Originally posted by Abby Normal
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Blood on Charles Lechmere
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Originally posted by miss marple View PostAbby NormaI
Charles Booth gives a quite detailed account of carman. 19th Working class men were often in unions or trade associations and there was quite strong demarcation on what you could and could not do. Men did not like other men muscling in in on their jobs. Apart from driving, the care of their horses was the most important part of their job and the descriptions of the constant hanging about waiting for goods does not suggest engagement with the lifting and moving of goods.Pickfords would not want their drivers wearing blood soaked clothes, thry would have to look respectible. The blood soaked clothes suggested by Fisherman seems to be very imaginative. Pickfords also moved furniture and other goods.
Miss Marple
thank you for the info. I had forgotten about the union/trade assoc. angle.
of course my company/workers that I used as an example were not involved in that.
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Originally posted by miss marple View PostThe blood soaked clothes suggested by Fisherman seems to be very imaginative.Pickfords also moved furniture and other goods.
(Thanks for the inspiration, Miss M)
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Abby NormaI
Charles Booth gives a quite detailed account of carman. 19th Working class men were often in unions or trade associations and there was quite strong demarcation on what you could and could not do. Men did not like other men muscling in in on their jobs. Apart from driving, the care of their horses was the most important part of their job and the descriptions of the constant hanging about waiting for goods does not suggest engagement with the lifting and moving of goods.Pickfords would not want their drivers wearing blood soaked clothes, thry would have to look respectible. The blood soaked clothes suggested by Fisherman seems to be very imaginative. Pickfords also moved furniture and other goods.
Miss MarpleLast edited by miss marple; 03-09-2016, 11:16 AM.
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I will be off the boards for some time now - I am going to watch Zlatan Ibrahimovic and his merry band of brothers lick Chelsea FC.
I hope...
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostWhy should you have to defend the indefensible, Fish? Just ignore them!
Failing that, tell them that his job as a Pickfords carman couldn't have provided him with much of a "blood-alibi" anyway, because delivery-men wouldn't have got enough on them to begin with. At the very worst, they might get the odd patch of that wishy-washy, pinkish-brown liquid that leaks out of joints of meat, but that ain't going to pass for the "proper red stuff" in a million years, not even if it were on a white shirt.
If I may offer another line of thinking, it may well be that Lechmere was known at work as the bloodiest carman in the history of Pickfords, and that he had an explnation for this in how he helped out with the catīs meat business bis motgher engaged in.
Once again, I am not saying that this must have been so - I am saying that there may have been many a reason for him to be bloodied on very good grounds. And he may only have been one of many carmen with blood on his clothing - we donīt know what he looked like as he approached Mizen, but it may well be that he could have had blood on his clothing without Mizen thinking it in any way out of the ordinary.
We are wasting a lot of time over this, I feel. We can only speculate, and all speculation may be wrong. Even the one proposing that Charles Lechmere was the killer, believe it or not. Not, preferably.
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Originally posted by MrBarnett View PostThis image of Smithfield porters gives some idea of the staining their overalls received. A sort of indeterminate brown smearing which shows up on white clothing but on clothing of a darker hue in poor light would be pretty much invisible.
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We may do well to recognize the fact that smear- and stainwise, the victorian working class will have differed very much from what we see on the streets today. Being grimy, stained and speckled will have been the order of the day in very many occupations, and would not have raised an eyebrow.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostMaybe so, Gareth - but the matter is constantly brought up and I am asked to explain it.
Failing that, tell them that his job as a Pickfords carman couldn't have provided him with much of a "blood-alibi" anyway, because delivery-men wouldn't have got enough on them to begin with. At the very worst, they might get the odd patch of that wishy-washy, pinkish-brown liquid that leaks out of joints of meat, but that ain't going to pass for the "proper red stuff" in a million years, not even if it were on a white shirt.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostI know the feeling.
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Originally posted by miss marple View PostCarman did not load frieght, that was not part of their job. They were drivers and a part of the job was spent hanging around waiting for their freight. Carman were also responsible for the care and feeding of their horses. So first thing in the morning would be attending to the horses.
Miss Marple
as someone who worked in the delivery goods business, I can assure you that the driver helped, even if it wasn't his explicit job, load and unload the goods. I was a sales rep, in business casual clothes,and even I helped, on almost a daily basis. and my truck drivers helped even more the loaders do their job. and they didn't have to either.
I am sure lech, even as driver, handled the goods in some capacity. probably on daily basis.
is there something even explicitly stating that drivers are not to handle the goods they deliver? I would imagine that loading and unloading would actually be part of there official job-especially back then. but even if not, Im sure they did-its just the way the world (and the delivery business works).
And re the idea that the consensus being that the killer did not neccesarily be covered in blood and thus this whole point of lech delivering meat and possibly having blood on him as a moot point-
I think the idea is obviously that even if he did get blood on him from the murders he could have explained it away as getting it from work.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostAnd we donīt. Know.
Lechmere didn't have blood on him his person (even though he killed and mutilated Nichols and hid the knife in his clothing) because he "straddled her and used her dress as a shield". So, he felt perfectly comfortable walking up to and touching Paul to have him come take a look at his handiwork. But if he DID have blood on his person........
Lechmere need not have worried about that because he was a carman and carman get blood on themselves all the time. Nothing unusual about that!
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Before we establish that carmen could have worn tuxedos, since they would not get a stain all day, letting others do the carrying for them, we may do well to contemplate the fact that Lechmere wore a sacking apron. I would propose that he wore it for protecting his clothes from getting stained. As such, I think the carmans job was dirty and grimy, and that we should not expect Lechmere to have exhibited a white parade uniform where any stain would have been seen from half a mile away.
Just saying...
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostIt's not even a case of "fresh", Caz. He'd practically have to have been standing next to the slaughterman, ready to hoist a still-warm, pulsating slab of cow onto his shoulders.
(I say "cow", but he might have been delivering poultry, for all we know.)
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