since the overall impression remains one of consistency.
Personally, I see no consistency whatsoever, with the closest possible "match" being the first capital "G", which was a common way of writing that letter in that era. The problem is that the Toppy signature contains elements that are not just "totally consistent" - they're absolute polar opposites.
and to be compared to the ones above, with no anti-clockwise turn - would that have ruled it out as not being by the same hand as the others?
I don't think we can really chalk up inconsistencies in writing to the type of paper used.
I totally agree that it would be useful to compare it with the marriage signature. It was this one that Sue Iremonger used as a basis to rule out Toppy as the witness, and it's noteworthy than another researcher has noticed a great similarity between the census and marriage signatures.
All the best,
Ben
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