David!
I agree with you that if Fleming was Marys ex-lover AND frequent visitor, it´s baffling that we have no mentioning of his height. Moreover, there is a lot of material pointing to the fact that the Victorians were the shortest Brits, historically. I´ve found it on the net, where there is this passage:
"There's an interesting table printed in "The Tudor Tailor" by Ninya Mikhalia and Jane Malcolm-Davies on height of people from London. For simplicity's sake, I'll list only the males:
Prehistory: 5' 7"
Roman: 5' 6.75"
Saxon: 5' 8"
Medieval: 5' 7.5"
Tudor: 5' 7.5"
Georgian: 5' 7.25"
Victorian: 5' 5.5"
1998: 5' 9""
So, if this is something to go by, "Joe the Giraffe" would in fact have been a more deviating person in Victorian England than in any other era of the kingdom! And so, the case you argue is a sound one, David. But as long as we have that 6.7 record staring us in our faces, maybe we should not call it a given.
On your post to Chris, I would actually be a little bit careful about the passage "Certainly 2 and 4 are the same individual".
There is no gainsaying that this is the implication, but it rests very much on the fact that we have the mentioning of Henrietta Fleming claiming that she was the mother of Evans/Fleming in Stone Asylum. And since that man claims to be James Evans, born in 1855, something that is not questioned as he is transferred from Stone to Claybury, I think we must accept the possibility that he WAS James Evans and not Joe Fleming. Why Henrietta would say that he was Joe if he was not, is of course open to speculation, and most of it will be quite wild. We may for example theorize that the real Joe Fleming for some reason - real or imagined - felt that the police were closing in on him back in 1892, or simply wanted to make sure that they never would. And so he persuades his old mother to go to Stone Asylum and claim that the tallish fellow in there was in fact her son. We have no indication that this suggestion was ever accepted by "Evans", just as we cannot even be sure that the woman who presented herself as Henrietta Fleming really was who she claimed to be.
Outlandish, conjecturish, improbable? Absolutely! But since there is a peripheral chance that this - or something else, for that matter - may have lain behind the Evans/Fleming hybrid, I think that no absolute certainty can be reached until more material surfaces.
All the best, David!
Fisherman
I agree with you that if Fleming was Marys ex-lover AND frequent visitor, it´s baffling that we have no mentioning of his height. Moreover, there is a lot of material pointing to the fact that the Victorians were the shortest Brits, historically. I´ve found it on the net, where there is this passage:
"There's an interesting table printed in "The Tudor Tailor" by Ninya Mikhalia and Jane Malcolm-Davies on height of people from London. For simplicity's sake, I'll list only the males:
Prehistory: 5' 7"
Roman: 5' 6.75"
Saxon: 5' 8"
Medieval: 5' 7.5"
Tudor: 5' 7.5"
Georgian: 5' 7.25"
Victorian: 5' 5.5"
1998: 5' 9""
So, if this is something to go by, "Joe the Giraffe" would in fact have been a more deviating person in Victorian England than in any other era of the kingdom! And so, the case you argue is a sound one, David. But as long as we have that 6.7 record staring us in our faces, maybe we should not call it a given.
On your post to Chris, I would actually be a little bit careful about the passage "Certainly 2 and 4 are the same individual".
There is no gainsaying that this is the implication, but it rests very much on the fact that we have the mentioning of Henrietta Fleming claiming that she was the mother of Evans/Fleming in Stone Asylum. And since that man claims to be James Evans, born in 1855, something that is not questioned as he is transferred from Stone to Claybury, I think we must accept the possibility that he WAS James Evans and not Joe Fleming. Why Henrietta would say that he was Joe if he was not, is of course open to speculation, and most of it will be quite wild. We may for example theorize that the real Joe Fleming for some reason - real or imagined - felt that the police were closing in on him back in 1892, or simply wanted to make sure that they never would. And so he persuades his old mother to go to Stone Asylum and claim that the tallish fellow in there was in fact her son. We have no indication that this suggestion was ever accepted by "Evans", just as we cannot even be sure that the woman who presented herself as Henrietta Fleming really was who she claimed to be.
Outlandish, conjecturish, improbable? Absolutely! But since there is a peripheral chance that this - or something else, for that matter - may have lain behind the Evans/Fleming hybrid, I think that no absolute certainty can be reached until more material surfaces.
All the best, David!
Fisherman
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