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  1. James Maybrick. Maybrick, a 50 year old Liverpool cotton broker, was named as Jack the Ripper after a diary, purporting to have been written by him, came into the possession of Michael Barrett, an unemployed former merchant seaman and scrap metal dealer from Liverpool. Barrett had been given the diary in a pub by a casual friend Tony Devereux ...

  2. 2 de sept. de 2017 · When it comes to suspects, James Maybrick is for now at the top of the leaderboard, displacing depraved artist Walter Sickert (favorite of author Patricia Cornwell) and insane barber Aaron Kosminski. What makes Maybrick an unusual suspect is his background and the 200-mile distance between Liverpool and Whitechapel, where the murders were committed.

  3. 18 de sept. de 2022 · If you wish to purchase a copy of Chris Jones's book, mentioned in the video, you can do so via the website www.florencemaybrick.comIn 1992 a journal came to...

  4. James Maybrick (ur. 24 października 1838 w Liverpoolu, zm. 11 maja 1889 tamże) – kupiec bawełniany z Liverpoolu, najbardziej znany jako podejrzany o bycie Kubą Rozpruwaczem, czemu wyraz dał w swoim pamiętniku. Pamiętnik często jest uznawany za mistyfikacj ...

  5. James Maybrick was a well known cotton merchant in Liverpool. The mysterious emergence of the so-called Maybrick "Jack The Ripper" journal in 1992 however, immediately thrust him to the forefront of credible Ripper suspects. Regardless of the Diary's authenticity, the story of James Maybrick is remarkable in its own right.

  6. Perhaps the most popular Jack the Ripper suspect among researchers, James Maybrick (October 24, 1838 - May 11, 1889) was a wealthy cotton merchant from a prominent Liverpool family. Though Liverpool is about a day's journey to London, it is important to note that all of the murders happened on the weekend, a time when someone of Maybrick's social class would not work ( Background of the ...

  7. 9 de ago. de 2017 · Según estas averiguaciones, al parecer, el verdadero Jack el Destripador fue en efecto James Maybrick, un comerciante rico que murió en 1889, un año después de los asesinatos de Whitechapel. Vivió en una gran propiedad, conocida como Battlecrease House, en el suburbio de Merseyside de Aigburth.