Originally posted by rjpalmer
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I understand that when Shirley and Sally went to the house [the right one] they were shown the deeds and you'd hardly credit the former house numbers attributed to it before it became No. 7. Oh go on then. They include nos. 3, 4 and Canter's 8.
Why should anyone be remotely surprised if Mike was originally in a muddle about it, whether he faked the diary or not?
And I'd appreciate it if RJ didn't try to project his own and Orsam's obsessions onto me. I'm not, and never have been, remotely 'obsessed' with Mike Barrett 'pounding' on doors, which he never claimed to do anyway. Quite the reverse. Whether the diary was faked by him or fenced to him, it wasn't in his interests before a publisher was secured, to 'pound' on any door in Riversdale Road, to ask which house had once been home to James Maybrick. I should have thought the reasons were fairly obvious.
But I am curious to know why RJ thinks it would have been in Mike's interests to 'pretend' to have identified it as No. 6 in the 1990s, if he had established, or even suspected, that Ryan had the number wrong and it was the house next door at No. 7. How does that help Orsam's theory that Mike's information for his research notes came straight from Ryan, but he then needed to find a way to hide the fact? If he found No. 6 Riversdale Road in the pages of Ryan's book, before putting that as the address of Battlecrease in pride of place as the very first typed up research note, both Barretts must have wrongly assumed this to be correct, and that it could easily be confirmed by other sources, or just by someone knocking at the door. The same applies to Mike simply going to Riversdale Road himself and jumping to a faulty conclusion. He could of course have done both, in either order, and the one would have seemed to confirm the other.
As we all now know, the house only changed its number to 7 and dropped its distinctive name, following the abrupt departure of the Maybricks, who had occupied it for a mere 15 months, between February 1888 and May 1889. It could have been called the Battlecrease Diary, as it is only concerned with events while the house bore that name.
Why couldn't Anne and Mike have read McDougall? And Moreland? And Christie?
I made this very point myself several times, and RJ studiously ignored it. Why couldn't Anne and Mike have read McDougall? And Moreland? And Christie? Or, dare I say it, even a few back issues of The Liverpool Echo?
If the whole point of the exercise was to type up a few amateurish looking research notes, to give the impression that they had never heard of Ryan, because his book had enabled them to fake the diary, it wouldn’t have taken a mastermind to ignore The Poisoned Life completely and pick a few titbits from one or more of the above instead, sourcing them correctly, or not at all. Either way, job done, and Ryan left on the shelf, unmolested by man, woman, beast or Barrett.
But I suppose the argument would then have been that the total absence of Ryan, in any guise, was a sure sign of guilt, as was the total absence of Fido, indicating an acute awareness that the diary text reflected both.
And here comes the corker:
Meanwhile, Caz is dancing all around the issue, evidently pretending that Ryan isn't the source, using an obviously faulty argument about Gladys.
The Barretts were operating by dimmer switch then, at the dimmest level when letting Ryan supply the info for their notes, including No. 6 for Battlecrease and the Britannic for where the Maybricks met, and only had the wit to leave both unsourced to try and cover their tracks. But then they turned their brightness up to maximum for a single light bulb moment – a one-off instance – and pretended not to have found a date of birth for Gladys, deftly avoiding the Ryan trap on page 27, where he supplies the wrong date for her entrance into the world.
If they could make such a deliberate and calculated move, designed to remove Ryan from the equation, and do it with such consummate ease, as RJ has amply demonstrated using Gladys as his example, then they had the brains to make all the notes reflect the same total ignorance of Ryan’s existence. Gladys is the exception to Orsam’s rule which tests it to breaking point, so if he avoided the little one in his own notes on the subject, it wouldn’t take a genius to work out why. I bet RJ never thought he’d be the one to expose this fly paper in Orsam’s ointment, for which I am truly grateful, for saving me another job.
Love,
Caz
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