I think it's worth our thinking a little deeper about what Mike Barrett had to do to create a text on the scrapbook which would cause Diamine's research chemist Alec Voller to claim with confidence that it had been set down around eighty to ninety years earlier.
So Barrett has to to be clear that his recently purchased and recently manufactured ink "is chemically identical or near-identical to a genuine Victorian ink". Do we feel comfortable in asserting that this was within the powers of an unemployed ex-scrap metal dealer with no obvious background in chemistry and certainly none in ink chemistry? It's a question which you have to answer "Yes" if you want to pursue a belief that Mike Barrett created the Maybrick scrapbook. Just keep that in mind. You can't have it both ways. He either knew what sort of ink he needed therefore he knew exactly how a genuine Victorian ink would be constituted, or else he just got incredibly lucky, or else he did not instigate the text hitting the paper.
What? Wait a few weeks? But Barrett is said to have purchased the scrapbook on March 31, 1992, at which point he soaked it in linseed oil to remove the manufacturer’s stamp, and two days later (after the linseed oil had completely dried in the gas oven) he started the process of writing in the scrapbook (in his wife’s hand, apparently) the text he was simultaneously creating on his word processor.
Whoa, hold on! An “accelerated fading apparatus for as long as may be necessary”? Who in 1990s working class Liverpool had access to an accelerated fading apparatus, and who had time to wait as long as may be necessary for the fading to appear given that the text had to be finalised on the word processor then transferred over to the scrapbook itself before April 13 and the meeting at Rupert Crew’s offices?
Are we to believe – as Nick Warren doubtless persuaded himself – that apparatus such as this was routinely chucked-out fully-functioning and sent off to scrap metal dealers so that Barrett could reach out to his old contacts and acquire one? Is that what the Barrett Believer needs to tell themselves given that already they must have their hearts in the mouths realising how utterly implausible this challenge facing Barrett was?
Well it self-evidently wasn’t “a big carbon-arc lamp” as that would not permit the simultaneous fading of some sixty-plus pages of freshly written text still attached to the scrapbook.
These sound like they are what Barrett was searching for amongst the old Ford Escorts and the battered prams. How many he had to purchase before he found one that worked is obviously not available to us but maybe he was lucky and the first one was fully-functioning.
Five years exposure to natural sunlight would take a matter of weeks. So how many weeks would it take to simulate Voller’s estimate of some 80-90 years since ink hit paper? Well, Voller attempts an answer.
Well that’s rather unfortunate as it really is rather the crux of his point. What factors might he (and therefore Barrett) have taken into account, though?
Unfortunately, this is as ambiguous as it could possibly have got. Does ‘not prohibitive’ mean hours or days or does it mean weeks or months? Sadly, we don’t know. Nevertheless, and highly interestingly, Mike Barrett must have known because it seems that he must have committed himself to such a process in order to artificially age his text by eighty or ninety years in Alec Voller’s opinion. Voller himself had no idea but Mike Barrett knew that it could be done in that amazing eleven-day creation period.
Okay, that’s a shot in the arm for Barrett Believers the world over. Barrett – being an amateur – actually had a better chance of producing a realistically-faded document than a professional.
I hope that this would have occurred to everyone whether Voller had stated it or not.
Here we see clear evidence that Nick Warren has described Mike Barrett to Alec Voller as someone with the mental competence to pull off a great hoax which is interesting. How did Warren know this, beyond knowing that some articles had been placed in Mike’s name in a trashy celebrity magazine some five years earlier?
What point is Voller uncertain that Barrett would grasp? Is Voller meaning to imply (as he does imply) that this process was in reality beyond the ken of the ordinary man in the street? Certainly, it feels instinctively implausible that Barrett had the good fortune to find a suitable piece of kit and the knowledge to be able to use it to artificially fade sixty-odd pages of still-being-written handwriting all still bound together in a scrapbook and all in an eleven-day period between purchase at Outhwaite and Litherland auctioneers and presentation at the offices of Rupert Crew. But was it impossible? Well, that’s down to the individual reader to decide but my money is very firmly on the side of impossible because I’m a pragmatist and I can immediately see the foolishness of the argument here in favour of Barrett’s authorship of the great hoax as – indeed – I strongly suspect did Alec Voller back in 1996.
Again, being a pragmatist, I find this notion a non-starter, but I well understand that if you are desperate to make an argument ‘attach’ (rather than ever ‘stick’), you might be inclined to tell yourself that this was perfectly normal and perfectly likely to have happened to a scrap metal dealer who had been away from his trade for around a decade.
We have already established that Barrett can’t have used a carbon-arc lamp as – given Voller’s description of the methodology – it would require loose sheets of paper and Barrett’s scrapbook was transparently not loose. So he must have used the xenon-arc lamp (at prodigious cost, but this would be a necessary commitment given what he was creating) or perhaps more likely the MBTF which he could have run comfortably off his solar panels.
So, two questions emerge for me here which I would ask my dear readers to ponder possible answers to:
A) Prepare the text, using paper of the right sort of vintage and an ink of the appropriate type i.e. an ink which though of recent manufacture is chemically identical or near-identical to a genuine Victorian ink.
B) Wait for a few weeks …
… then expose the text to the radiation of an accelerated fading apparatus for as long as may be necessary.
The apparatus mentioned above is widely used in industries such as ink, paint and textiles to reproduce quickly, the effects of long periods of natural fading.
Traditionally, it consisted of a big carbon-arc lamp enclosed within a metal drum, on the interior of which, the samples would be affixed.
In recent years, however, the carbon-arc lamp has been largely superseded by the xenon-arc lamp and more recently still, by the mercury-tungsten flurescent (MBTF) lamp.
These are powerful tools; with samples of paint you can simulate effects say five years exposure to natural sunlight in just a matter of weeks.
How long it would take to produce an 80-90 years old effect with ferrogalic writing, I have no idea; as far as I am aware the experiment has never been tried.
But it might well be possible, certainly the dyestuffs involved are not noted for great lightfastness, so the period of time might not be prohibitive.
I also have to say (ruefully) that as a method of forgery, the above technique would probably produce more convincing results in amateurish rather than professional hands because a person unused to the finer points of the operation of the equipment would probably obtain willy-nilly, exactly the sort of highly uneven fading that is very characteristic of the old documents.
Of course, the above raises many questions and doubts.
Would Barrett, in spite of your comments …
… really be able to grasp the point?
Could he conceivably have access to such apparatus either personally or through some confederate? Could his reputed scrapyard connections have enabled him to get hold of an obsolete but still workable carbon-arc lamp?
If so, could he afford to use it. Arc lamps use really prodigious amounts of current, although the objection would not apply to the MBTF lamp which usually requires no more than 0.5kw per hour. If he could obtain a carbon-arc lamp, could he also obtain the necessary electrodes, which have to be replaced after about 36 hours running time.
So, two questions emerge for me here which I would ask my dear readers to ponder possible answers to:
- How plausible does any of this sound, especially given Barrett’s impossibly-tight timeframe of just eleven-days (thirteen if the aging process was going on simultaneously with the linseed oil and the gas oven)?
- Why – if, as he claimed, Barrett had been attempting to reveal the hoax since December 1993, and he was last interviewed on the subject in 2002 or 2003, during which time he gave many interviews and signed many affidavits – did he never once describe in any way whatsoever any of these activities in which he successfully faded the newly-written text in his newly-acquired scrapbook to the point where research chemist Alec Voller could be fooled into claiming that the text had first hit the paper some eighty to ninety years earlier?
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