Originally posted by Tom_Wescott
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liking the sound of your guy.
There was huge political resentment against Stead from 1885 for hi-jacking parliament and forcing through the criminal amendments Bill. The misfortune is that it is remembered for making homosexual acts illegal, yet that was a plug on from Stead's intention to raise the age of consent to stamp out child prostituion (in fact Stead was the chosen megaphone of Josephine Butler's and the Salvation Army's Catherine Booth in forcing through the age of consent increase). The parliamentary politics at the time as you know was labyrinthian, and I'd recommend Christy Campbell's Fenian Fire as one of the best on the real-politik, and it's domination by the Irish home rule question and sinister secret policing (much by the men in charge of teh Ripper case). That book may also help you on the Phoenix Park background. Pimp's as a possibility for the Ripper are intriguing. My Walter suspect ran the books of a posh West End brothel as a younger man, and was baiting Mary Davis on working elsewhere to earn more for her sexual services. Cavendish Bentinck is a good candidate for Stead's "London Minotaur", but frustratingly the Minotaur's identity remains illusive.
What also came out of 1885 and the Stead/Cavendish clash was the Vigilance Committees. Stead published the guide to setting them up at the peak of the Maiden's Tribute campaign. Fastforward three years, and a Vigilance Committee get's half a kidney. The political meaning of sending a Vigilance Committe such a scare letter has been much underestimated. The Committee's had very specific political meaning in the late 1880s, far more nuanced that simply gentlemen keeping a protective eye of womenfolk. Stead advocated they use publicity, self generated prosecutions, and encourage blackmail of those using underage girls for sex. A main vector for such girls with older prostitute procuresses.
Regards
David Monaghan
Author
Jack the Ripper's Secret Confession
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