Originally posted by GBinOz
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I certainly agree that we are making rods for our own backs by trying to tie times down too accurately. As your example shows, it’s so easy to look at events of 130 years ago and reel off the ‘impossibilities.’ If I remember correctly wasn’t it Halse who claimed to have walked along Goulston Street at exactly the same time as Long said that he also had and yet they didn’t see each other? Would we assume that one of them was lying or that they simply arrived at their times by different clocks that would only have needed to have been a minute or less out?
On reflection I still can’t help wondering if Stride did know BS man though and that she might have arranged to meet him there. Firstly she’s apparently determined to not to agree to any proposal from the man that Brown potentially saw her with and secondly, there’s the fact that she didn’t scream loudly. After Smith, Tabram, Nichols and Chapman how terrified would we have expected a lone woman (one who engaged in prostitution at times) to have been whilst being attacked in the street, in that area and in the early hours by some unknown man? It’s not a given of course but I think that there has to be a possibility that either she’d arranged to meet him or that she’d arranged to meet someone and BS man was some troublesome admirer or punter.
Maybe she’d arranged to meet Goldstein but he was late (didn’t Fanny say that she was walking very quickly?) and he quickly looked into the gateway to see if she was there. Maybe Goldstein was hesitant to come forward because his ‘relationship’ with Stride would have been frowned on by his friends and seen as suspicious by the police. Maybe…..maybe not.
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