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25 YEARS OF THE DIARY OF JACK THE RIPPER: THE TRUE FACTS by Robert Smith
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Monty
https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...t/evilgrin.gif
Author of Capturing Jack the Ripper.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/1445621622
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View PostIt comes from when Lord Salisbury (Robert [Bob] Cecil) appointed his nephew Arthur Balfour to a senior position when no one thought that he should get the post. Therefore he only got the job because 'Bob was his uncle.'Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View PostI take your points Mike.
But in any attempt to 'prove' that the diary could have been written in 1888/9 any test would have to show that there were no components in the paper or ink that would disprove it. So it's difficult to dismiss offhand, say, the tests that were done in 2005 at Staffordshire University which concluded 'The optical examination reveals no characteristics that are inconsistent with a diary written in the 1880's'. I just find facts like these hard to square with the phrase 'amateurish.' Now I know absolutely nothing about the relevant science involved. I can't say that this 'proves' anything. All I'm saying is that I can't dismiss it,unless a scientist comes along and tells me there's a reason to do so.
I wish that we knew a document forger who could tell us how easy it is to 'create' a Victorian document that 'fools' a load of scientists. Maybe it is easy? But until someone can come on here and say ' yeah, piece of cake. There's even a video on YouTube showing you how it's done,' I personally can't dismiss it, yet.
In terms of it not matching Maybrick's hand, that's a bit of a glaring error for any person claiming it's the real-deal. There's just no way to get around that, tbh. You don't generally find that people write in two completely different styles. There are common traits and visible mannerisms within every persons style of writing. We saw it being called into question on the recent H.H. Holmes program on History. As far as I'm aware, Maybrick's hand did not match that of the diary's, and though guys like Ike enjoy musing that it wasn't his formal hand, this outright ignores the fact that it wouldn't matter one iota whether the hand was formal or informal, those traits do not disappear depending on the manner of writing. Pressure points, upward/downward strokes, angles, etc, etc, these are things that professionals can study and verify. Unless Keith Skinner has any actual evidence of that sort to suggest that Maybrick did indeed write the diary, I'm going to have to stick with it being a fake.
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View PostI know that you haven't read the new book Mike, and it's true that things can't always be explained conclusively, but about the pub.
And I'm just repeating Robert Smith here.
He looked at loads of Victorian dictionaries and found that 'post office' and 'post house' were synonyms (but I think we all already knew that any house/building that accepted and distributed mail tended to be called post houses.) There was a pub called The Post Office Tavern which adjoined the GPO very near to the Maybrick family home. It can't be impossible that this pub could have been known as The Post House (especially to someone whose family lived pretty much next door to it.) Yes the diary writer spelt it 'poste' but apparently he misspells post 4 times, for eg using 'poste haste' rather than 'post haste.'
Now, obviously this isn't conclusive proof but it's a reasonable/possible explaination.
From all of my personal research, I simply cannot find any information for a Poste House before the one which we know came into being after the Muck Midden in the city-center. I do not recall any pubs being in my area other than the Kingsman, and further down, the Fulwood Arms.
Caz has mentioned the Post Office Tavern, and for the life of me, I can find no reference to this pub as being known as the Poste House.
For me, being that I know how many people are aware of the Poste House's age, in that it's understood to be a very old pub, I think it's a much clearer indication that the forger slipped up when making reference to the old pub, assuming it to be older than it actually was under that name.
It just seems really odd that "Maybrick" would name a pub like that, when there's no actual evidence of any pub by that name besides the obvious one in town.
If Robert Smith has evidence of a pub in Aigburth called the Poste House, I'd very much like to see it, as it seems a bit untrue to me, being that I live here and am interested in local history.
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Originally posted by caz View PostWe only found out after our book was published, when Keith finally obtained the time sheets proving there was work carried out that involved lifting floorboards in that room on one day - 9 March 1992Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post"Ye olde countrye fayre" and similar are often seen, but inauthentic. Some ill-informed people seem to think that adding an "e" to a word confers a stamp of historicity.
People have told me that another pub might have gone by that name, but research into this is sorely lacking, and I think that lends credence to the idea that whoever wrote the diary made a mistake, as opposed to being correct in naming a very very obscure nickname for a pub I cannot for the life of me locate.
It is commonly accepted that Maybrick drank here, whether he did or did not, which makes the idea that the writer was talking about another pub to be rather odd and nonsensical: http://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/whats...-poste-9758780
The fact remains that if James did drink there, he did so when it was known as the Muck Midden.Last edited by Mike J. G.; 09-13-2017, 09:46 AM.
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostIn these days of "open data", Neil, it somehow seems more fitting to make them available to all
No one else.
Don't see how Mr Orsam can be praised in this instance. Either they are for public consumption or they are not.
Again, how are they being released for 'the public'? Via what precise medium.
Monty
Monty
https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...t/evilgrin.gif
Author of Capturing Jack the Ripper.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/1445621622
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Originally posted by caz View PostHi Abby,
How else do you imagine it could have come out, given that it arrived in London 'in its complete form' on 13 April?
It bemuses me how some people are suggesting the time would be too tight for anyone to get word to Mike about 'the' diary on 9 March and for him to make a couple of exploratory phone calls the same day to test the waters.
Yet the time would not apparently be too tight for word to get to Mike on 9 March about some old scrapbook with blank pages being found under floorboards; for Mike then to devise a cunning plan, based on those floorboards being in the former bedroom of James Maybrick, in the house once called Battlecrease, to frame him as Jack the Ripper by faking his diary using the blank pages; then to obtain all the materials and books needed to execute that plan; and finally to take the finished product to London on 13 April?
And not one of the electricians was willing to say that Mike had turned this worthless old book, which had been 'liberated' from the house, into a serial killer's diary and made a shed load [or greenhouse load] of money out of it in the process?
Love,
Caz
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Originally posted by Monty View PostDave asked for them Gareth.
No one else.
Don't see how Mr Orsam can be praised in this instance. Either they are for public consumption or they are not.
Again, how are they being released for 'the public'? Via what precise medium.Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Originally posted by caz View PostHi Mike,
You're quite wrong. Diary researchers have independently used their common sense to dissect coincidences and weigh up the chances.
Originally posted by caz View PostHow would you dissect the coincidence and weigh up the chances of the diary coming out of Maybrick's old bedroom on the very same day Mike Barrett decided to phone Doreen about it?
Originally posted by caz View PostYet that is what the evidence - when looked at in context and in its entirety - indicates.
No actual legit provenance, out-of-date phrases and pub's, entirely different writing-styles, specific wording that was evident in books published a century later, conflicting accounts and retractions, and you sincerely think that this adds up to evidence? Baffling, Caz. I see a lot of talk about science and logic from so many on this site, and yet I see none on display.
Originally posted by caz View PostThen you've been sold a pup, by someone who claims to know something you don't. Oh the irony.
Originally posted by caz View PostPriceless. Of course anyone who has read a book you haven't will 'know something you don't know'. That's why you have to read it for yourself before you can possibly know if what you have 'been told' is accurate or a gross distortion of what's actually in it.
Love,
Caz
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostI thought the notes were going to be posted by Mr Cobb on How's site.
So it's more a promo than a public release.
Gotcha.
Monty
.Monty
https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...t/evilgrin.gif
Author of Capturing Jack the Ripper.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/1445621622
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View PostAhh I see. Answering two simple questions is akin to miracle working huh? Well I see you certainly trying to work miracles defending this nonsense in boat loads of long posts no less. You apparently have no problem with that!
If they spent as much time answering questions as they do promoting cheap money-grabs, we'd all be a little bit better off.
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