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A Cross by any other name...smells like JtR?

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  • Lechmere
    replied
    Bolo
    My comments upon what can be discerned about Charles Lechmere’s character by the nature of the records that we have of him have been somewhat distorted out of shape by other people’s commentary.
    Hence I don’t have to rethink an aspect of the Lechmere theory that has him down as a control freak. I have never suggested he was a control freak.

    Mr B
    I didn’t pick up on a previous mention that this Mr T was an ancestor of yours.
    I don’t know whether your ancestor ended up but Charles Lechmere, in running a corner shop, didn’t acquire riches. He was a comfortably off working class man. His children mostly stayed in the East End doing typical East End jobs with no silver spoons.
    Without much more detail it frankly isn’t possible to judge whether your comparison is of any service.
    Having said that the obvious problem with your comparison is that you are comparing Charles Lechmere with someone who you already knew was similar. So it is hardly surprising if they have similar records.
    My point was that if you compare Lechmere to other average people in the East End his number of records is unusual. Not unique, just unusual.
    Just as Charles Lechmere was not unique in coming from a home where he was brought up by a step father, or no father at all for a lot of the time.
    Just as he was not unique in coming from a wealthy family, while his branch had fallen on hard times.
    Just as he was not unique (clearly) in being brought up in the most overcrowded district in the country

    You have said several times that it was a legal requirement to register to vote back then. What is your authority for this?

    Sally
    Your strange concern over me being embarrassed by the potential discovery another individual with 100 plus records is in drastic and equally strange contrast to your earlier attitude when you refused to believe that there were 100 plus Lechmere records. Now you think it is commonplace. Try and get some constituency or you will give the impression that you make it up as you go along.

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  • Sally
    replied
    Originally posted by MrBarnett View Post
    Hi Boris,

    I wouldn't tar T with the control freak brush just yet. There are still quite a few gaps to be filled before his record is anywhere near complete.

    Cheers,

    MrB
    If we were to look at a sample as we have discussed above, Mr B, my prediction would be that Crossmere and Mr T are far from isolated examples. But perhaps we'll see

    Leave a comment:


  • MrBarnett
    replied
    Hi Boris,

    I wouldn't tar T with the control freak brush just yet. There are still quite a few gaps to be filled before his record is anywhere near complete.

    Cheers,

    MrB

    Leave a comment:


  • bolo
    replied
    Hi Sally,

    Originally posted by Sally View Post
    Perhaps whether either Crossmere or Mr T are representative is a different question from whether Crossmere was unique or extraordinary though?
    extraordinary? Perhaps, who knows. Unique? No.

    Or perhaps we've found the only two control freaks of the LVP East End?

    Best wishes,

    Boris

    Leave a comment:


  • Sally
    replied
    Originally posted by bolo View Post
    Hello MrB and Sally,

    it goes without saying that compiling a statistic like that would be a huge task, I wouldn't even know where to start. What I want to say is that after a second thought I've come to the conclusion that neither Crossmere nor T could be called representative for whether or not the common East Ender took care in keeping his records straight without comparing them to a more or less representative group.

    This is not meant to diminish the value of your research, I just think that we need more data to base any theories on the record thing.

    Best wishes,

    Boris
    Hi Boris,

    You are right in that we couldn't use a sample of 2 to make any informed judgements on the record-keeping habits of the common East Ender. The sample is far too small; and we haven't even defined what the common East Ender is for the purposes of data collection!

    Perhaps whether either Crossmere or Mr T are representative is a different question from whether Crossmere was unique or extraordinary though?

    The latter is an easier question to answer.

    Leave a comment:


  • bolo
    replied
    Hello MrB and Sally,

    it goes without saying that compiling a statistic like that would be a huge task, I wouldn't even know where to start. What I want to say is that after a second thought I've come to the conclusion that neither Crossmere nor T could be called representative for whether or not the common East Ender took care in keeping his records straight without comparing them to a more or less representative group.

    This is not meant to diminish the value of your research, I just think that we need more data to base any theories on the record thing.

    Best wishes,

    Boris

    Leave a comment:


  • Sally
    replied
    Originally posted by MrBarnett View Post
    Hi Bolo,

    To do this you would have to use online resources that are equally accessible in Germany. To avoid any charge of bias, perhaps you could have a go.

    Seriously, that would be beyond my limited research skills. I'm happy to plug away at my ancestors' records to see if they bring up anything interesting, but beyond that I'd be lost .

    MrB
    Yep, that'd be a huge job. It could be done, you'd need a representative sample, rather than looking at the whole lot [what - some 100k people in Whitechapel alone??]

    Even if you took say, 1% and applied other defining criteria, you'd be looking at a lot of work.

    We could do 5 or 6 living on Doveton Street? See how that worked out. If nothing else, it might tell us whether Doveton Street was some sort of Hell Mouth inhabited by controlling record keepers....

    Leave a comment:


  • MrBarnett
    replied
    Hi Bolo,

    To do this you would have to use online resources that are equally accessible in Germany. To avoid any charge of bias, perhaps you could have a go.

    Seriously, that would be beyond my limited research skills. I'm happy to plug away at my ancestors' records to see if they bring up anything interesting, but beyond that I'd be lost .

    MrB
    Last edited by MrBarnett; 07-16-2014, 04:54 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • bolo
    replied
    Hi Lechmere and MrB,

    perhaps you guys could underline your respective arguments with a more in-depth statistical analysis of the available data of a representative group of LVP East Enders. Crossmere and T are just two of many people who lived in the area, after all.

    Best wishes,

    Boris

    Leave a comment:


  • MrBarnett
    replied
    Hi Sally,

    Great idea. I know it's all probably a huge waste of time, but somehow I got it into my head that 100 records was exceptional and I felt the need to check it out.

    As it stands, I do have gaps in T's record which it may or may not be possible to fill. Some electoral records appear to be missing for other residents in the same street, so possibly they have not made it into the digital age. So if Lech's record is as complete as it sounds, then perhaps his malign influence is present in cyberspace, jealously guarding his record for posterity.

    MrB

    Leave a comment:


  • Sally
    replied
    Originally posted by Lechmere View Post
    Mr B's man T may indeed be an interesting study in Victorian London, but isn't it illustrative that it is being seized on already when we know nothing about T yet, whether he is a valid comparison, whether he was picked at random, and whether his records are actually comparable.
    Ed,

    What do you mean by 'a valid comparison'? Perhaps you could clarify. As Mr. B has said, Mr T is demographically similar to Crossmere - that ought to make him valid for comparison, surely?

    What's the test, else?

    But actually, you hit on a point here inasmuch as an equally fair test would be to pick at random a sample of men demographically similar to Crossmere. Well, perhaps I'll have a go at that, if I can find the time.

    For the avoidance of doubt, perhaps you could let us know [as above] what you would consider a fair test? It'd be in your interests to discover just how unique Crossmere and his hundred records are either way. If it does turn out to be remarkable - well then, perhaps you have a point. If not, it saves you the embarrassment of pressing the point further.

    Thanks in advance

    Leave a comment:


  • MrBarnett
    replied
    Originally posted by Lechmere View Post
    Mr B's man T may indeed be an interesting study in Victorian London, but isn't it illustrative that it is being seized on already when we know nothing about T yet, whether he is a valid comparison, whether he was picked at random, and whether his records are actually comparable.
    Ed,

    You don't have his name or therefore the ability to check him out, but I have provided the salient points in his life, so it should be possible to acknowledge or challenge his general suitability for this exercise.

    I have no idea how one would go about picking a random subject for this. I genuinely (trust me!) had no idea how many records T would provide before I started this. I had his BMD certs and the censuses and that was it. I chose him because he was a close contemporary of Lech, and had followed a similar rags to riches trajectory - the Cockney dream, a small corner shop in 'ackney.

    I do have carmen on the other side of the family, but these are some of Booth's blackest of the black from Spitalfields and St. George's, so probably not a good enough match for mister squeaky clean. Even so, they left behind quite a few records (the Old Bailey online has been particularly fruitful!)

    MrB

    Leave a comment:


  • bolo
    replied
    Hello Lechmere,

    Originally posted by Lechmere View Post
    Mr B's man T may indeed be an interesting study in Victorian London, but isn't it illustrative that it is being seized on already when we know nothing about T yet, whether he is a valid comparison, whether he was picked at random, and whether his records are actually comparable.
    even if we just compare sheer numbers, I think it's fair to say that a more or less complete set of records of a LVP working class person does not necessarily point to him/her having been a control freak. Maybe it couldn't hurt to rethink this particular part of your Crossmere theory.

    Best wishes,

    Boris

    Leave a comment:


  • MrBarnett
    replied
    Originally posted by Lechmere View Post
    Mr B's man T may indeed be an interesting study in Victorian London, but isn't it illustrative that it is being seized on already when we know nothing about T yet, whether he is a valid comparison, whether he was picked at random, and whether his records are actually comparable.
    Ed,

    As I think I mentioned previously, he wasn't picked at random. He is an ancestor of mine and I already had the broad outline of his story and saw the resemblance to Lechmere's. When I read the 100+ claim, I was at first incredulous, but then it dawned on me that if you include the electoral roll and school records, it would be hard not to come up with a very large number.

    T has a fairly common surname, and it was often easier to search for ER records using one of his neighbours with an unusual name. These neighbours also seem to crop up with monotonous regularity on the ER, as one would expect - it was, and is, a criminal offence not to register.

    But since we have established that Lech's assiduous form-filling can not in any way be considered sinister, it's all rather academic. I will plod on extracting T's records and reveal his name (in case anyone might be interested) at a later stage.

    MrB
    Last edited by MrBarnett; 07-16-2014, 03:01 AM.

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  • MrBarnett
    replied
    Hi Ed,

    That could be it. All those Hammer Horror films I watched in my youth were probably comedies, only in my fevered imagination did they become sinister.

    And when you describe Lechmere as 'liking control' or 'anal' in respect of his form filling, you are probably saying he was a very nice man, a very, very nice man. Now I get it.

    I promise to curb my imagination from now on. (Unless, of course T needs a bit of a kick-start)

    MrB
    Last edited by MrBarnett; 07-16-2014, 03:02 AM.

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