Yep, Trevor. Maybe because this is a fact rather than the (occasionally bizarre) supposition on which yourself and many others have made a nice sum of money, eh?
I've concluded those doubting this after all I've done and didn't want to do are a bunch of prats. Go hang yourselves. I have never been so pissed off in all my years on this site. Ungrateful bastards.
However, I am not about to do a flounce and announce I am leaving Casebook, because I have no intention of doing so. The amount of PMs and e-mails I've been sent of support have been overwhelming, as well as the posts on this board.
Anna - obviously, the photo you have seen is very lo-res so you can't pick out everything. One thing that does and will confuse people until they actually inspect the image is that it looks too long and the gates are too far down. The reason for this is that the first few people on either side are actually standing in Berner Street at the entrance. The yard begins with the gates. You can see this because of the shadows cast by the first few people on the left. There is clearly nothing behind them, and then the wall begins.
There has been a lot of work done, particularly by Jake, on where things were at the bottom of the yard. It appears the businesses kept moving about and some of the things on the 1889 Goads do not match up with the written descriptions of 1888. You were thinking that the yard was more square than this because at the bottom, on the right, it does open out to a small courtyard (off picture).
The murder spot is the one place where people are deliberately not standing, the gully running down from the guy in the apron by himself on the right. At the end of the gully is the steps into the IWEC and all the windows behind that are the club windows. The higher building at the end of the yard was a cabinet maker by 1900 and the smaller one is marked 'forge' on the 1889 Goads.
The cats (the detail of which is above) are on the steps of the IWEC building. One is on the ground, head cut off by a skirt. The other is in the doorway, head just visible looking down to the cat on the cobbles.
PHILIP
I've concluded those doubting this after all I've done and didn't want to do are a bunch of prats. Go hang yourselves. I have never been so pissed off in all my years on this site. Ungrateful bastards.
However, I am not about to do a flounce and announce I am leaving Casebook, because I have no intention of doing so. The amount of PMs and e-mails I've been sent of support have been overwhelming, as well as the posts on this board.
Anna - obviously, the photo you have seen is very lo-res so you can't pick out everything. One thing that does and will confuse people until they actually inspect the image is that it looks too long and the gates are too far down. The reason for this is that the first few people on either side are actually standing in Berner Street at the entrance. The yard begins with the gates. You can see this because of the shadows cast by the first few people on the left. There is clearly nothing behind them, and then the wall begins.
There has been a lot of work done, particularly by Jake, on where things were at the bottom of the yard. It appears the businesses kept moving about and some of the things on the 1889 Goads do not match up with the written descriptions of 1888. You were thinking that the yard was more square than this because at the bottom, on the right, it does open out to a small courtyard (off picture).
The murder spot is the one place where people are deliberately not standing, the gully running down from the guy in the apron by himself on the right. At the end of the gully is the steps into the IWEC and all the windows behind that are the club windows. The higher building at the end of the yard was a cabinet maker by 1900 and the smaller one is marked 'forge' on the 1889 Goads.
The cats (the detail of which is above) are on the steps of the IWEC building. One is on the ground, head cut off by a skirt. The other is in the doorway, head just visible looking down to the cat on the cobbles.
PHILIP
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