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A closer look at George Hutchinson

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  • rjpalmer
    replied
    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
    Sorry, but it is extremely strong evidence. it would easily hold up in any court of law..

    Seeing the matter would be decided by a jury, and there are always any number of people voicing reasonable doubt about Toppy, this is just chest thumping, Christer.

    And I say this even though I already admitted that Sam Flynn has made some 'strong' arguments, and I think Toppy has a reasonable chance of being the 'real' Hutchinson.

    I just think it's far from conclusive, and if this was a criminal matter I wouldn't vote to 'convict' based on what I've seen. There are reasonable doubts.

    Heck, even your own expert is voicing reasonable doubt, and added some emphatic exclamation marks in his reply which suggests that he was a little irritated at the certainty being overstated.
    Last edited by rjpalmer; 03-05-2024, 05:48 PM.

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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post

    The way I see it, there are many reasons a man might need to go to Romford--and that's all the witness told us.

    It's interesting speculation, and Toppy is an interesting possibility, but since we don't know any of those things actually apply to the witness George Hutchinson, it is tantalizing but it is not strong evidence.

    Pat Marshall and Debrah Arif found two George Hutchinsons who were listed as grooms--one in Shadwell and one in Southwark. There are ways around it, but if we concede that a plumber's apprentice could have been an unemployed groom, then what's stopping us from identifying GW as a gas fitter or a dock worker or other occupations?

    It's entirely vague, I admit--but something about his 'military bearing' and his claim that Kelly addressed him as "Mr. Hutchinson" seems a little off to me when we consider that Toppy was younger and (supposedly as per the witness) dossing in the Victoria Home for Working Men.

    But to each his or her own.
    Sorry, but it is extremely strong evidence. it would easily hold up in any court of law.

    But each to his own, as you say. Not least you to your own.

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  • rjpalmer
    replied
    Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post

    Did they all live in or around South East London in the late 1880s/early 1890s, have family connections near Romford, and/or marry a girl from Bethnal Green?
    The way I see it, there are many reasons a man might need to go to Romford--and that's all the witness told us.

    It's interesting speculation, and Toppy is an interesting possibility, but since we don't know any of those things actually apply to the witness George Hutchinson, it is tantalizing but it is not strong evidence.

    Pat Marshall and Debrah Arif found two George Hutchinsons who were listed as grooms--one in Shadwell and one in Southwark. There are ways around it, but if we concede that a plumber's apprentice could have been an unemployed groom, then what's stopping us from identifying GW as a gas fitter or a dock worker or other occupations?

    It's entirely vague, I admit--but something about his 'military bearing' and his claim that Kelly addressed him as "Mr. Hutchinson" seems a little off to me when we consider that Toppy was younger and (supposedly as per the witness) dossing in the Victoria Home for Working Men.

    But to each his or her own.

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  • caz
    replied
    Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
    I think that does matter, especially when taken in combination with other biographical/geographical factors that candidate "X" would share with Dorset Street Hutch.
    The point of the exercise, Sam, would be to see if any two George Hutchinsons, who could have lived a street away from each other in Romford, or many thousands of miles apart, had signatures that appeared to match - as has been argued for dear old Toppy's and that of the murder witness fondly known as 'Hutch'.

    We would then know how common it was for people using the same name to have similar looking signatures. We don't seem to have that kind of data.

    Love,

    Caz
    X

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  • The Rookie Detective
    replied
    It's nice to see that nobody seems to have noticed that this...


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    ...isn't Maybrick's "K"

    It belongs to this man...


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    Frederick Gehringer

    I have another ongoing thread relating to this particular person of interest.

    It's also interesting that I tried the same thing on a thread dedicated to Maybrick, and nobody noticed there either.


    The point I am making is that appearances can be deceptive.


    When you combine the family story of George William Topping Hutchinson, and add in the comparison of the handwriting with the Ripper letter; that's an interesting set of circumstantial data that promotes the idea Topping was the right man.

    But, on the flip side; if Frederick Gehringer can write a letter "K" very similar to Maybrick's alleged watch, it shows that handwriting can be up for scrutiny.



    RD


    Leave a comment:


  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by caz View Post
    It wouldn't matter where they all lived
    I think that does matter, especially when taken in combination with other biographical/geographical factors that candidate "X" would share with Dorset Street Hutch.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by caz View Post

    I would want to see verifiable signatures for every George Hutchinson alive at the right time, and only then, if the similarities between Toppy's and Hutch's stood out a mile from all the others, would I be happy to conclude that this was the same George Hutchinson. It wouldn't matter where they all lived, because the object of the exercise would simply be to see how many of the signatures - if any - had similar similarities, as it were, to each other as the two in question have. We could in theory end up with a number of apparent matches that were provably nothing of the kind.

    Love,

    Caz
    X
    In theory, anything can happen. In the real world, it is a different story. The George Hutchinsons of victorian days were just as likely or unlikely to write like siamese twins as we are today, I’ d say. I would welcome an investigation into the matter, since I think it will prove that point.
    Last edited by Fisherman; 03-05-2024, 01:50 PM.

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  • caz
    replied
    Originally posted by The Rookie Detective View Post
    The handwriting angle is rather interesting, but dare I say, impossible to unravel


    For example; we are all familiar with this...

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    The Maybrick "k"


    But how common was this?


    I asked this question on another thread but it received minimal response.

    How common were individual letters of the alphabet in common writing form at that time?


    The "pp" in the topping signature for me is the most compelling, as it seems virtually identical to the "pp" in Jack's signature.



    Thoughts?


    RD
    Hi Rookie,

    I'm not sure the Maybrick 'k' is relevant, because whoever put it in the watch - and some believe this was not until May 1993 - wanted it to be seen as a genuine James Maybrick signature, and the individual letters would have been formed on that basis, regardless of how those same letters might have been formed by the average Victorian.

    Love,

    Caz
    X

    Leave a comment:


  • caz
    replied
    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post

    The names being the same is of course why the comparison is made. But you seem to think that this dissolves the value of the correlation, and that the one point of comparison is the similarity in style. That is not so. What you need to consider is not one similarity, it is two.
    They had the same name.
    They wrote in a similar fashion.
    Take away any one of these matters, and you have no strong case at all - in fact, if we take away the similarity in writing style, there is no case at all, but instead evidence of a non-correlation. And we know that there were a number of George Hutchinsons about in London, many more in the country - and that the name could have been an invention, so if we only have the name similarity, we have a very weak and unprovable case.
    Once we have BOTH matters, that all changes totally, and we have what must be regarded as a more or less watertight case.
    I would want to see verifiable signatures for every George Hutchinson alive at the right time, and only then, if the similarities between Toppy's and Hutch's stood out a mile from all the others, would I be happy to conclude that this was the same George Hutchinson. It wouldn't matter where they all lived, because the object of the exercise would simply be to see how many of the signatures - if any - had similar similarities, as it were, to each other as the two in question have. We could in theory end up with a number of apparent matches that were provably nothing of the kind.

    Love,

    Caz
    X
    Last edited by caz; 03-05-2024, 12:21 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • The Rookie Detective
    replied
    The handwriting angle is rather interesting, but dare I say, impossible to unravel


    For example; we are all familiar with this...

    Click image for larger version

Name:	image.png
Views:	179
Size:	4.5 KB
ID:	830583

    The Maybrick "k"


    But how common was this?


    I asked this question on another thread but it received minimal response.

    How common were individual letters of the alphabet in common writing form at that time?


    The "pp" in the topping signature for me is the most compelling, as it seems virtually identical to the "pp" in Jack's signature.



    Thoughts?


    RD

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post

    Hi Fisherman,

    The similarity in the names is what forms the question being asked, it's not part of the "answer". Again, the question is "Are these two documents signed by the same person or two different people with similar names". That's the question being addressed; the similarity in the names is part of the question, not a portion of the answer. Name similarity is not evidence they are the same person, it just opens the possibility they are, but since they might not be, we are at the baseline point of either/or. Just because if they are the same person that fits with the same name doesn't add to the probability over and above the initial starting point. But if you just mean it's more likely that two similar names arise from the same person than two dissimilar names, then ok, but we're past that point. We're wondering if these two similar names are, or are not, refering to the same person, or two different people with similar names. As you yourself point out, there were a number of George Hutchinsons in London at the time, so two different people with similar names is a very real possibility.

    As for the similar handwriting, simply being similar is not surprising, given they would be of similar ages (if, of course, it's two different people), and so would have learned the same handwriting styles. My Mum and her sisters all have very similar handwriting, and if I showed non-experts letters written by different sisters I'm sure many of us would think they were written by the same person. But similar to the untrained eye is not evidence, it would require a proper analysis. And as the handwriting expert has indicated, a proper analysis cannot be conducted on images, they need to have the original material for comparison. He even states that explicitly when he says:

    "In conclusion, you must see this as a spontaneous, personal comment from me and not as a full expert opinion, since such things cannot be done from a material like this!" (bold and underling added by me for emphasis)

    As such, we do not have an expert opinion to guide us and should be wary of promoting ourselves to expert status!

    I personally have no opinion on the matter one way or the other, nor would knowing alter anything significant about issues that I have opinions and views upon. However, I do like to know things and see questions of any nature matched up with answers, so I think it would be great if the original materials could be provided to a few different handwriting experts in order to obtain a number of opinions. Then we would either end up with a strong consensus one way or the other, or end up with a split decision. The latter, I fear, would probably be our result, and that would be a great shame, and yet seems to be the way of things JtR.

    - Jeff
    Wrong. The name similarity very much belongs to the answer. No smoke screen can dissolve that fact. We have two (2) similarities, the names and the writing styles. And as I pointed out before, they are both essential to close the case.

    You repeat what I already told you when saying that name correlation is not evidence of the same person. Of course it is not. And of course, nobody is saying that it is, making your point moot. What I am saying is that if we find that two people who have the same name MAY be the same person, then checking this by way of a writing style comparison is a very good way to go about it. Once we get a hit there, we have a closed case.

    You also repeat what I have already said many times, that Leander said that the material he got was too small to give a full expert opinion. What needs to be added to this is that even if the two signatures had been exactly alike, involving very odd things and the exact same pressure applied to the pen, Leander would still not be able to say anything more than that it is a hit on the lower end of the scale. That does not boil down to the signatures being in any way dissimilar, it instead boils down to the legal requirements for a comparison, stating that there must be at least ten examples of each persons writing, and we only have the signature in the witnesses case. But as I have pointed out, Leander was able to tell that he expected that any forthcoming material would only strengthen the case. In other words, a document examiner may feel totally convinced that he is correct, but he cannot say that he is as long as he does not have the required amount of material to legally argue the case.

    And how do you treat all of this? Answer: You treat it by saying that I should not elevate myself to expert status. Which was the exact thing I never did What I did was instead was to take the matter as far as it can be taken, I contacted a man who IS an expert and who gave his opinion, adding professionally that it was not a FULL expert opinion. This you turn into saying that it was no expert opinion at all.

    Good to know how you reason, Jeff!

    Leave a comment:


  • JeffHamm
    replied
    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post

    The names being the same is of course why the comparison is made. But you seem to think that this dissolves the value of the correlation, and that the one point of comparison is the similarity in style. That is not so. What you need to consider is not one similarity, it is two.
    They had the same name.
    They wrote in a similar fashion.
    Take away any one of these matters, and you have no strong case at all - in fact, if we take away the similarity in writing style, there is no case at all, but instead evidence of a non-correlation. And we know that there were a number of George Hutchinsons about in London, many more in the country - and that the name could have been an invention, so if we only have the name similarity, we have a very weak and unprovable case.
    Once we have BOTH matters, that all changes totally, and we have what must be regarded as a more or less watertight case.
    Hi Fisherman,

    The similarity in the names is what forms the question being asked, it's not part of the "answer". Again, the question is "Are these two documents signed by the same person or two different people with similar names". That's the question being addressed; the similarity in the names is part of the question, not a portion of the answer. Name similarity is not evidence they are the same person, it just opens the possibility they are, but since they might not be, we are at the baseline point of either/or. Just because if they are the same person that fits with the same name doesn't add to the probability over and above the initial starting point. But if you just mean it's more likely that two similar names arise from the same person than two dissimilar names, then ok, but we're past that point. We're wondering if these two similar names are, or are not, refering to the same person, or two different people with similar names. As you yourself point out, there were a number of George Hutchinsons in London at the time, so two different people with similar names is a very real possibility.

    As for the similar handwriting, simply being similar is not surprising, given they would be of similar ages (if, of course, it's two different people), and so would have learned the same handwriting styles. My Mum and her sisters all have very similar handwriting, and if I showed non-experts letters written by different sisters I'm sure many of us would think they were written by the same person. But similar to the untrained eye is not evidence, it would require a proper analysis. And as the handwriting expert has indicated, a proper analysis cannot be conducted on images, they need to have the original material for comparison. He even states that explicitly when he says:

    "In conclusion, you must see this as a spontaneous, personal comment from me and not as a full expert opinion, since such things cannot be done from a material like this!" (bold and underling added by me for emphasis)

    As such, we do not have an expert opinion to guide us and should be wary of promoting ourselves to expert status!

    I personally have no opinion on the matter one way or the other, nor would knowing alter anything significant about issues that I have opinions and views upon. However, I do like to know things and see questions of any nature matched up with answers, so I think it would be great if the original materials could be provided to a few different handwriting experts in order to obtain a number of opinions. Then we would either end up with a strong consensus one way or the other, or end up with a split decision. The latter, I fear, would probably be our result, and that would be a great shame, and yet seems to be the way of things JtR.

    - Jeff
    Last edited by JeffHamm; 03-05-2024, 08:58 AM.

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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by Fiver View Post

    Leander clearly said there was not enough evidence to draw any conclusions about the signatures and that there were several significant differences. That wouldn't even make it to a jury, let alone be presented as something that was beyond a reasonable doubt.
    I know what Leander said, and what he felt about the matter. I spoke to him. And he was adamant that for techical reasons (just the one signature by the witness) he could not grade the comparison very high - but he felt convinced that any forthcoming evidence would strengthen the deal. At the end of the day, we can all see how the two signatures are a very close match, although I am of course aware of how somebody - like Ben, for example - could say that the signatures were in his view no more similar than black and white is.
    That is why we have Frank Leander to turn to.
    PS. In telling us that Leander pointed out that there were differences, it seems you forgot to tell us that he also pointed out that the two signatures were similar enough to produce a hit on the scale of similarities. He also added that the fact that he only had one signature from the witness, meant that he was unable to grade it any higher.

    Maybe you should mention that too, so as not to get things very wrong?
    Last edited by Fisherman; 03-05-2024, 07:24 AM.

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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post

    Why would they even compare them if the names weren't the same? That's sort of a starting condition, it's not further evidence the two are the same person as the alternative is that we have two people with similar names. And that's the question that we're trying to answer: Are these two documents, signed with similar names, signed by the same person or by two different people with similar names?

    - Jeff
    The names being the same is of course why the comparison is made. But you seem to think that this dissolves the value of the correlation, and that the one point of comparison is the similarity in style. That is not so. What you need to consider is not one similarity, it is two.
    They had the same name.
    They wrote in a similar fashion.
    Take away any one of these matters, and you have no strong case at all - in fact, if we take away the similarity in writing style, there is no case at all, but instead evidence of a non-correlation. And we know that there were a number of George Hutchinsons about in London, many more in the country - and that the name could have been an invention, so if we only have the name similarity, we have a very weak and unprovable case.
    Once we have BOTH matters, that all changes totally, and we have what must be regarded as a more or less watertight case.
    Last edited by Fisherman; 03-05-2024, 07:17 AM.

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  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post

    I once snipped the following men out of the 1911 UK Census just for jolly, making sure they were all born 1855 +/- 10 years.
    Did they all live in or around South East London in the late 1880s/early 1890s, have family connections near Romford, and/or marry a girl from Bethnal Green?
    Last edited by Sam Flynn; 03-04-2024, 09:45 PM.

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