Hi Mike,
I'd be interested to learn how, as soon as December 1st 1888, William Smith, the Deputy Minister of Marine in Ottawa, learned the details of the Euston arrest and concluded it involved Tumblety. Neither the Birmingham Daily Post or Belfast News Letter named Tumblety in their 19th November reports, and the latter newspaper reported that the anonymous arrestee "had no connection with the Whitechapel outrages." Also, the The Wheeling Register and Bucks County Gazette reports didn't appear until one and two weeks respectively after William Smith had mailed his letter to James Barber.
Any chance of Ron Keith showing us the William Smith letter?
Regards,
Simon
I'd be interested to learn how, as soon as December 1st 1888, William Smith, the Deputy Minister of Marine in Ottawa, learned the details of the Euston arrest and concluded it involved Tumblety. Neither the Birmingham Daily Post or Belfast News Letter named Tumblety in their 19th November reports, and the latter newspaper reported that the anonymous arrestee "had no connection with the Whitechapel outrages." Also, the The Wheeling Register and Bucks County Gazette reports didn't appear until one and two weeks respectively after William Smith had mailed his letter to James Barber.
Any chance of Ron Keith showing us the William Smith letter?
Regards,
Simon
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