That's your rub, Sam, nobody is claiming that it is genuine, but everyone is claiming that it is a fake.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
September 17th Letter
Collapse
X
-
Hi AP,Originally posted by Cap'n Jack View PostThat's your rub, Sam, nobody is claiming that it is genuine, but everyone is claiming that it is a fake.Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
Comment
-
Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostBeing purely objective, Mac, there's nothing that proves it's a genuine survivor from 1888 either.
Thank you young fellah me laddo.
And it's exactly that angle of opinion that makes this letter a 'questionable' document.
So far, it's only been proven that it isn't modern.I didn't do it, a big boy did it and ran away.
Comment
-
Originally posted by mac-the-kipper View PostThere is not one jot of evidence that proves this letter to be a fake. Nothing, zilch, zip, diddley.
Originally posted by mac-the-kipper View PostShow me proof that this is a fake.
You, on the other hand, don't have evidence to support your side, there's plenty to indicate you are wrong, so you want to toss out all the evidence and declare yourself right unless you can be proven wrong to your own satisfaction, which is not how the real world works.
Originally posted by mac-the-kipper View PostI ask again, have YOU personally examined this letter?
Dan Norder
Ripper Notes: The International Journal for Ripper Studies
Web site: www.RipperNotes.com - Email: dannorder@gmail.com
Comment
-
Well Dan, I reckon Mac has a few good friends, like the National Archives to mention just one. And I'm proud to say that I was able to place Mac's letter in a better historical context by simply being open-minded about it, doing a bit of honest research, like pushing back the date of the first meeting of the WVC back to the 10th September 1888; and then finding him a jolly splendid press reference referring to the wounds around Chapman's neck as a 'necklace' that predated the 17th September letter by at least a week; and then finding quotations from Lusk where he admitted to having had letters in the past but had 'discarded' them.
That's not a bad little haul for an old and sodden drunk who runs rings round you sober boys when it comes to finding and identifying the devil.
Now what were you saying about sour grapes on that podcast?
Comment
-
Hi all,
Jenni & Cap'n Jack.
JENNI: What happened re Cornwell's tests?
JACK: She was declared insane, but rich.
Nicole---------------------------------------------------
"We serial killers are your sons, we are your husbands, we are everywhere. And there will be more of your children dead tomorrow."
- Ted Bundy
Comment
-
Originally posted by mac-the-kipper View PostAnd it's exactly that angle of opinion that makes this letter a 'questionable' document.Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
Comment
-
Originally posted by Dan Norder View PostAs I said in my post, the overwhelming weight of the evidence indicates that it's a fake. You can ignore that all you want, but that doesn't make you right.
Show me the proof that the sun will still exist tomorrow, that oxygen isn't made up fairy dust, or that a swarm of killer sheep won't suddenly invade Lithuania and declare it the homeland for distressed livestock the world over. All sane people can and do make decisions based upon the weight of accumulated evidence.
You, on the other hand, don't have evidence to support your side, there's plenty to indicate you are wrong, so you want to toss out all the evidence and declare yourself right unless you can be proven wrong to your own satisfaction, which is not how the real world works.
No, but then what difference does that make? I haven't personally examined the Hitler Diaries either, but those are fakes. I've never seen an electron, but the evidence shows they exist. Have you ever eaten arsenic laced with weapons grade plutonium? I'm pretty sure you'd die if you did, but if you insist that someone has to experience on object firsthand instead of just reading books and other sources before coming to a conclusion about it, by all means knock yourself out.
What evidence? No one has produced a single shred of evidence that proves this letter a fake. Please show me where I can find this 'overwhelming' evidence.
The fact that we have no evidence either way makes this a questioned document.I didn't do it, a big boy did it and ran away.
Comment
-
Looking again at the 17th September letter I do find that it has a remarkable similarity to the Openshaw letter, in its layout and format.
Try laying one over the other and then see what you get?
Quite remarkable I say.
I reckon the same hand created the layout and format, for you have the same major body of text descending to the signature, placed in the same area, and then the 'PS'.
When was the Openshaw letter first published, or available to researchers?
2001 was it?
Comment
-
Thanks Natalie,
you'll also note that in the 17th September letter the writer begins:
'Dear old Boss...'
And in the Openshaw letter he uses the term:
'old Boss'.
Now there is no way that the discoverer of the 17th September letter in 1988could have known about the 'old Boss' in the Openshaw letter from 1888.
Look at the elongated 'PP's' in both signatures.
No accident, and no possibility of copy.
Comment
-
Really?
Originally posted by Cap'n Jack View PostThanks Natalie,
you'll also note that in the 17th September letter the writer begins:
'Dear old Boss...'
And in the Openshaw letter he uses the term:
'old Boss'.
Now there is no way that the discoverer of the 17th September letter in 1988could have known about the 'old Boss' in the Openshaw letter from 1888.
Look at the elongated 'PP's' in both signatures.
No accident, and no possibility of copy.
SPE
Treat me gently I'm a newbie.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Cap'n Jack View PostNow there is no way that the discoverer of the 17th September letter in 1988could have known about the 'old Boss' in the Openshaw letter from 1888.
Look at the elongated 'PP's' in both signatures.
No accident, and no possibility of copy.
Apparently Derek Davis published a comparison of the handwriting of the Dear Boss letter and the Openshaw letter in The Criminologist in 1974 [Wilson and Odell, p. 143]. I assume that article would have included illustrations. Maybe someone can confirm that.
Comment
-
Thanks Stewart, for bringing me down to earth.
But I hope you'll admit that this letter deserves a little more than you have previously given it, and I don't mean that in the manner of authenticity but rather good and honest discussion.
My impression - and I think it one backed by good science - is that the paper and ink are from the time period we discuss.
And while I'm on my pony, you do think that a modern forger would have picked up the spelling of 'rite' in the Openshaw letter and then copied it into the 17th September letter?
Am I right to assume that is your studied opinion?
Comment
Comment