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http://www.casebook.org/suspects/knight.html

The Royal Conspiracy

GOOD KNIGHT: An Examination of THE FINAL SOLUTION
Unfortunately, it isn't. -- Donald Rumbelow
One of the most controversial Ripper theories was made in Stephen
Knight's 1978 book, JACK THE RIPPER: THE FINAL SOLUTION. In it,
Knight weaves a fascinating tapestry of conspiracy involving
virtually every person who has ever been a Ripper suspect plus a few
new ones. Knight's conspiracy has become the most popular Ripper
theory ever despite strong objections raised by Ripperologists such
as Donald Rumbelow and the recanting of pertinent testimony from
Knight's key informant. Still, it has received the most exposure and
support of any Ripper theory and continues to appear in other areas
of popular culture. Clearly, it manages to appeal to a great number
of people and we shall examine that reason shortly.
First, however, it is important to discuss the actual theory as
Knight presents it in his book. The basic genesis of Knight's theory
actually began in 1973 and had nothing to do with Knight at all! The
Ripper murders had recently increased in popularity to the point
where the BBC decided to produce a television program on the murders.
In an unprecedented move, they combined their theatrical and
documentary departments to produce a strange hybrid of a show that
purported to solve the mystery once and for all using documented
evidence, but by including fictional television detectives. It was
decided that research would be extremely important to the shows
success so several assistants were assigned to obtain all possible
information on the murders. In speaking with a Scotland Yard
detective, they were advised to speak to a man named Sickert who knew
about a secret marriage between Eddy and a poor Catholic girl named
Alice Mary Crook.
The researchers could not find evidence of the marriage or the man
Sickert. Puzzled, they went back to their Scotland Yard contact who
revealed that the details were slightly off (apparently to test their
intentions) he then gave them Sickert's address and phone number. The
researchers tracked down Sickert and were told an amazing story.
Joseph Sickert's father had been the famous painter, Walter Sickert,
who had lived in the East End during the time of the murders and
reportedly knew the truth behind them. Joseph briefly outlined a tale
in which Eddy, while slumming as a commoner under Sickert's guidance,
met a girl named Annie Elizabeth Crook in a tobacconist's shop in
Cleveland Street. Eddy soon got the girl pregnant and they were
living quite happily until the Queen discovered her grandson's
indiscretion and became furious. She demanded that the situation be
handled as Annie was not only a commoner, but a Catholic. Joseph
explained that the government had been very vulnerable at that time
and the news of a Catholic heir to the throne was likely to cause a
revolution. Queen Victoria supposedly gave the matter to Lord
Salisbury, her Prime Minister, for resolution. Salisbury ordered a
raid on the Cleveland Street apartment and Eddy and Annie were taken
away in separate cabs. Her child, a girl by the name of Alice
Margaret, had somehow escaped.
Salisbury then enlisted the aid of Sir William Gull who was the
Queen's personal physician. According to Walter Sickert, Gull had
Annie put away in the hospital and performed experiments on her which
made her lose her memory, become epileptic, and slowly go insane. The
story would have ended there if it had not been for Mary Kelly.
Kelly was found by Walter Sickert in one of the poor houses and he
brought her to the tobacconist's shop to help Annie. She soon became
Alice's nanny and it was supposed that Alice was with her when the
raid took place. Desperate, Mary placed the child with nuns and fled
back into the East End, falling into a life of drink and
prostitution. But she knew the entire story of Eddy's indiscretion
and began spreading it around. Soon, several of her cronies pressured
her into blackmailing the government for hush money. These cronies
were Polly Nichols, Liz Stride, and Annie Chapman. When Salisbury
learned of the threat, he called on Gull once again.
Gull brought along John Netley, a coachman who had often ferried Eddy
in his forays into the East End, for help and soon devised a plan
that would rid them of the bothersome women and teach them a lesson
about trying to topple a government. Together with John Netley, he
created Jack the Ripper as a symbol of Freemasonry. To that end, the
aid of Sir Robert Anderson was also enlisted to help cover up the
crimes and act as lookout during the murders.
Eddowes, Sickert said, had been a mistake. She often went by the name
of Mary Kelly and the conspirators thought that she was the one they
were looking for. When the mistake became known, they found the real
Mary and viciously silenced her.
The murders were hushed up and a scapegoat chosen if anyone tried to
investigate too closely. The poor barrister, Montague Druitt, was
chosen to take the blame and possibly, Sickert hinted, was murdered
for it. The girl, Alice Margaret, grew up quietly in the care of nuns
and later, by an odd series of twists and turns, married Walter
Sickert and gave birth to their son, Joseph. Sir William Gull died
shortly after the murders, but there were rumors that he had been
committed to an insane asylum. Annie Crook died insane in a workhouse
in 1920. Netley was chased by an angry mob after he unsuccessfully
tried to run over Alice Margaret with his cab shortly after the
murders. He was believed to have been drowned in the Thames.
Joseph said that his father was fascinated with the murders and bore
great guilt over them. Walter Sickert, after all, had been the one
who introduced Eddy to Annie and started the grisly game. To
alleviate his guilt, for he could say nothing safely, he painted
clues into several of his most famous paintings. Later, Walter
Sickert supposedly married Alice Margaret.
The researchers were amazed as no one had ever put forward anything
like this before. In checking the few facts, they did find that a
woman named Annie Crook lived in Cleveland Street at that time and
that she did give birth to a bastard daughter at the same time that
Sickert said she did. They felt that the theory was the correct one
and they incorporated it into the show.
When it appeared, JACK THE RIPPER (the BBC production) was confusing
to many viewers. The strange combination of facts with fictional
detectives and an outlandish theory prompted many to question the
program's veracity. Joseph Sickert appeared in the last episode and
verified everything that had been said. It was, they all felt, the
only solution.
Stephen Knight enters the story a little later when he asks Joseph
Sickert for an interview for a local paper. After some indecision,
Sickert agrees. During the course of their interview, which took
place over several occasions, Knight also became convinced that
Joseph Sickert believed he was telling the truth. The story, he said,
had been told to him by his father to explain why his mother always
looked so sad and why both she and Joseph were partially deaf.
Once given the basic germ of the plot, Knight then proceeds to try
and confirm the theory. Eventually, he felt that the story warranted
a book. Joseph was disappointed as he had only agreed to be
interviewed for an article and wanted very little publicity.
Undaunted, Knight went ahead with his book in which he tried to prove
that the conspiracy did exist, that Eddy did father Annie's child,
and (most amazing of all) that the third man in the murderous trio
was not Sir Robert Anderson at all but Joseph's own father, Walter
Sickert.
The book was initially released in 1978 and caused something of a
sensation. As both the BBC program and Knight's book were derived
from Sickert's story, they varied only in the identity of the third
man. In essence, then, Knight is reiterating the same story told to
the BBC but is trying to validate it as a serious theory. It is a
fascinating piece of fiction, but very little actual evidence is
produced.
Knight makes great use of the infamous Ripper files held by Scotland
Yard and the Home Office (not to be opened to the public until 1992
and 1993 respectively and a source of much speculation in 1978) but
it is difficult to accept some of his conclusions. His logic is, at
times, extremely flawed. Having discovered the birth certificate of
Alice Margaret, he verifies the existence of Annie Elizabeth Crook
and the fact that she was in Cleveland Street. The fact that she is
listed as being employed as a "confectionary assistant" instead of a
tobacconist is never fully explained. The name of the father is left
blank.
Knight then moves on to the story of a man who remembers his
grandmother foster feeding "a child of the Duke's." This story is
strictly hearsay with nothing to support it. Knight has proved that
Alice Margaret existed but then goes on to connect her with the child
of the apocryphal story. There is nothing to link the two and nothing
to prove that the rumor of a Duke's child had any basis in fact.
Knight merely assumes that because Alice Margaret did exist when
Sickert said she did and because of this story that they were one and
the same. This is typical of much of Knight's reasoning and logic. It
is based primarily on assumption and the belief that if "X was true
than Y must also be true." This is wonderfully faulty logic at its
best.
A great deal of time is spent connecting Eddy with Cleveland Street.
At the time, it was considered a great mecca for artists and Knight
postulates that Sickert maintained a studio on that street. There is,
outside of the story he told his son, nothing to firmly state that he
did so. He does not appear on any of the registry books or as a rent
payer. Knight explains this by simply saying that Sickert may have
avoided being listed in case he had to make a quick escape from the
landlord or something even more sinister. He then implicates Eddy in
the Cleveland Street scandal of 1889 in which a homosexual brothel
was raided. Eddy was reportedly one of the clients and, according to
Knight and several other authors, a cover up was done to erase his
involvement.
Knight then goes on to say that the cover up was initiated not to
conceal Eddy's "bisexual nature (which was well known by then
anyway), but his connection with that particular street" (K 107).
This is incredible reasoning. Knight seemingly believes that Eddy
would be no more than 'inconvienced' if his bisexual nature was
exposed. This is in spite of the strict anti-homosexual laws which
existed in England. Surely if Eddy was exposed as having homosexual
relations, the scandal would be quite large on its own without having
to worry about any other connections. It was these laws which brought
Oscar Wilde from fame to absolute ruin and disgrace. Would the outcry
be any less against a future King?
The connection is supposedly even greater when Knight mentions that
the infamous Aleister Crowley claimed in one of his books that he had
compromising letters from Eddy to a boy called Morgan who lived in
Cleveland Street. Knight then goes on to link these letters (whose
existence has never been verified or even been seen by another
source) with a Mrs. Morgan who "ran the very shop at No. 22 Cleveland
Street in which Annie Elizabeth worked" (K 103). Even if we accept
that these unseen letters existed, there is nothing to positively
connect them with this Mrs. Morgan or Annie. Knight assumes that if
Eddy wrote letters to this boy then he surely must have been a
frequent visitor to the shop. Are we then to suppose that Eddy was
seducing both Annie and Morgan?
This is symptomatic of the entire problem with Knight's book and the
Sickert theory. It is based entirely on assumptions. There is no
direct, objective evidence to link Eddy with Annie, Gull with Sickert
and Netley, or even Warren and Anderson with the Masons. Knight
builds his argument through assuming that certain things are true.
His proof is loose, lacking in hard facts, and uses them to make
further assumptions leading to the murderous trio. It is a veritable
house of cards which could be toppled by the removal of the slightest
piece of evidence.
One of the most detailed parts of the book involves Knight's attempts
to implicate the Masons into the conspiracy. Of course, Knight takes
it as certain that the conspiracy did exist because of some of the
strange evidence given at inquests (or not given) and the
unexplainable actions of several of the principals. It is absolutely
necessary for Knight's theory that there be a conspiracy so one is
naturally assumed to have existed. The Masons are chosen as the
movers behind the conspiracy. As victims go, the Masons are probably
the best choice Knight could have made. Intensely secretive, they
would not allow anyone to consult their files and would refuse all
requests for information. This merely fuels Knights certainty that
they were implicitly involved in the conspiracy. Knight lists the
principal characters as Masons merely on assumption that in order to
achieve their political and social stature, they would have to be
Masons. There is no evidence to prove this which, of course, fits
right in with Knight's conspiracy.
This is actually one of the main reasonings behind his theory.
Evidence does not exist because the conspiracy made sure that all
evidence was destroyed. This is a handy excuse for lack of hard,
objective facts. No marriage certificate for Eddy and Annie?
Conspiracy. No evidence that Gull, Salisbury, Warren, and Anderson
were Masons? Conspiracy. Evidence suppressed at the inquest?
Conspiracy. It is a handy excuse but one that requires an amazing
amount of trust from the reader.
The Mason connection is tenuous at best and relies entirely on
Knight's supposed 'revelations' about the sect. He discloses that the
murders were ritual re-enactments of the murder of Mason Hirem Abiff
in Soloman's Temple by three initiates Jubela, Jubelo, and Jubelum.
Knight claims that further evidence of the placing of the victims in
specific areas points directly to the Masons. One of these claims
rests upon Mitre Square being significant to the Masons as a local
meeting place of various lodges and the words Mitre and Square being
symbols of Masonic tools. This is an example of Knight's symbolic
logic. Working from a list of Procedures, supposedly dictating
Masonic conduct, Knight believes that the murders were committed to
show Masonic power and had to include humor as well. This explains
some of Knight's stretches in logic as he identifies virtually
everything to have connections to Eddy or the Masons. For instance,
John Netley is said to have been killed, not by jumping off a bridge,
but by being run over by his own cab. This is significant, Knight
implies, as it was probably a Masonic killing which took place at
Clarence Gate. The Clarence being, of course, a veiled reference to
Eddy.
Sickert is implicated because he knows too many details about the
murders to be an outside man. He must have been working with Gull and
Netley. Knight then goes on to suggest that the man seen by several
witnesses was Sickert. The parcel the man was carrying is said to be
a portrait of Kelly which they were using to track her down. This is
confusing in that if Sickert was involved because of his first-hand
knowledge of Mary Kelly and the Cleveland Street affair, why would he
need a portrait to find Kelly? He knew what she looked like perfectly
well so why bring such a useless item along?
In Rumbelow's revised edition of JACK THE RIPPER: A COMPLETE
CASEBOOK, he addresses the question of the Gull and Sickert theory.
He does not find much truth in the conspiracy. Criticizing Knight for
his lack of facts, Rumbelow goes on to prove that Annie Crook did
indeed drift from workhouse to workhouse before her death but Alice
Margaret was with her during much of this time! Also, in her 1918
marriage certificate, Alice Margaret lists her father as William
Crook who was actually her grandfather! This raises just as much
possibility that Alice was a product of incest as she was a child of
the Duke. In addition, Rumbelow has found that Alice's grandmother,
and Annie's mother, Sarah Crook had also been living in workhouses
with them and that she was also deaf and given to epileptic seizures.
This raises the possibility of Alice's medical problems coming from
somewhere other than the Duke.
Perhaps one of the strongest points Rumbelow makes against Knight is
when he proves that the actual location which Knight names in
Cleveland Street, could not have existed in 1888. The buildings were
in a process of being torn down and renovated during that time and
could not have been the scene of the dramatic abduction. Rumbelow
then goes on to attack Knight's accusation of Sickert as being
unfounded. Much of Knight's theory has to do with a red handkerchief
which Sickert used in his painting. It is described as being a tool
he used to stimulate his memory. It implies the connection that the
last man seen with Kelly gave her a red handkerchief and this is what
makes Knight name Sickert. To be fair, he also includes Sickert's
intimate knowledge of the crimes and his moodiness. Rumbelow points
out that the use of the handkerchief is noted in 1917 and there is no
indication that he used it before then. Plus, he continues, Sickert
had many moods including his 'Ripper' phase which invalidates that
argument.
One of Knight's points against Sickert was supposed 'hush' money paid
to him by Salisbury. The story went that Salisbury had abruptly
appeared in Sickert's Dieppe studio one day and, without looking at
it, bought a painting for 500 when it was barely worth 3. Knight says
that Sickert had originally attributed this story to the artist
Vallon but confided to his son that it had actually happened to him.
Rumbelow discloses that the actual painting was done by A. Vallon and
was hung in Salisbury's home (where it remains) and included his
family which was why he had paid so much for it. By assuming, rather
than checking, Knight has left himself open to accusation by the
facts.
Knight himself is contradicted by Joseph Sickert who confessed
shortly after the book's appearance, to having made up the entire
story. Knight claimed that this revelation was simply in reaction to
his naming Joseph's father as one of the killers and not to be taken
seriously. Yet Knight also contradicts the testimony of Dr. Howard.
There was an article printed in a Chicago newspaper shortly after the
murders in which a Doctor, while drunk, confessed to having sat on a
board of medical inquiry passing judgement on Jack the Ripper. This
man, reportedly named Doctor Howard, told how the man was judged to
be insane, committed, and a mock funeral given to explain his
absence. Knight jumps on this story and proves, through a circuitous
route, that the unnamed man mentioned in the story was Dr. Gull. In a
postscript, Knight mentions that a letter by Dr. Howard was found and
published by Richard Wittington-Egan in which Dr. Howard loudly
discounts the story and claims to have not even been in Chicago at
the time. Knight explains this rejection of an important part of his
theory by saying that "Dr. Howard would hardly have admitted that he
had become drunk and broken the solemn oath binding him to secrecy
about the Masonic lunacy commission proceedings" (K 211). Once again,
he uses the conspiracy theory to explain the existence of conflicting
or nonexistent evidence. Clearly, there is no arguing with Knight.
Another interesting point comes in Knight's examination of Gull as a
suspect. He states that Rumbelow and Farson have both discounted Gull
as a suspect due to his having a stroke a few years before the
murder. Knight then goes on to prove that a man can indeed function
perfectly well after major strokes and that Gull had only suffered
one slight stroke. Then, strangely, he relates the story of mystic
Robert Lees leading a detective to the house of a doctor claiming
that the man was Jack the Ripper. Knight establishes that this was
Gull through another account in a memoir of Gull. Be that as it may,
Knight relates the story of Lees and the detective confronting the
man who confessed that his mind had been confused as of late and that
he had, on more than one occasion, woken up with blood on his shirt.
Knight appears to be laying a case for Gull having a split
personality that resulted in his committing the Ripper murders. This
would appear to be in contrast with the portrait of Gull which Knight
earlier paints as a Masonic madman intent upon saving the realm
through an intricate plan. It is a strange contradiction.
Ironically, Knight himself accuses Cullen and Farson of not checking
their facts when they accused Druitt. Their theories, he says, are
based on inaccurate copies of the MacNaughten papers and are thus
worthless. The same accusation applies to Knight as his lack of
evidence makes his theory just as worthless.
Despite the lack of hard facts, the Sickert theory remains one of the
most popular Ripper theories yet advanced. It continues to appear in
popular fiction and media, eclipsing all other theories. The
reasoning for this is quite simple. The conspiracy theory is a
favorite among many people as a large number of them often have
persecution complexes and do not trust the government. That aside,
the Sickert theory makes an excellent story regardless of whether it
is true or not. It is far more powerful than a tale of a lone madman
stalking women. It involves powerful people subverting justice for
their own ends, romance, tragedy, and guilt. In short, it is the
perfect Hollywood story! This fact has not been missed by most as
this theory appears frequently in such different forms as movies,
television shows, comic books, and novels.
When read as fiction, it makes wonderful sense and provides an
incredibly enjoyable read. If taken as fact, Knight's book falls
apart from the lack of evidence supporting it. The entire concept is
only effective if key elements are believed on faith. The study of
the Ripper requires much more than that.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Forwarded as information only; no endorsement to be presumed
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In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material
is distributed without charge or profit to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this type of information
for non-profit research and educational purposes only.
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The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking
new landscapes but in having new eyes. -Marcel Proust
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"Do not believe in anything simply because you have heard it. Do not believe
simply because it has been handed down for many generations. Do not
believe in anything simply because it is spoken and rumored by many. Do
not believe in anything simply because it is written in Holy Scriptures. Do not
believe in anything merely on the authority of Teachers, elders or wise men.
Believe only after careful observation and analysis, when you find that it
agrees with reason and is conducive to the good and benefit of one and all.
Then accept it and live up to it."
The Buddha on Belief, from the Kalama Sutta
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A merely fallen enemy may rise again, but the reconciled
one is truly vanquished. -Johann Christoph Schiller,
                                     German Writer (1759-1805)
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It is preoccupation with possessions, more than anything else, that
prevents us from living freely and nobly. -Bertrand Russell
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"Everyone has the right...to seek, receive and impart
information and ideas through any media and regardless
of frontiers."
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
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"Always do sober what you said you'd do drunk. That will
teach you to keep your mouth shut."
--- Ernest Hemingway

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