One aspect of the GSG which might be helpful to assess is its height on the wall. Having been an elementary school teacher for ten years, I can testify that the neatest handwriting on a horizontal surface occurs at eye level. We are told the GSG was written in a neat schoolboy hand.
With care it is possible to write neatly above eyelevel (reaching up) but it is harder and would not be done unless there was a special reason.
The farther you try to write below eye level the more your handwriting deteriorates. This can be compensated for by sitting on a chair or the floor to write.
Anyone with access to a horizontal surface can test this and unless you are incredibly dexterous you will find that it is almost impossible to produce a neat schoolboy hand writing at or below waist level while standing erect. Bending over improves the result somewhat but it is still awkward and the outcome less than perfect.
Since we are talking about a neat schoolboy hand I would estimate that the very youngest the writer could possibly be would be about 8.
If the GSG was at the top of the wall then we are almost certainly dealing with an adult. Of course it would be possible for a child to stand on a chair or reach up but why would he?
If we are dealing with the bottom of the wall, then in order for any writer, child or adult to produce a neat schoolboy hand they would have had to be sitting on the ground. Would Jack have stopped and sat on the ground while running from the police?
The middle is more problematic. First we have to allow for the fact that people have been getting bigger over the last 100 years. As a guess I would think that average male height today is somewhere in the neighborhood of 5 feet 10 inches. Maybe in 1888 it was closer to 5 feet 8 inches?
From this I can infer that anything above 68 inches was probably written by an adult.
An 8 year old would be about 36 to 40 inches, so anything written below that level infers that the person would have been sitting.
If the GSG was written at a level between 40 and say 50 inches we are probably talking about either a child or an adult who has bent himself into an exceedingly uncomfortable and awkward position.
Of course the writer was influenced by the height of the black dado. He didn’t want to write with white on white or it wouldn’t be seen.
Nevertheless the neatness of the writing and its height may provide enough constraints for us to make some assumptions.
With care it is possible to write neatly above eyelevel (reaching up) but it is harder and would not be done unless there was a special reason.
The farther you try to write below eye level the more your handwriting deteriorates. This can be compensated for by sitting on a chair or the floor to write.
Anyone with access to a horizontal surface can test this and unless you are incredibly dexterous you will find that it is almost impossible to produce a neat schoolboy hand writing at or below waist level while standing erect. Bending over improves the result somewhat but it is still awkward and the outcome less than perfect.
Since we are talking about a neat schoolboy hand I would estimate that the very youngest the writer could possibly be would be about 8.
If the GSG was at the top of the wall then we are almost certainly dealing with an adult. Of course it would be possible for a child to stand on a chair or reach up but why would he?
If we are dealing with the bottom of the wall, then in order for any writer, child or adult to produce a neat schoolboy hand they would have had to be sitting on the ground. Would Jack have stopped and sat on the ground while running from the police?
The middle is more problematic. First we have to allow for the fact that people have been getting bigger over the last 100 years. As a guess I would think that average male height today is somewhere in the neighborhood of 5 feet 10 inches. Maybe in 1888 it was closer to 5 feet 8 inches?
From this I can infer that anything above 68 inches was probably written by an adult.
An 8 year old would be about 36 to 40 inches, so anything written below that level infers that the person would have been sitting.
If the GSG was written at a level between 40 and say 50 inches we are probably talking about either a child or an adult who has bent himself into an exceedingly uncomfortable and awkward position.
Of course the writer was influenced by the height of the black dado. He didn’t want to write with white on white or it wouldn’t be seen.
Nevertheless the neatness of the writing and its height may provide enough constraints for us to make some assumptions.
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