last half a dozen women were retailing it as their own personal experience."
(More sloppy reporting, 2:00 o'clock?)
So this "one woman, reported below" is one of two women mentioned, either Mrs Prater or Mrs Kennedy, as they are the only two witnesses from Millers Court mentioned in the article.
The paragraph concerning Mrs Prater makes no mention of a cry of "murder", so this rules her out.
The paragraph concerning Mrs Kennedy is where we read of the cry of "murder", and this story, as we read above was repeated by "at last half a dozen women", illustrating to anyone with a rudimentary grasp of the English language that Mrs Kennedy is the source, and not one of the "half dozen women".
Nowhere is Sarah Lewis mentioned in this article.
Which also serves to illustrate how inaccurate your next line is.
The author of the account Mrs. Kennedy plagiarized – Sarah Lewis –
They were either the same woman, or they were together when they witnessed events.
Interestingly, George Sims knew of them as sisters, in an article dated one week after Millers Court (18th Nov.) he refers to these witnesses as "the Kennedy's". Given Sims's deep interest in the Whitechapel murders his understanding could easily be the truth of the matter.
Regards, Jon S.
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