L. Forbes Winslow Explained

L. Forbes Winslow
Birth Name:Lyttelton Stewart Forbes Winslow
Birth Date:1844 1, df=yes
Birth Place:Marylebone, London
Death Place:Portland Place, London

Lyttelton Stewart Forbes Winslow MRCP (31 January 1844 – 8 June 1913) was a British psychiatrist famous for his involvement in the Jack the Ripper and Georgina Weldon cases during the late Victorian era.

Career

Born in Marylebone in London, the son of psychiatrist Forbes Benignus Winslow and Susan Winslow née Holt, Winslow was possibly the most controversial psychiatrist of his time.[1] As a boy he was brought up in lunatic asylums owned by his father, and was educated at Rugby School and Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, transferring to Downing College at the University of Cambridge after four terms, where he took the MB degree in 1870. He was also a DCL(1873) of Trinity College Oxford and LL.D. of Cambridge University.[2] A keen cricketer, Winslow captained the Downing College XI.[3] In July 1864 he was a member of the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) team which played against South Wales, in which team was W. G. Grace.

In 1871 he was appointed a Member of the Royal College of Physicians (MRCP). He spent his medical career in an attempt to persuade the courts that crime and alcoholism were the result of mental instability. His attempt in 1878 to have Mrs Georgina Weldon committed as a lunatic at the instigation of her estranged husband William Weldon resulted in one of the most notorious court cases of the nineteenth century.[4] The public notoriety the Weldon case caused earned him the displeasure of the medical establishment, which continued even after his death.

He became an adherent of the benefits of hypnotism in dealing with psychiatric cases.[5] He took an active role in securing a reprieve for the four people sentenced to death for the murder by starvation of Mrs. Staunton at Penge in 1877. In 1878 he inquired into the mental condition of the Rev. Mr. Dodwell, who had shot at Sir George Jessel, the Master of the Rolls. Other trials in which Winslow was involved were those of Percy Lefroy Mapleton, convicted of the murder on the Brighton line; that of Florence Maybrick, and that of Amelia Dyer, the Reading baby farmer.[6] He also appeared in many civil actions.[7]

Jack the Ripper

Winslow managed his father's asylums after his death in 1874, but these were removed from his control following a family feud, so he turned his attention to forensic work. Also in 1874 he changed his surname to Forbes-Winslow.

In 1888, with a little manipulation of the evidence, Winslow came to believe he knew the identity of Jack the Ripper, and believed that if he was given a team of six Police Constables he could catch the murderer.[8]

Winslow's suspect was Canadian G. Wentworth Smith, who had come to London to work for the Toronto Trust Society, and who lodged with a Mr and Mrs Callaghan at 27 Sun Street, Finsbury Square. Mr Callaghan became suspicious of Smith when he was heard saying that all prostitutes should be drowned. Smith also talked and moaned to himself, and kept three loaded revolvers hidden in a chest of drawers. Callaghan went to Winslow to express his suspicions, and he in turn contacted the police, who fully investigated his theory and showed it to be without foundation. Nevertheless, convinced that he was correct, for many years Winslow declared his theory at every chance, and claimed that his actions were responsible for forcing Jack the Ripper into abandoning murder and fleeing the country.

In his 1910 memoirs Winslow describes how he spent days and nights in Whitechapel: "The detectives knew me, the lodging house keepers knew me, and at last the poor creatures of the streets came to know me. In terror they rushed to me with every scrap of information which might, to my mind, be of value to me. The frightened women looked for hope in my presence. They felt reassured and welcomed me to their dens and obeyed my commands eagerly, and I found the bits of information I wanted".[8]

When Winslow's claims about knowing the identity of the Ripper were reported in the English press Scotland Yard sent Chief Inspector Donald Swanson to interview him. Confronted with this senior police officer, Forbes Winslow immediately began to back-pedal. He said the story printed in the newspaper was not accurate and misrepresented the entire conversation between himself and the reporter. He further stated that the reporter had tricked him into talking about the Ripper murders. Winslow had never given any information to the police with the exception of his earlier theory concerning an escaped lunatic, which he had by then abandoned.[9]

According to Donald McCormick, for a short period the police suspected Winslow of involvement in the killings because of his persistence and constant agitation in the Jack the Ripper case, and they checked on his movements at the time of the Ripper murders.[10] He gained further publicity, and visited New York City in August 1895, to chair a meeting on lunacy at an International Medico-Legal Congress.[11] He also appeared as an expert defence witness in some American cases involving lunacy.

Spiritualism

Winslow was the author of the 1877 pamphlet Spiritualistic Madness which identified spiritualism as a cause of insanity.[12] He wrote that many believers in spiritualism were women and victims of their own gullibility. Winslow wrote that most believers in spiritualism were insane and suffer from mental delusions. He affirmed that there were "nearly ten thousand [such] persons in America" who had been confined in lunatic asylums.[13]

Personal life

His older brother was Edward Winslow Forbes, the vicar of Epping, while his sister, Susanna Frances, married the humourist Arthur William à Beckett. Forbes Winslow published his memoirs, Recollections of Forty Years, in 1910, and also wrote the Handbook For Attendants on the Insane. He founded the British Hospital for Mental Disorders in London,[8] and was a lecturer on insanity at Charing Cross Hospital and was a physician to the West End Hospital and the North London Hospital for Consumption.[7] A member of the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) and a vice-president of the Psycho—Therapeutic Society, he married twice. In the 1880s, he was the owner of the famous progenitor of the modern English Mastiff, Ch. Crown Prince.[14]

Winslow died at his home in Devonshire Street, London, of a heart attack, aged 69. He left a widow, three sons and a daughter, Dulcie Sylvia, who, in 1906, married Roland St John Braddell (1880–1966).

Winslow appears as the central figure in the 2003 novel A Handbook for Attendants on the Insane,[15] since republished in a new edition as The Revelation of Jack the Ripper by Alan Scarfe.[16]

Publications

External links

Notes and References

  1. Berrios . G E . 2013 . Forbes Winslow and his Journal . History of Psychiatry . 24 . 4. 492–501 . 10.1177/0957154x13507390. 24573757 . 206589218 .
  2. 2299309 . 1302 . 1 . 2737 . Br Med J . Dr. Lyttelton Stewart Forbes Winslow . 10.1136/bmj.1.2737.1302-b. 1913 .
  3. http://www.cricinfo.com/england/content/player/23112.html Winslow on the Cricinfo website
  4. Judith R. Walkowitz, Science and the Seance: Transgressions of Gender and Genre in Late Victorian London Representations 22 (Spring 1988):3–29.
  5. Lyttleton Forbes Winslow's Obituary in Light 14 June 1913
  6. https://archive.org/stream/recollectionsoff00winsiala/recollectionsoff00winsiala_djvu.txt FMonika Sing-Leeull text of Recollections of Forty Years by L. Forbes Winslow Published by John Ouseley Ltd, London (1910)
  7. Winslow's obituary in The Times 9 June 1913
  8. http://www.casebook.org/ripper_media/book_reviews/non-fiction/cjmorley/200.html Dr. Lyttleton Forbes Winslow
  9. http://www.casebook.org/suspects/lodger.html The Lodger
  10. McCormick quoted in Cullen, Tom (1965) Autumn of Terror, London: The Bodley Head, p. 91
  11. Cullen, p. 91, n. 1
  12. Anna Green, Kathleen Troup. (1999). The Houses of History: A Critical Reader in Twentieth-century History and Theory. New York University Press. p. 312.
  13. Frank Lauterbach, Jan Alber. (2009). Stones of Law, Bricks of Shame: Narrating Imprisonment in the Victorian Age. University of Toronto Press. p. 264.
  14. Andersson, D. D. (1999). The Mastiff: Aristocratic Guardian. Doral Publishing.
  15. A Handbook for Attendants on the Insane: The autobiography of Jack the Ripper as revealed to Clanash Farjeon, Trafford Publishing, Canada (2003)
  16. smarthousebooks.com