Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Who was the author of the 'Maybrick' diary? Some options.

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • If the ledger was originally in the Maybricks' possession, why would a forger have removed those pages from the front? If it had been a Maybrick family scrapbook/photo-album, or at least contained non-family artefacts (e.g. press cuttings or other ephemera) that dated the book to 1889 or earlier, surely they would have been left in to support its provenance? I'd suggest that the most likely explanation for the missing pages is that they contained evidence which not only showed the book had not been a Maybrick possession, but placed it at a later point in time
    Indeed Sam. I never actually stated - only speculated - that it contained anything, photos or otherwise, which could have linked it to the Maybrick family. Whatever it contained, the hoaxer either didn't want it, or those pages had been removed before the hoaxer obtained the book. I seem to recall reading - not in any work about the Diary but in a book about the Maybrick Case - that certain items went missing from Battlecrease before and after Florrie's arrest, and that the honesty of at least one of the servants was suspect. All I am suggesting is that IF the book came out of Battlecrease it was more likely - in my humble opinion - to have been abstracted at a point well in the past and not a little over 25 years ago when work was being carried out at the house.

    It seems unlikely, reading the posts here on this Forum, that there will ever be any agreement, or further solid positive evidence, forthcoming with regard to The Floorboards, The Electricians And Mike Barrett. (Hey, could be a Peter Greenaway work!!). As I and others have suggested, why on earth would a dying man wish to secrete anything under the floorboards? And how could he have achieved it anyway?

    Graham
    We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze

    Comment


    • Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
      Hi Gareth,

      Surely a highly skilled person would have been needed
      I honestly don't think that to be the case, Herlock. My great grandfather scratched his own initial on his signet ring, in a space no bigger than half a centimetre square. He had no experience of engraving at all, and no access to special tools. Gold is a soft metal, with about the same hardness on the Mohs scale as aluminium, and can be scored with something as mundane as an iron nail.
      Last edited by Sam Flynn; 03-20-2018, 12:28 AM.
      Kind regards, Sam Flynn

      "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

      Comment


      • Originally posted by DirectorDave View Post
        With "Nest of Forgers" I'm not insinuating a large number of individuals but the sophistication of the conspiracy.



        "One Study"....mmm OK I'll take it....22% that does not sound like an insignificant impairment to me.



        The stroke may be one of the reasons many right Barrett off, but look at John Humble a man probably below the standing of Barrett able to fool the police into going on a wild goose chase and hold the country in terror...did he look any more capable than Barrett?

        Alcohol again, OK alcohol prevents Barrett writing it but arsenic enables Maybrick to write it.

        Booze and drugs have a long association with the creative arts if they are inhibitors to the creative process there seems to be plenty examples of stuff getting through....the Beatles from Rubber Soul onwards for example.




        Yes I'm saying this was not some eutopic conspiracy where a group of experienced forgers democratically elected a master forger....it was more Steptoe than Shakespeare....they probably come up with the idea watching Lovejoy over a fish supper.

        I fail to see how Mike's literary skills limit his involvement....a published journalist in a national magazine, and whether his wife is his proof reader or not is neither here nor there.

        The Mike Barrett photoalbum is perhaps a microcosm of the whole Ripper case....a need to see sophistication and design when little are present.
        "Prevalence" is a word that means "extensiveness" or "frequency": see dictionary.thefreedictionary.com It does not therefore refer to intensity, so the study concluded that around one in five individuals, who had suffered a stroke, had a medium to long term cognitive impairment.

        Your argument regarding alcohol is self defeating: you cannot argue that the reason Mike was deemed incapable of authoring the diary, by those who interviwed him, was on account of his alcoholism, whilst at the same time contending that the same condition transformed him into a creative genius.

        The articles written for the magazine were trivial in nature. And of course it's relevant as to what extent they were his own work, i.e. they may have been heavily edited by his wife.

        Mike stated in his original affidavit that there people were involved in the conspiracy; assuming that's correct, who knows which one of them had the "master forger" role.
        Last edited by John G; 03-20-2018, 01:35 AM.

        Comment


        • Originally posted by DirectorDave View Post
          With "Nest of Forgers" I'm not insinuating a large number of individuals but the sophistication of the conspiracy.



          "One Study"....mmm OK I'll take it....22% that does not sound like an insignificant impairment to me.



          The stroke may be one of the reasons many right Barrett off, but look at John Humble a man probably below the standing of Barrett able to fool the police into going on a wild goose chase and hold the country in terror...did he look any more capable than Barrett?

          Alcohol again, OK alcohol prevents Barrett writing it but arsenic enables Maybrick to write it.

          Booze and drugs have a long association with the creative arts if they are inhibitors to the creative process there seems to be plenty examples of stuff getting through....the Beatles from Rubber Soul onwards for example.




          Yes I'm saying this was not some eutopic conspiracy where a group of experienced forgers democratically elected a master forger....it was more Steptoe than Shakespeare....they probably come up with the idea watching Lovejoy over a fish supper.

          I fail to see how Mike's literary skills limit his involvement....a published journalist in a national magazine, and whether his wife is his proof reader or not is neither here nor there.

          The Mike Barrett photoalbum is perhaps a microcosm of the whole Ripper case....a need to see sophistication and design when little are present.
          Mike stated in his original affidavit that three people were involved in the forgery. Assuming that's correct, who knows what the extent of his involvement was? Of course, he boasts about have the primary role, that of "master forger". But then again, he once claimed to have been a secret agent as well!

          Comment


          • Originally posted by John G View Post
            Your argument regarding alcohol is self defeating: you cannot argue that the reason Mike was deemed incapable of authoring the diary, by those who interviwed him, was on account of his alcoholism, whilst at the same time contending that the same condition transformed him into a creative genius.
            "creative genius"...getting a bit silly now eh?

            The people interviewing him do not know the state of his condition at the time of forging the diary and even if they did being an alcoholic still would not rule him out.

            The articles written for the magazine were trivial in nature. And of course it's relevant as to what extent they were his own work, i.e. they may have been heavily edited by his wife.
            Yes they were trivial, that was the nature of the magazine so the articles in themselves only point to the writer's competency...he carried out his brief.

            What does it matter how much editing Ann had to do? If she was proof reader for his articles she would proof read his forgery work?

            In a long line of strawmen arguments on this subject "his wife tidied up his articles" is the silliest.
            Last edited by DirectorDave; 03-20-2018, 01:52 AM.
            My opinion is all I have to offer here,

            Dave.

            Smilies are canned laughter.

            Comment


            • Originally posted by Graham View Post
              As for its being found under the floorboards, when this is proved, I'll believe it! But as hardly anything concerning the Diary has been [I]proved, I don't think this is about to happen. And I just cannot visualise, try as I might, Mike Barrett (or anyone else, for that matter) getting onto a literary agency the same day that the floorboards were lifted - unless of course this is another coincidence. Or, of course, this is precisely what did happen - but I don't think it did. Feldman IIRC said that he didn't think that whatever the electricians took to Liverpool University, it wasn't the Diary.
              Morning Graham,

              Well we know the two events coincided: the floorboards being lifted [in the right room of the right house as far as any diary supposedly written by Maybrick and left there would have been concerned]; and Mike's first contact with a literary agency, both on March 9th 1992.

              Some coincidence, supposing none of the electricians knew about any such diary in 1992 or took anything from the house; didn't know Mike from Adam or anything about his call to an agent; and only when Feldman came along did one or two of them invent a tale from whole cloth about the diary, currently making the headlines, being found under floorboards - not in 1992, but way back in 1989.

              Feldman gave up on this line of enquiry as soon as money entered the equation, assuming the electricians were only out to con him. He would not have appreciated that one little bit, so it's not surprising he didn't believe they ever had the diary to take anywhere. I don't think he ever knew - or asked - when Mike had first made contact with Doreen. Why would it have struck him as relevant? Eddie's claim went back to a find in 1989; Mike's was that Tony D gave it to him in 1991 and he had been researching it ever since. Even if Feldman worked out from the time sheets that some floorboards were lifted in March 1992, by employees of Portus & Rhodes, there was no reason for him to connect this event with the diary or with what Mike might have been doing with it around the same time. Nobody else was even suggesting a possible connection. Had Eddie said bluntly to Feldy in early 1993: "Look, here's my daily work sheet for March 9th 1992, showing I helped out in Maybrick's old bedroom by lifting the floorboards first thing, and I know for a fact that Mike called an agency that same afternoon about the diary I seen and shown him down the Saddle that lunchtime. Check with the agency if you don't believe me. Now what's my confession worth?"

              Somehow, if that had happened, I doubt we'd ever have heard Anne's 'in the family' story.

              As with Murphy and the watch scratches, one can see all manner of things without observing and seeing any meaning there. Feldman saw no significance in the timing of events because there was nobody willing to point the timing, or indeed the events themselves, out to him.

              Love,

              Caz
              X
              Last edited by caz; 03-20-2018, 02:47 AM.
              "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


              Comment


              • Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
                I honestly don't think that to be the case, Herlock. My great grandfather scratched his own initial on his signet ring, in a space no bigger than half a centimetre square. He had no experience of engraving at all, and no access to special tools. Gold is a soft metal, with about the same hardness on the Mohs scale as aluminium, and can be scored with something as mundane as an iron nail.
                But, Gareth, aren't you missing the point? Obviously someone was originally able to scratch crude but legible words and initials inside the watch, and presumably with no great difficulty. Nobody's questioning this [except possibly Abby Normal, who seemed to be sceptical about their very existence because I hadn't been able to see them myself in 2001 ].

                The point is, when your great grandfather scratched his own initial on his ring [ouch, sounds painful], would he have been able to make it look, under a microscope, like he had not done it yesterday, but decades before he was even a twinkle in your great great grandfather's eye?

                This is our main concern here, not the initial [ha ha] difficulty of scratching initials into soft metal surfaces. But while we're here, do you think your example from personal experience suggests your great grandfather could also have scratched a passable forgery of your great grandmother's signature, using her maiden name, into a slightly larger soft metal surface, and then done a professional job of giving it the appearance of many decades of wear when viewed under a microscope?

                If it was all such a doddle, why haven't we seen other Maybrick artefacts coming out of the brickwork, such as a gold ring that turns out to be brass... er, bad example there. How about a couple of brass rings with AC scratched on them, or a hankie embroidered with the initials FM complete with traces of arsenic and a note attached reading "the whore will suffer", in a suitably diary-like hand?

                Love,

                Caz
                X
                "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


                Comment


                • Originally posted by Graham View Post
                  It seems unlikely, reading the posts here on this Forum, that there will ever be any agreement, or further solid positive evidence, forthcoming with regard to The Floorboards, The Electricians And Mike Barrett. (Hey, could be a Peter Greenaway work!!). As I and others have suggested, why on earth would a dying man wish to secrete anything under the floorboards? And how could he have achieved it anyway?
                  Well that would be for the diary's author to explain, Graham, but it does seem to me all too obvious why a Battlecrease provenance - Maybrick's own bedroom where he died on May 11th 1889, no less - would have been our hoaxer's dream, at least compared with some dead pal of Mike Barrett's, who expected him to do something sensible with it while saying nothing about where it had been for the last 100 years.

                  A dying "Sir Jim", writing his last entry, did express the wish that the book would be found and would reveal all when he was in his grave. If I had been the hoaxer I think I might have hinted at a loose floorboard under his bed, or very close to it, which he had used on previous occasions to secrete stuff he didn't want found while he was alive and still kicking.

                  Love,

                  Caz
                  X
                  "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by caz View Post
                    But, Gareth, aren't you missing the point? Obviously someone was originally able to scratch crude but legible words and initials inside the watch, and presumably with no great difficulty. Nobody's questioning this [except possibly Abby Normal, who seemed to be sceptical about their very existence because I hadn't been able to see them myself in 2001 ].

                    The point is, when your great grandfather scratched his own initial on his ring [ouch, sounds painful], would he have been able to make it look, under a microscope, like he had not done it yesterday, but decades before he was even a twinkle in your great great grandfather's eye?

                    This is our main concern here, not the initial [ha ha] difficulty of scratching initials into soft metal surfaces. But while we're here, do you think your example from personal experience suggests your great grandfather could also have scratched a passable forgery of your great grandmother's signature, using her maiden name, into a slightly larger soft metal surface, and then done a professional job of giving it the appearance of many decades of wear when viewed under a microscope?

                    If it was all such a doddle, why haven't we seen other Maybrick artefacts coming out of the brickwork, such as a gold ring that turns out to be brass... er, bad example there. How about a couple of brass rings with AC scratched on them, or a hankie embroidered with the initials FM complete with traces of arsenic and a note attached reading "the whore will suffer", in a suitably diary-like hand?

                    Love,

                    Caz
                    X
                    Hi Caz and Gareth,

                    I accept that whoever did it didn’t need to be a master craftsman but I still don’t think that I could do it for example. Especially the signature. But the point Caz has made is surely the important one. Creating the initials and signature that could give a scientific examiner no cause to doubt that it could have been done in 1888/9 would require very high levels of skill. I may be recalling incorrectly here but didn’t the scientist who did the test (the unusual name of Turgoose [or something similar] comes to mind) say that he couldn’t have replicated it?
                    If it is possible to apply those kind of scratches to a gold watch and include an ageing process (and I’ve no doubt that it is) we are left with a question that is probably impossible to answer.
                    Did Albert Johnson or his brother know anyone with the required high levels of skill and knowledge? And furthermore wouldn’t there be a risk of him crawling out of the woodwork for a bit of publicity or possible reward (via a newspaper story for example) by shouting “it was me?”

                    Comment


                    • I love a good hypothetical scenario. So here’s one (it may have been suggested before.)

                      One of Maybrick’s brother’s finds the diary somewhere other than beneath the floorboards. Searching his study perhaps? Or perhaps Lowry found it at the office and presented it to the brothers? One of the brother’s take a moral viewpoint. “If our brother is responsible for the deaths of these poor women they have a right to justice. We must inform the police.”
                      The other takes the pragmatic approach. “But think of the scandal. We would all be ruined. Tarnished for the rest of our lives by our brother’s infamy.”

                      I know, very melodramatic but you get the picture

                      They come to a compromise. “We’ll hide it under the floorboards. By the time anyone finds it we will all be long gone.”

                      If it was Lowry that found it they pay for his silence.

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
                        Hi Caz and Gareth,

                        I accept that whoever did it didn’t need to be a master craftsman but I still don’t think that I could do it for example. Especially the signature. But the point Caz has made is surely the important one. Creating the initials and signature that could give a scientific examiner no cause to doubt that it could have been done in 1888/9 would require very high levels of skill. I may be recalling incorrectly here but didn’t the scientist who did the test (the unusual name of Turgoose [or something similar] comes to mind) say that he couldn’t have replicated it?
                        If it is possible to apply those kind of scratches to a gold watch and include an ageing process (and I’ve no doubt that it is) we are left with a question that is probably impossible to answer.
                        Did Albert Johnson or his brother know anyone with the required high levels of skill and knowledge? And furthermore wouldn’t there be a risk of him crawling out of the woodwork for a bit of publicity or possible reward (via a newspaper story for example) by shouting “it was me?”
                        Hi Herlock
                        It wouldn't be too hard to figure out that if you wanted to make engravings in something appear old, or at least obfuscate the matter, you would scratch them in there lightly, or however, and then "buff" them out (for lack of better word) to make it appear old. no?
                        "Is all that we see or seem
                        but a dream within a dream?"

                        -Edgar Allan Poe


                        "...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
                        quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."

                        -Frederick G. Abberline

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
                          Hi Herlock
                          It wouldn't be too hard to figure out that if you wanted to make engravings in something appear old, or at least obfuscate the matter, you would scratch them in there lightly, or however, and then "buff" them out (for lack of better word) to make it appear old. no?
                          Hi Abby,

                          I’m no expert but I can’t see it being that easy. Everyone would be at it

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
                            Hi Abby,

                            I’m no expert but I can’t see it being that easy. Everyone would be at it
                            Everyone IS at it! Fake jewellery is big business!

                            Graham
                            We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
                              Hi Herlock
                              It wouldn't be too hard to figure out that if you wanted to make engravings in something appear old, or at least obfuscate the matter, you would scratch them in there lightly, or however, and then "buff" them out (for lack of better word) to make it appear old. no?
                              The 'scratchings' were deemed to be many tens of years old and made with a number of different implements. Under examination with an Electron microscope were found embedded in parts of the 'scratchings', rusted iron particles which were probably from one of the implements. These would have been impossible to have been placed there.
                              ‘There is nothing more deceptive than an obvious fact’ Sherlock Holmes

                              Comment


                              • And I think that I'm right in saying (I'll happily stand correcting though) that the alleged Maybrick scratches were overlaid by more modern ones.

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X