Originally posted by Iconoclast
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I'm unclear about the relevance of Berwick. Is it your suggestion that this particular book caught Mr. Martin-Wright's eye, during a trip between Liverpool (presumably) and Berwick in what must have been June 1994, because Mr. M-W had already heard about Jack the Ripper's diary, so he was drawn to this particular title?
Is that how Martin-Wright tells the story? I was under the impression that his previous conversation with Dodgson only dawned on him later while reading the book, but I'll have to recheck my source for that.
Also, I have a sneaking suspicion that anyone reading your post will be confused by the chronology, so it might be helpful to add any specific dates you might have.
The conversation in red, between Martin-Wright and Paul Feldman, took place in June 1994? If it was recorded, you must have a more precise date, but at any rate, Mr. M-W recalled during this conversation with Feldman that he had heard about a diary (for the sake of objectivity, I don't think we can say the diary) 24 months earlier--sometime around June 1992? (Although I also think Mr. M-W might have further admitted that it could have been only 18 months earlier, ie. December 1992?) As he recalls it, his employee, Dodgson, claimed at that point to have personally seen the diary--or a 'copy' of the diary---in a pub.
“I saw a really interesting book that you would like in the pub the other night”. I said, “Oh yeah”. He said; “It, um, is a copy of Jack the Ripper’s Diary.”
The words 'copy' is worrisome (and it appears to have been worrisome or at least notable to Feldman) and I wonder if some of your readers are going to wonder if all Dodgson saw was a facsimile of Jack the Ripper's diary--ie., Shirley Harrison's hardbound book, published in the autumn of 1993.
Don't shoot the messenger, but that has to be a possibility, doesn't it? That Mr. Martin-Wright is off by a year? And what drew him to Shirley's book in June 1994 during his journey up to Berwick was having heard about Shirley's book from Dodgson in 1993? which Martin-Wright accidentally and innocently dated to two years earlier, when it was actually only one?
(Something about Keith Skinner and Martin Howells unraveling the confusion over the alleged monograph The East End Murderer: I Knew Him comes to mind here).
Another thing that must make this story so confusing and perhaps doubtful to the casual reader is that it materially differs from the account given by Shirley Harrison in later editions of her book. In her version, she has Robert Smith contacting Mr. Martin-Wright in the Summer of 1997 having heard an account of this same story from a solicitor friend of Martin-Wright.
Yet, when Smith goes to visit Mr. Dodgson in Bootle (A.D. is unnamed in Harrison's book but I'm assuming it's him) he says nothing of having personally seen the diary, but only having heard about it from Davies, who claims that at the end of 1991, a biscuit tin had been found at a work site (presumably Paul Dodd's house) containing a leather-bound diary and a ring.
Yet the diary is not leather bound, as such, nor is it likely to fit inside a standard biscuit tin.
What was seen and when it was seen appears to be quite...what's the right word?...fluid.
Isn't that fair to say?
The reader will also wonder why Feldman never passed along Martin-Wright's tale to Smith back in June 1994, and thus Smith had to learn it from someone else in 1997---unless Feldman had already dismissed the account as unimportant.
Yours truly &tc.
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