Dear Sleuth1888
Thanks for the words of support. Apologies for the delay. If it achieves nothing else at least for the first time (for those few interested) my book will house in one place the following sources re: Macnaghten's solution:
- All three versions of Mac's Report: the 1894 filed version, the 1898 rewrite for public consumption, and the chapter of his 1914 memoir: 'Laying the ghost of Jack the Ripper'.
- Several versions of Macnaghten's 1913 farewell press conference, where he claims to be certain about Jack's identity (just as certain as Anderson; e.g. about a suspect who can ever have his day in court) and that the solution came to him and would exit with him.
- The Rosetta Stone source: the 'West of England' MP articles from 1891; the initial, but by no means the final source of Mac's 'private information'. To be fair, Henry Farquharson as the missing link between Druitt and Macnaghten has already appeared in the excellent book on Edmund Reid by Evans and Connell, in later editions of the A to Z by Fido, Skinner and Begg -- and even in Russell Edwards' recent best seller.
- the 'North Country Vicar' story of 1899 and his claims of hiding the truth via fiction about a Ripper who suffered from 'epileptic mania' and confessed all to an Anglican priest before expiring.
- George Sims' pertinent writings: his 'Mustard and Cress columns for 'The Referee', his short stories (including his Dorcas Dene tales, and a newly uncovered piece about an epileptic maniac confessing his murders to an Anglican priest), his 1892, 1904 and 1905 interviews, and his big piece for 'Lloyds Weekly' in 1907, his 1915 cameo for 'Pearson's Weekly' and his 1917 memoirs. A Dagonet column of 1910 arguably confirms Evans' and Rumbelow's 2006 thesis that Kosminski was not confronted, let alone identified by a Jewish witness.
- Also a vital 1905 article found by Chris Phillips confirming that George Sims was not able to tell the whole Drowned Doctor solution, not without putting the killer's super-respectable relations in peril.
- Excerpts from Guy Logan's 'The True History of Jack the Ripper' from the 'Illustrated Police News' of 1905, with the kind permission of Jan Bondeson ( a story that also says it is an impenetrable mix of fact and fiction).
- Excerpts from Tom Cullen's 'Autumn of Terror' (1965) and Dan Farson's 'Jack the Ripper' (1972), though their alleged clincher sources are rejected (in Cullen's case the McCormick hoax about Backert, and in Farson's his wild goose chase in my country for a document almost certainly about Deeming).
-- A source unknown since 1922 that will, nonetheless, be endlessly debated for its merits and/or demerits, but is certainly incontestably relevant to Montague Druitt as the alleged fiend.
- Excerpts from Lady Christabel Aberconway's memoir, 'A Wiser Woman?' from 1966.
For what it is worth, I have already begun work on my second book:
'JFK - Case Solved, 1964'.
Thanks for the words of support. Apologies for the delay. If it achieves nothing else at least for the first time (for those few interested) my book will house in one place the following sources re: Macnaghten's solution:
- All three versions of Mac's Report: the 1894 filed version, the 1898 rewrite for public consumption, and the chapter of his 1914 memoir: 'Laying the ghost of Jack the Ripper'.
- Several versions of Macnaghten's 1913 farewell press conference, where he claims to be certain about Jack's identity (just as certain as Anderson; e.g. about a suspect who can ever have his day in court) and that the solution came to him and would exit with him.
- The Rosetta Stone source: the 'West of England' MP articles from 1891; the initial, but by no means the final source of Mac's 'private information'. To be fair, Henry Farquharson as the missing link between Druitt and Macnaghten has already appeared in the excellent book on Edmund Reid by Evans and Connell, in later editions of the A to Z by Fido, Skinner and Begg -- and even in Russell Edwards' recent best seller.
- the 'North Country Vicar' story of 1899 and his claims of hiding the truth via fiction about a Ripper who suffered from 'epileptic mania' and confessed all to an Anglican priest before expiring.
- George Sims' pertinent writings: his 'Mustard and Cress columns for 'The Referee', his short stories (including his Dorcas Dene tales, and a newly uncovered piece about an epileptic maniac confessing his murders to an Anglican priest), his 1892, 1904 and 1905 interviews, and his big piece for 'Lloyds Weekly' in 1907, his 1915 cameo for 'Pearson's Weekly' and his 1917 memoirs. A Dagonet column of 1910 arguably confirms Evans' and Rumbelow's 2006 thesis that Kosminski was not confronted, let alone identified by a Jewish witness.
- Also a vital 1905 article found by Chris Phillips confirming that George Sims was not able to tell the whole Drowned Doctor solution, not without putting the killer's super-respectable relations in peril.
- Excerpts from Guy Logan's 'The True History of Jack the Ripper' from the 'Illustrated Police News' of 1905, with the kind permission of Jan Bondeson ( a story that also says it is an impenetrable mix of fact and fiction).
- Excerpts from Tom Cullen's 'Autumn of Terror' (1965) and Dan Farson's 'Jack the Ripper' (1972), though their alleged clincher sources are rejected (in Cullen's case the McCormick hoax about Backert, and in Farson's his wild goose chase in my country for a document almost certainly about Deeming).
-- A source unknown since 1922 that will, nonetheless, be endlessly debated for its merits and/or demerits, but is certainly incontestably relevant to Montague Druitt as the alleged fiend.
- Excerpts from Lady Christabel Aberconway's memoir, 'A Wiser Woman?' from 1966.
For what it is worth, I have already begun work on my second book:
'JFK - Case Solved, 1964'.
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