As a newcomer, I'm mustard keen to learn from the most prolix and senior Ripperologists. My aim is to become a hybrid of Professor David Wilson, Fred Dinenage and Emilia Fox.
To that end, I've undertaken my first piece of research. It concerns the trump-card 'risk taker' character of suspects, so useful for swatting aside objections and making the 'serial killers are like that' dismissal. Not to mention statements of the obvious - 'there's excitement in risk' - offered as if profundities from Wittgenstein's Tractatus.
If have used the most debated of recent suspects, for my pioneering study. Through archival work on Letchmere's school reports, Herefordshire Assize records, local/national newspapers and Pickfords' annual appraisals, I provide hitherto undiscussed details of his recklessness.
I trust my work will be of assistance to others. Feel free to use any of it, acknowledging me under my nom-de-plume of Dr Grimesby Roylott, Stoke Moran:
1. As a schoolboy in Herefordshire, Lechmere stole 3d's worth of pease-pudding from Ma Megwipe's pie shop.
2. As a young apprentice, Lechmere stole a penny-farthing bicycle and cycled into Ross-on-Wye, without wearing a hat.
3. On completing his apprenticeship, the young ruffian consumed six pints of local ale and was involved in fisticuffs/steam-hammerings when things kicked off outside The Royal Oak, Much Marcle (later haunt of Fred West). His resulting conviction for 'hi jinks and public affray' led to a term in chokey, picking oakum and running the tread-mill.
4. Lechmere was charged - but acquitted - with 'fornicating with a fireplace,' in Nuneaton, 1872. This was a capital offence until 1998 and still remains one in Scotland.
5. Lechmere received the cat-o'-nine tails in 1879, for 'disastrous indulgence in solitary vices'. I've yet to confirm the disaster. Nevertheless, he was transported to Australia and then - in a legal first - reverse-transported back to England, for 'gross intimacy with a dingo'.
I suspect - but cannot yet prove - this was why he abandoned the much-debated surname of Cross, following a cruel newspaper headline: 'Barking Cross-breed of cat and dog.'
6. Photographs from the 1880s show Lechmere in a black cape and silken top-hat, brandishing a scalpel. His wife Edwina is dressed as Fairy Fay.
7. At Pickfords' annual dinners, 'Lech' attended dressed as Spring-Heeled Jack. He was frequently disciplined for goosing serving girls, hence the abbreviation.
8. Lechmere butchered five unfortunates in 1888's Autumn of Terror, before triumphing with his cucumbers in 1889's Bethnal Green Allotment Keeper of the Year Award.
9. After a successful career in mass murder, Lechmere retired - exhausted - and opened a feather shop ('Tickle Your Fancies, Ladies?') in Stevenage - with occasional headless torsos the only nod to his East End days.
10. In 2017, he was revealed as the killer of Jill Dando.
To that end, I've undertaken my first piece of research. It concerns the trump-card 'risk taker' character of suspects, so useful for swatting aside objections and making the 'serial killers are like that' dismissal. Not to mention statements of the obvious - 'there's excitement in risk' - offered as if profundities from Wittgenstein's Tractatus.
If have used the most debated of recent suspects, for my pioneering study. Through archival work on Letchmere's school reports, Herefordshire Assize records, local/national newspapers and Pickfords' annual appraisals, I provide hitherto undiscussed details of his recklessness.
I trust my work will be of assistance to others. Feel free to use any of it, acknowledging me under my nom-de-plume of Dr Grimesby Roylott, Stoke Moran:
1. As a schoolboy in Herefordshire, Lechmere stole 3d's worth of pease-pudding from Ma Megwipe's pie shop.
2. As a young apprentice, Lechmere stole a penny-farthing bicycle and cycled into Ross-on-Wye, without wearing a hat.
3. On completing his apprenticeship, the young ruffian consumed six pints of local ale and was involved in fisticuffs/steam-hammerings when things kicked off outside The Royal Oak, Much Marcle (later haunt of Fred West). His resulting conviction for 'hi jinks and public affray' led to a term in chokey, picking oakum and running the tread-mill.
4. Lechmere was charged - but acquitted - with 'fornicating with a fireplace,' in Nuneaton, 1872. This was a capital offence until 1998 and still remains one in Scotland.
5. Lechmere received the cat-o'-nine tails in 1879, for 'disastrous indulgence in solitary vices'. I've yet to confirm the disaster. Nevertheless, he was transported to Australia and then - in a legal first - reverse-transported back to England, for 'gross intimacy with a dingo'.
I suspect - but cannot yet prove - this was why he abandoned the much-debated surname of Cross, following a cruel newspaper headline: 'Barking Cross-breed of cat and dog.'
6. Photographs from the 1880s show Lechmere in a black cape and silken top-hat, brandishing a scalpel. His wife Edwina is dressed as Fairy Fay.
7. At Pickfords' annual dinners, 'Lech' attended dressed as Spring-Heeled Jack. He was frequently disciplined for goosing serving girls, hence the abbreviation.
8. Lechmere butchered five unfortunates in 1888's Autumn of Terror, before triumphing with his cucumbers in 1889's Bethnal Green Allotment Keeper of the Year Award.
9. After a successful career in mass murder, Lechmere retired - exhausted - and opened a feather shop ('Tickle Your Fancies, Ladies?') in Stevenage - with occasional headless torsos the only nod to his East End days.
10. In 2017, he was revealed as the killer of Jill Dando.
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