Mike writes: The real question is if signatures are, as Crystal suggests, much more than a tertiary source of evidence. I think they are not, but that the combination of several coincidences, as Gareth too agrees, weigh things heavily in Toppy's favor.
Let me be clear, in case there is confusion here. I am saying that these signatures, being part of a primary document in both these cases, are primary evidence. That is the class of evidence to which they belong. It is not my opinion, it is a fact. The story told by Reg Hutchinson is not primary evidence. It is tertiary at best. Consider - Fairclough writes his account of what Reg has told him his father told him. Right, any part of that chain of evidence could be unreliable. What we really must decide whether to take on faith or not (because there is no other option - we do not have any better evidence to hand) is whether we believe that George W.T. Hutchinson told his son what Reg claimed - or even if we believe that to be the case, if we believe GWT Hutchinson to have been telling the truth.
A matter of faith, again.
The fact of the existence of the signature examples we have seen posted on this thread is not in dispute. It is to the facts that we should restrain our attention. And the facts here are that yes, there are similarities between the hand of the Dorset Street witness and GWT Hutchinson, and yes, there are also discrepancies.
And although we may think we know by now everything there is to know about these signatures, we don't. None of us have actually seen them, have we? All we can do is conduct a surface analysis of a digital image. It may be good enough for a jolly good gossip, but it won't do if people are seriously suggesting that their identification of Dorset Street George with GWT Hutchinson is a done deal.
I reiterate - to draw so firm a conclusion at this stage is unsafe. Those who insist upon it do so at their own peril.
Let me be clear, in case there is confusion here. I am saying that these signatures, being part of a primary document in both these cases, are primary evidence. That is the class of evidence to which they belong. It is not my opinion, it is a fact. The story told by Reg Hutchinson is not primary evidence. It is tertiary at best. Consider - Fairclough writes his account of what Reg has told him his father told him. Right, any part of that chain of evidence could be unreliable. What we really must decide whether to take on faith or not (because there is no other option - we do not have any better evidence to hand) is whether we believe that George W.T. Hutchinson told his son what Reg claimed - or even if we believe that to be the case, if we believe GWT Hutchinson to have been telling the truth.
A matter of faith, again.
The fact of the existence of the signature examples we have seen posted on this thread is not in dispute. It is to the facts that we should restrain our attention. And the facts here are that yes, there are similarities between the hand of the Dorset Street witness and GWT Hutchinson, and yes, there are also discrepancies.
And although we may think we know by now everything there is to know about these signatures, we don't. None of us have actually seen them, have we? All we can do is conduct a surface analysis of a digital image. It may be good enough for a jolly good gossip, but it won't do if people are seriously suggesting that their identification of Dorset Street George with GWT Hutchinson is a done deal.
I reiterate - to draw so firm a conclusion at this stage is unsafe. Those who insist upon it do so at their own peril.
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