Triangular for the MH socket......
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Jack the Ripper Tech
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G'Day Steve
Yes I'll accept triangular, you'll note I put diamond in inverted commas I couldn't think of the description. I know miss triangle Huh!!!G U T
There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.
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Bayonets used up through at least the US civil war were essentially spikes. They were long, with little taper, and I think the wound would be like a giant ice pick wound. I always assumed the wound was something like this.
I suppose it could have been a really large awl, or a straightened-out meat hook, or even a fencing foil-- theaters had them, and someone could have taken the ball end off, and sharpened it.
Has anyone ever proposed a stagehand as a candidate? He'd have access to costumes, and could dress better than his income could afford, and he'd know the actors trick of one breakaway costume on top of another for quick changes, as a way of getting rid of bloody clothes, and changing his appearance, plus, back then, you had to be physically strong to work as a stagehand, and the lowest level people weren't very well-paid nor educated.
Random late-night thought, maybe better for a novel than a real theory.
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A bowie knife's blade is usually more broad and has a single sharpened edge.Best Wishes,
Hunter
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When evidence is not to be had, theories abound. Even the most plausible of them do not carry conviction- London Times Nov. 10.1888
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I find it highly unlikely that even the most ignorant onlooker would describe a triangular wound (as from the spike bayonet) as potentially the result of a Sword bayonet.
Surely the common spike bayonet can be effectively ruled out.
The real contention should center around whether the wound in the breastbone was indicative of a large single-sided weapon, a strong knife (dagger?), with an elongated triangular silhouette..
Or, a double-sided (like stiletto) weapon, leaving a diamond or to some degree elliptical silhouette, also known as a dagger.
Last edited by Wickerman; 02-16-2014, 08:14 AM.Regards, Jon S.
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If it were a bayonet that was indistinguishable from a knife, I think they would have said "knife." It must have been a spikey, hiltlessy bayonet, or something distinctively non-knifey for the report to say "bayonet." It could have been a sawn off fence spike, but who thinks of that? "Bayonet" was the best guess. If knife was a better guess, the report would have said that.
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