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  • #76
    Originally posted by Roy Corduroy View Post
    Mke starts a Kosminski thread and we end up discussing Dr T. How'd that happen.

    Oh yes he was a suspect all right. With Francis Tumblety it was a classic case of being in the wrong place at the wrong time. In his younger days the doctor always had a steady boyfriend. But he was getting up in years, and on this sojourn to London he engaged in risky behavior to fulfill his desires. Which got him popped by the bobbies. And he was also given a lookover for the Ripper murders. Why? For one thing, when you are around a person, you get a certain 'vibe' from them. We don't know just what vibe Tumblety gave off because we weren't there. But the police were. He could very well have struck them as a dangerous person. Impulsive, unpredictable, odd. Said to be a 'doctor.'

    Roy
    Don't forget that homosexuality was a symptom of violent psychopathy back then. But not lesbianism. That didn't exist. Queen Victoria said so.
    The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

    Comment


    • #77
      Solitary vs Unmentionable?

      How did Macnaghten know that 'Kosminski' was alive and Anderson and Swanson did not?

      I am not aware that this was ever noticed before (it's in 'Aberconway'); it was always just voiced as how did the latter two make such a mistake.

      In fact t's much worse, for the No.2 at CID knew he was not deceased 'soon after' being sectioned which seems to have been believed to be 'soon after ' Kelly by Anderson and/or Swanson, also wrong.

      It begs the question: did Mac mislead Sir Bob?

      As for homosexuality, Scotland Yard -- very unusually -- had in Macnaghten a police administrator who had experienced a prestigious, male-only institution where sexual activities, minus females, were common if below the radar. Arguably the inherent sado-masochism innherent in the corporal punihsment rituals is barely even that.

      You had a top cop with potentially a greater sense of proportion about so-called 'sexual deviance' than the average plod, and this applies, equally, towards 'Kosminski' and Tumblety. The latter Mac only knew from interviews and files, the latter, on the other hand, was sectioned after he had been on the Force for many months.

      Yet he backdates it to before he started.

      I do not believe that that is a memory malfunction, it's deliberate.

      Teh revised timeline makes the Polish Jew suspect more plausible. To Macnaghten, ipso facto, the timing of his actual incarceration in Feb 1891 'exonerated' Kosminski (a word he uses in 'Aberconway').

      The moderate term 'solitary vices' is a world away from the hysterical and judgmental 'unmentionable vices'.

      Both Mac and Anderson believed in deceased madmen as the fiend whose concerned families or 'people' also knew, yet only one actually was dead ...

      Comment


      • #78
        Good morning Mike, I just noticed what appears to be an error that your original question is predicated on -

        Originally posted by mklhawley View Post
        Quick question: How did Melville Macnaghten know that 'Kosminski' was alive yet Assistant Commissioner Anderson and Chief Inspector Swanson did not?
        Robert Anderson. Where did he say that? The unnamed man was not alive. Maybe I've missed something.

        Roy
        Sink the Bismark

        Comment


        • #79
          Originally posted by Roy Corduroy View Post
          Good morning Mike, I just noticed what appears to be an error that your original question is predicated on -

          Robert Anderson. Where did he say that? The unnamed man was not alive. Maybe I've missed something.

          Roy
          Actually I thought you were going in the other direction, like, where does Macnaghten say Kosminski was still alive?

          Jon S.
          Regards, Jon S.

          Comment


          • #80
            Dead AND Alive?

            To Roy

            Yes, you've missed it but you are hardly alone.

            Macnaghten from 'Aberconway', which so far as we know was seen only by cronies and family, and which was written sometime between 1894 and 1898:

            "No 2. Kosminski, a Polish Jew, who lived in the very heart of the district where the murders were committed. He had become insane owing to many years indulgence in solitary vices. He had a great hatred of women, with strong homicidal tendencies. He was (and I believe still is) detained in a lunatic asylum about March 1889. This man in appearance strongly resembled the individual seen by the City PC near Mitre Square."

            Macnaghten's proxy, Sims, wrote the following discarding this suspect in 1907:

            'The first man was a Polish Jew of curious habits and strange disposition, who was the sole occupant of certain premises in Whitechapel after night-fall. This man was in the district during the whole period covered by the Whitechapel murders, and soon after they ceased certain facts came to light which showed that it was quite possible that he might have been the Ripper. He had at one time been employed in a hospital in Poland. He was known to be a lunatic at the time of the murders, and some-time afterwards he betrayed such undoubted signs of homicidal mania that he was sent to a lunatic asylum.

            The policeman who got a glimpse of Jack in Mitre Court said, when some time afterwards he saw the Pole, that he was the height and build of the man he had seen on the night of the murder.

            The second man was a Russian doctor ...

            Both these men were capable of the Ripper crimes, but there is one thing that makes the case against each of them weak.

            They were both alive long after the horrors had ceased, and though both were in an asylum, there had been a considerable time after the cessation of the Ripper crimes during which they were at liberty and passing about among their fellow men.'


            Sir Robert Anderson never mentions the suspect being alive, or dead, after being 'safely caged', in any extant source by him, but it can be inferred from two other sources who were close to him that this was, indeed, his mistaken opinion.

            Firstly, the biography by his son:

            'Sir Robert Anderson and Lady Agnes Anderson'
            by Arthur Ponsonby Moore-Anderson, 1947.

            Chapter IV Scotland Yard

            'The facts were that the locality in which the crimes occurred was full of narrow streets with small shops over almost every one of which was a foreign name. The victims belonged to a small class of degraded women frequenting the East End at night. However the fact be accounted for, no further murder in the series took place after a warning had been given that the police would not protect them if found on the prowl after midnight. The criminal was a sexual maniac of a virulent kind living in the immediate vicinity. The police reached the conclusion that he and his people were aliens of a certain low type, that the latter knew of the crimes but would not give him up. Two clues which might have led to an arrest were destroyed before the C.I.D. had a chance of seeing them, one a clay pipe, the other some writing with chalk on a wall. Scotland Yard, however, had no doubt that the criminal was eventually found. The only person who ever had a good view of the murderer identified the suspect without hesitation the instant he was confronted with him ; but he refused to give evidence. Sir Robert states as a fact that the man was an alien from Eastern Europe, and believed that he died in an asylum.'

            Secondly, the last section of the 'Swanson Marginalia', written sometime between 1910 and 1924:

            "Continuing from page 138, after the suspect had been identified at the Seaside Home where he had been sent by us with difficulty in order to subject him to identification, and he knew he was identified. On suspect’s return to his brother’s house in Whitechapel he was watched by police (City CID) by day & night. In a very short time the suspect with his hands tied behind his back, he was sent to Stepney Workhouse and then to Colney Hatch and died shortly afterwards – Kosminski was the suspect – DSS"

            Swanson writes that 'Kosminski' died soon after 1888 and yet in 1894, or thereabouts, Macnaghten is aware that he is still alive.

            Of course a suspect who is safely deceased does not require any follow-up checking -- or can be checked.

            Actually it was Druitt who was dead, and whose family 'believed'.

            So, back to the original question: how did Macnaghten have accurate intelligence about the fate of [presumably] Aaron Kosminski and Anderson (and Swanson) did not?

            Comment


            • #81
              Hi Roy, Wickerman,

              Jonathan has answered your question much better than I could. What do you think?

              Sincerely,

              Mike
              The Ripper's Haunts/JtR Suspect Dr. Francis Tumblety (Sunbury Press)
              http://www.michaelLhawley.com

              Comment


              • #82
                Originally posted by mklhawley View Post
                Hi Roy, Wickerman,

                Jonathan has answered your question much better than I could. What do you think?

                Sincerely,

                Mike
                Hi Mike.

                In all fairness, there are differences between the two versions (Donner/Aberconway). In the Aberconway version Mac. suggests that he was inclined to exonerate Kosminski & Ostrog, and that "he believes" Kosminski may still be alive.

                In the better known Donner version these lines were removed, therefore, we cannot justify including contrary claims just to substantiate a theory. We should go with one, or the other.

                Either, Kosminski is a weak suspect (exonerated), and he may still be alive, or, Kosminski is a strong suspect, and Mac. does not know if he still lives.

                We traditionally take the Donner view.
                Regards, Jon S.

                Comment


                • #83
                  Good morning to you Mike,

                  Yes Jonathan did a great job of compiling those excerpts for us. But no he confirmed I've not missed something. Because he said -

                  Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post
                  Sir Robert Anderson never mentions the suspect being alive, or dead, after being 'safely caged', in any extant source by him,
                  Jonathan then went on to say -

                  but it can be inferred from two other sources who were close to him that this was, indeed, his mistaken opinion.
                  He quoted Anderson's biography written by his son in 1947 -

                  "Sir Robert states as a fact that the man was an alien from Eastern Europe, and believed that he died in an asylum".
                  and of course he quotes the marginalia, too. And from these two he inferred Anderson also thought the man had died. During Anderson's lifetime, which ended 1918, one year before Aaron Kosminski died in 1919.

                  So what do I think? To tell you the truth, I'd never thought of it. Since Anderson didn't say it. When Macnaghten wrote he believed Kosminski
                  was still detained in asylum that was 1894. Anderson's own book and Swanson's comments in the margin were written later.

                  So let me ask you, Mike. Was this what you were inferring in your original question? That Anderson believed the man had died, even though he never said that.

                  Roy
                  Sink the Bismark

                  Comment


                  • #84
                    Who's this 'we'?

                    Plus Donner is 'Aberconway'.

                    The 'Donner' version, by which I presume -- perhaps wrongly -- that you mean the original from which Lady Christabel Aberconway made a typed and hand-written copy (sometime, it is thought, in the 1930's) is the same version as the one in which Macnaghten knows, between 1894 and 1898, that 'Kosminski' is still alive.

                    Perhaps you mean the filed version for Scotland Yard's arhcive in which he says nothing about the ultimate fate of 'Kosminski' one way or another.

                    To deny one version because it does not suit the 'conventional wisdom' is not how an historian works. You are meant to test the received wisdom and expand the possibilities, not contract them, by examining a range of sources.

                    In a source, 'Aberconway', exactly what Mac wrote matches other primary sources about the fate of Aaron Kosking -- that he was still alive.

                    Yet we are supposed to ignore that, shut our eyes to it, because in the filed version -- the alternate version I think you mean -- he says nothing about his fate (it would be a stronger argument if he had written for file that 'Kosminski' was deceased, but he does not).

                    Another point adherents to this wisdom will never digest, is that Macnaghten chose 'Aberconway' as his opinion for the public -- albeit anonymously. Sure enough, Sims tells the public in 1907 that the Polish Jew was out and about and alive and well for a coniserable time after the Kelly murder.

                    That also matches the primary sourcesa about Aaron Kosminski and not what Anderson writes or Swanson (who may only have Anderson as his source).

                    In his own memoirs, the one source under his own name for the public, Macnaghten eliminated 'kosminski' altogether and implicitly debunked Anderson's preferred suspect.

                    Swanson not only has 'Kosminski' safely dead but soon after incarceration. These are annotations in an account which Swanson never corrects the false impression that this all happened in late 1888 or early 1899 (where Cohen theorists understandably try and locate the arrest of the suspect and the positive i.d.)

                    Where would Anderson and/or Swanson have gained the erronoeus impression that 'Kosminski' was 'safely caged' almost two years earlier than he actually was?

                    From Macnaghten who in the extant record -- twice -- backdates an incareration which happened while he was already months and months on the Force.

                    Otherwise, if you do not backdate then 'Kosminski' is no longer a viable suspect. Again this matches the opinion of those who propose Choen or somebody like him. To a certain extent, this is true of Fido's opinion.

                    The conventioanl wisdom has long argued that Macnaghten received his information from Anderson and/or Swanson, but just adding up the bits that the former gets right and the latter get wrong, suggests the flow of information was the other way round.

                    Of course in the filed version, the one nobody seems to have read until 1966, and which too often is the only one which makes it into today's secondary sources, Macnaghten wrote that Druitt was definitely turned on by ultra-violence. Police were [allegedly] unsure what he did for a living, or whether he came from a good family, or whether his body was upwards of a month in a river -- but he was definitely 'sexually insane' causing his family to 'believe' in his guilt. How could they not ...?

                    Comment


                    • #85
                      Hello Jonathan.

                      Yes, there are differences between the Official version and the Aberconway version, is what I meant. It was these differences I was concerned with.

                      When the Aberconway states, "No-one ever saw the Whitechapel murderer, unless possibly it was the city P.C...." and the Official states, "No-one ever saw the Whitechapel murderer".

                      We must choose one, we cannot have it both ways, either he was seen or he wasn't - the choice is black or white.

                      Likewise then, when comparing the two, either Kosminski was a weak suspect whom he thinks 'may' still be alive, or a strong suspect, where he makes no comment either way.

                      As the Abeconway version (always assuming it is a faithful copy), is taken to have been the draft copy, then any differences between it and the final Official version are generally accepted to indicate a change of opinion meaning, false information was superceded by accurate information.

                      We cannot use these contrary statements at the same time.
                      Regards, Jon S.

                      Comment


                      • #86
                        Mac chose before we had to ...

                        To Wickerman

                        Macnaghten is cognizant that 'Kosminski' is alive in a document from 1894. In 1907 in a proxy source he is still aware that the man was alive for a long, long time after Kelly's murder.

                        To deny that basic match between 'Aberconway' and the meagre medical sources on Aaron Kosminski is to fly in the face of, well ... common sense.

                        Instead it is twisted to mean that Macnaghten agrees with Anderson and Swanson that he's dead.

                        All I can say is: abandon all hope ...

                        Nowhere in the extant wrritings of Anderon and Swanson are they are aware of this elongated timeline, or that their suspect was alive as they wrote him off for dead.

                        Quite the opposite.

                        A strong argument can be mounted that they thought the same suspect was deceased 'soon after' the Kelly murder (back to Mac again).

                        Eveything with them is soon after. That's the key theme. The murderer's reign was 'cut short', it was brief. He died 'soon after' being sectioned. Swanson talks in 1895 of a man who is already dead. Anderson tells his son that the man was deceased -- when he actually outlived the police chief.

                        None of that matches Aaron Kosminski, hence the lingering arguments for David Cohen. Scott Nelson's recent effort is fascinating.

                        There are a myriad of competing pressures and countervaling forces which go into the making of primary sources, including playing fast and loose with the facts when so required.

                        That 'Aberconway' was a draft is a long-standing theory, not a fact, and maybe correct.

                        What is a 'definitely, ascertained fact' is that the so-called draft was propagated to the public. Mac shared much of the content with the public -- though anonymously.

                        This is an element nof the mystery which RipperLand has never absorbed and never will. Macnaghten's opinion did not stay in a drawer; he shared it with the public.

                        The 'drowned doctor', eg. behind which impenetrably lies Druitt, is the best suspect.

                        Then Mac reconceived the document again as his memoir chapter 'Laying the Ghost of Jack the Ripper' (1914). This time, the only time, it would be under his own prestigious name for the public -- forever

                        Thus there are arguably three versions to 'choose' from.

                        The choice you say which has to be made was made by Macnaghten himself.

                        He's already used the shears, though people in 1914 could not have known this unless they were playing very careful attention to what George Sims had written about a doctor who drowned himself in the Thames, the same night as the final murder:

                        3rd Version:

                        - the best suspect was a 'Simon Pure' Gentile gent and not a Jew.
                        - no mention of being a mddle-aged doctor
                        - had never been 'detained' in an asylum, or been a lodger.
                        - all other suspects are worthless, and not worthy of even the briefest outline.
                        - no witness saw anything worthwhile, not even a beat cop.
                        - the police, eg. Anderson, had never had the real Ripper on their radar
                        - the real Jack only came to police attention 'some years after' he killed himself.
                        - these 'certain facts' leading to a 'conclusion' by Macnaghten were provided by 'his own people'.
                        - he had a diseased body as well as mind, and suffered from an implosion after the 'awful glut' of Miller's Ct.
                        - yet this implosion was not the same night, as he could function to get away from the East End and be noticably 'absented' by his 'people' presumably family members whom he seems to live with (though it does not state that explicitly).

                        But if all that cuts no ice, then consider this line from the official version which is aruably definitive (not my argument):

                        ' ... He was sexually insane, and I have little doubt but that his own family believed him to be the murderer'.

                        They believed he was Jack the Ripepr because he was Jack the Ripper.

                        As for the witness?

                        Of course there was one -- and he appears in no extant source by Mac or on his behalf.

                        It was Joseph Lawende, used once if not twice by the police of the day.

                        In my opinion Macnaghten went to great lengths (well, it took all of a few minutes) to eliminate Lawende's existence from public consciousness; to obliterate a witness and whom that witness allegedly saw: a man of about 30, Gentile featured, middle-figured and heighted, with enough charm to put an exhausted, poverty-striken, middle-aged woman at her ease ...

                        Comment


                        • #87
                          Never-ending Loop?

                          On the other site there is a debate about whether Reid knew about Aaron Kosminski, or at least his fictional variant: 'Kosminski'.

                          I would argue there is nothing in the extant record to suggest that he knew of this suspect. Quite the opposite. He has a generic theory, that's all.

                          Debaters still ignore two salient points, in my opinion, which traps the debate in a never-ending loop.

                          1. Macnaghten knew that 'Kosminski' was alive.

                          Why shouldn't he? He was alive. He also knows that he was sectioned a long time after the Kelly murder. Why shouldn't he? Macnaghten had been on the Force for nealy two years when Aaron Kosminski was permanently incarcerated. He knew that Aaron was a chronic self-abuser and lived in the heart of the kill-zone. Why shouldn't he? Both of these details are true too.

                          What needs explaining is why Anderson (and Swanson?) thought he was dead soon after being sectioned?

                          2. That the timing of Druitt's suicide at least explains the cessation of the Ripper murders.

                          It doesn't.

                          The last Ripper victim was initially thought to be Frances Coles, over two years after Druitt had taken the fateful plunge. That Kelly is the real final victim is retrospective only; it is imposed by the timing of Druitt's demise not the other way round.

                          Almost everybody does not think Druitt is viable suspect, nor that Sir Melville is a strong and reliable source. Fair enough.

                          The puzzle is why so many people stick with his Druitt-centric list of victims (albeit some do not). That's the easiest way to eliminate Druitt -- the timing of his self-murder does not fit.


                          For example, Reid always believed that Coles was the final victim and we can see why. Though his memory is dodgy, other police primary sources from 1891show that Coles' murder was taken very seriously as Jack's return, for example by Swanson.

                          Certainly there was no indications in 1891 that any police thought that they had identified the Ripper as a 'safely caged' madman -- not until 1895 when Swanson says it is believed to be a man who is deceased and Anderson tells Griffiths he believes it is probably a locked-up lunatic.

                          In 1898 Griffiths mentioned the locked-up lunatic again, but sidelined him in favour of the drowned, English doctor, the timing of whose death cemented Kelly as the final victim with Coles not mentioned at all (no acknowledgment is made that the timeline is being altered because the Major is also claiming that the police knew at the time in 1888 about all these suspects.)

                          Comment


                          • #88
                            Sectioned and then dead?

                            Have a look at this quote from a top cop's memoirs:

                            It is about a suspect who probably was the killer, they just could not nail him.

                            '... But the identification had entirely failed ... Some months after the man was ajudged insane and confined in a lunatic asylum, and, as far as I know, he died there.'

                            Sounds like a version of the Swanson Marginalia: an identification which does not get the required result for a courtroom, though this is the likeliest suspect -- but never fear he was sectioned and then expired.

                            Well, that's some kind of justice.

                            The main difference with Swanson is the wriggle room the author leaves for himself in case the suspect is not deceased -- which he wasn't.

                            He was not guilty of murder either.

                            The above is from Sir Melville's memoirs, p. 186, about the Elizabeth Camp murder on a train in 1897.

                            Chris Phillips found the suspect, or at least elements of a suspect who was investigated and who was cleared. He also got better, and was released from the asylum.

                            Yet he seems to have been merrged with other suspects, one of whom wore a false moustache. This was not true of the young, mentally ill barrister

                            Surely the similarities with 'Kosminski' are not only obvious but relevant.

                            Macnaghten knew Aaron Kosminski was alive, and yet his superior, Anderson, believed -- or was misled to believe -- that the suspect was long deceased (which of course was true of Druitt).

                            Since we know that Mac falsely wrote that 'Kosmisnki' was sectioned in early 1889, was this detail also used to mislead his loathed boss? Certainly Anderson writes as if these were all events tidied up in late 1888 and/or early 1889.

                            That contingent line -- 'as far as I know' -- echoes Littlechild writing to Sims and saying it was provisionally 'believed' that the American quack had vanished and, maybe, taken his own life.

                            Tom Divall claimed in his 1930 memoir that Mac had told him that the Ripper was a man who fled to the States and died there -- in an asylum.

                            I'll put this on the other site to see if debate can be generated about this aspect.

                            Comment


                            • #89
                              Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post

                              Macnaghten knew Aaron Kosminski was alive,
                              Actually having read through these last posts this is where the whole of Jonathon's theory falls down..

                              Actually we have know idea what MacNaughten did or did not know because what he says is: "He was (and I believe still is) detained in a lunatic asylum about March 1889"

                              'And I believe still is' is a clear indicator that MacNaughten didn't know the definitive answer to what happened to Kosminski after March 1889.

                              Of course MacNaughten continues to give this information out to various people including Griffith's…

                              But he never knows what happens after March 1889

                              We know of Course that James Monroe did not believe that an ID had taken place after the Alice McKenzie murder some months later and its not until 1890,Monroe told Casells magazine that he had formed a theory on the case, adding 'when I do theorise it is from a practical stand point. and not upon visionary foundations' He also said, however, that the police had nothing positive' by way of the clues, with the ryder that such crimes were difficult to solve since the victims, as well as the murderer, SOUGHT SECTRET SITES'

                              Did at this time Monroe know about the meeting (Crawford Letter) between Anderson and a member of Kozminski's family but the ID itself hadn't yet taken place…

                              Another words the ID took place after July 1890 but the introduction and meeting took place before?

                              Yours Jeff

                              Comment


                              • #90
                                Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post


                                Though his memory is dodgy, other police primary sources from 1891 show that Coles' murder was taken very seriously as Jack's return, for example by Swanson.



                                Even though Swanson's suspect, Kosminski, had by the time of Coles' murder been safely caged in an asylum?

                                Of course, by suspect I mean the man whom Swanson - some 20 years later - named as the man he had - like Anderson - known all along to have been the Whitechapel Murderer.

                                Comment

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