With regards to the late Martin Fido, I believe it was he who also made two quite important discoveries which are not directly related to the diary, but actually circumstantially endorse the potential candidacy of James Maybrick.
1 - The luck of prescriptions
I believe it was he (happy to be corrected on this) discovered around 70 prescriptions for Maybrick in and around 1888, of which not one clashes with the dates of any of the canonical victims. That is some very fortunate luck. A man constantly dosing himself with pills and potions, yet not one prescription shows he could not have been in London on the dates of the canonical murders.
2. The cotton fields of America
I know the scrapbook very much supports the idea of the Dear Boss letter being penned by Maybrick, and this is where I have my own biggest challenge with the scrapbook. I don't believe he did write that letter or the saucy jack postcard or the Moab letter. I do believe he wrote the From Hell and Openshaw letters. In the Openshaw letter in particular, there is a brief poem of sorts:
O have you seen the devle with his mikerscope and scalpul a-lookin at a kidney with a slide cocked up
It was Martin Fido who discovered the incredible similarity to the following:
Did you ever see de devil wid his iron handled shovel, A-scrapin up de san’ in his ole tin pan
The extract was taken from a book originally published in 1926:
https://uncpress.org/book/9781469610...outhern-negro/
The author aimed to collect and collate folk songs, superstitions and voodoo beliefs of the Black communities living across the Deep South. Most of whom would have had family members in their immediate ancestry who worked the cotton fields. Another link to America. More importantly, American cotton.
That's my bit on Martin Fido.
1 - The luck of prescriptions
I believe it was he (happy to be corrected on this) discovered around 70 prescriptions for Maybrick in and around 1888, of which not one clashes with the dates of any of the canonical victims. That is some very fortunate luck. A man constantly dosing himself with pills and potions, yet not one prescription shows he could not have been in London on the dates of the canonical murders.
2. The cotton fields of America
I know the scrapbook very much supports the idea of the Dear Boss letter being penned by Maybrick, and this is where I have my own biggest challenge with the scrapbook. I don't believe he did write that letter or the saucy jack postcard or the Moab letter. I do believe he wrote the From Hell and Openshaw letters. In the Openshaw letter in particular, there is a brief poem of sorts:
O have you seen the devle with his mikerscope and scalpul a-lookin at a kidney with a slide cocked up
It was Martin Fido who discovered the incredible similarity to the following:
Did you ever see de devil wid his iron handled shovel, A-scrapin up de san’ in his ole tin pan
The extract was taken from a book originally published in 1926:
https://uncpress.org/book/9781469610...outhern-negro/
The author aimed to collect and collate folk songs, superstitions and voodoo beliefs of the Black communities living across the Deep South. Most of whom would have had family members in their immediate ancestry who worked the cotton fields. Another link to America. More importantly, American cotton.
That's my bit on Martin Fido.
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