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The Diary—Old Hoax or New?

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  • Originally posted by Trapperologist View Post
    Yo Ikey, don’t be so modest! I’m sure if there was no Diary, you could have come up with James Maybrick as a suspect.
    Well, El Trappo, it is an interesting supposition but one not supported by the evidence: to date, all candidates for Jack have had at least had some logical link to Whitechapel in 1888 before they were proposed or else have drawn attention to themselves in some form long before they were jumped-upon for Jack. What is wholly unique about James Maybrick is that - in the absence of his confession in the form of the Victorian scrapbook and the watch - we would never, ever have seen him proposed as the killer. You just have to look at the vehement opposition to Maybrick in the presence of the scrapbook and the watch to begin to detect quite how vociferously his candidature would have been rejected without them. This should be quite compelling were it not for the howling in the wind since 1992 of the mad packs of wolves in both camps which has dominated the argument until it has literally become nothing but an argument.

    James Maybrick was as implausible a foil for Jack the Ripper as you could possibly have imagined. His candidature should have ended after the first bit of research into his life, but it didn't. Nor did it on the second, nor did it on the 102nd. Maybrick - on the contrary - just kept fitting-in and getting better as a candidate rather than worse and that should not have happened were he not actually Jack. If he is innocent of the Whitechapel crimes then a statistical miracle to end all statistical miracle has been observed. Clearly, in a universe as vast and as old as ours you're guaranteed to get one occasionally, so this is what it could be. Most statisticians would look at the Maybrick case, though, and say - all possibility of chance miracle aside - there's just too much going for Maybrick that he must be the man.

    So, if there were no scrapbook and no watch, no-one would have come up with James Maybrick as Jack the Ripper. This alone should be ringing our alarm bells. The fact that - once identified as 'Jack' and the research really began - James quickly became an increasingly more likely candidate rather than an increasingly less likely one should have had all the bells in Ripperdom ringing loudly and proudly, for the war was over with every peal of a bell anywhere in our minds.

    James Maybrick should never have been identified as Jack the Ripper. This is why he is so strong a candidate to be Jack.

    Ike
    Last edited by Iconoclast; 11-02-2019, 11:53 AM.
    Iconoclast
    Materials: HistoryvsMaybrick – Dropbox

    Comment


    • I've often wondered why the suggestion by a certain well-known author/scriptwriter that Michael Maybrick, Jim's somewhat more loaded brother, has never met with the same vilification as any suggestion that it was Jim wot dun it. Or is the suggestion that good old Mike a.k.a. Steven Adams was the Ripper just too barmy to bother discussing? I mean to say, could a chap who composed 'The Holy City' go around bumping off whores?
      (Not that for one instant do I believe that either Maybrick brother was Jack - must make this clear...)

      Graham
      We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze

      Comment


      • That’s an interesting idea, Graham. Michael Maybrick has a double initial M. I considered that to be the number 1 clue. I remember having Monty as my go-to but looking for other men in the historic record with the letter M. This was back in the 80s, though not for an instant do I believe in a modern hoax.

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Graham View Post
          I've often wondered why the suggestion by a certain well-known author/scriptwriter that Michael Maybrick, Jim's somewhat more loaded brother, has never met with the same vilification as any suggestion that it was Jim wot dun it. Or is the suggestion that good old Mike a.k.a. Steven Adams was the Ripper just too barmy to bother discussing? I mean to say, could a chap who composed 'The Holy City' go around bumping off whores?
          (Not that for one instant do I believe that either Maybrick brother was Jack - must make this clear...)

          Graham
          Graham,

          You make a great observation. The answer (as I'm sure we all know) is that no case has been made against Michael. Robinson's book was truly astonishing in its detail and I loved reading it (especially the cryptic references to 'one wet weekend' and a couple of shout-outs for 'Soothsayer'), but it fell well short of a conviction, so of course we all feel comfortable enough not to scream and bluff and bluster and pull our hair out and play fast and loose with the evidence - because none of us think for a moment that Michael Maybrick was the killer.

          If people truly felt the same about James Maybrick, it would be a significantly quieter world, I promise you.

          Ike
          Iconoclast
          Materials: HistoryvsMaybrick – Dropbox

          Comment


          • The Most "Normal" Serial Killers of all time...

            Ted Bundy
            H.H Holmes
            John Wayne Gacy
            Richard Angelo
            Karl Denke

            Dennis Nilson
            Albert Fish
            Dr Harold Shipman
            Philip Markof
            Paul Bernado
            John Bodkin Adams
            Randy Steven Kraft
            Dean Corll
            Robert Lee Yates
            Linda Hazzard



            None were regarded as named suspects in advance of being caught one way or another. Many were very active members in their communities or local politics. Most of them were seen as pillars of society. Why do we find it so hard to believe that such a man could commit such crimes?

            Opinions are fine, but we have to look through all of history to understand what happened that year in Whitechapel. We must be open minded to all reasonable possibilities.

            The scrpabook and watch are not scientifically ruled out and certainly not circumstantially either. In fact both artefacts continue to ask more questions than answer them. Perhaps we will find out one way or another when Time Reveals All.
            Author of 'Jack the Ripper: Threads' out now on Amazon > UK | USA | CA | AUS
            JayHartley.com

            Comment


            • Erobitha,

              you make a good point. As you say, Ted Bundy wasn't even suspected until he was arrested (for something else, I believe), and Dr Bodkin-Adams was a well-respected avuncular GP to the upper middle classes of Eastbourne. I note you omitted John Christie - he too was well-liked by those who knew him. There's Haig, the acid-bath murderer also, a suave playboy-ish figure before whom ladies of a certain swooned. Where the Ripper is concerned, I have to admit I'm no expert in the 'history' of suspects, but of those suspects known actually to have existed, it seems like Montague Druitt is the only 'respectable' one. It does sometimes seem to me that some Ripperologists are still looking for a cloaked and masked shadowy figure with a wide-brimmed hat and flashing eyes, showing just a glimpse of his curved-bladed dagger. Maybe this is an unfair assessment, but not I think wholly inaccurate. Unfortunately, Erobitha, open-mindedness is something of a rare commodity in Ripperology, as I think you're finding out.

              All the best with your investigations.

              Graham

              PS: in spite of what certain posters on here have said of him, you ought to read Feldman's book as soon as poss.
              We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze

              Comment


              • Originally posted by Graham View Post
                Erobitha,

                you make a good point. As you say, Ted Bundy wasn't even suspected until he was arrested (for something else, I believe), and Dr Bodkin-Adams was a well-respected avuncular GP to the upper middle classes of Eastbourne. I note you omitted John Christie - he too was well-liked by those who knew him. There's Haig, the acid-bath murderer also, a suave playboy-ish figure before whom ladies of a certain swooned. Where the Ripper is concerned, I have to admit I'm no expert in the 'history' of suspects, but of those suspects known actually to have existed, it seems like Montague Druitt is the only 'respectable' one. It does sometimes seem to me that some Ripperologists are still looking for a cloaked and masked shadowy figure with a wide-brimmed hat and flashing eyes, showing just a glimpse of his curved-bladed dagger. Maybe this is an unfair assessment, but not I think wholly inaccurate. Unfortunately, Erobitha, open-mindedness is something of a rare commodity in Ripperology, as I think you're finding out.

                All the best with your investigations.

                Graham

                PS: in spite of what certain posters on here have said of him, you ought to read Feldman's book as soon as poss.
                Yes indeed, you should probably read Feldman first followed by Harrison's American Connection (which was an update to her - and the - first Maybrick book). Then look at Inside Story. You were quite right to say that Robinson has not had full credit for his astonishing level of research, though it is probably fairer to pass your praise (and mine) onto researchers such as the indefatigable Keith Skinner as it was they (as usual in these cases) who did all the hard yards.

                Cheers,

                Ike
                Iconoclast
                Materials: HistoryvsMaybrick – Dropbox

                Comment


                • I started reading Robinson some time ago, but after a while began to wonder if I had sufficient life-force left at my time of life to finish it. Have juts dug it out again for another bash.

                  Inside Story is a must-read, and I'm disappointed that lovely Caz no longer posts on these boards; I'm sure I speak for most when I say, 'Come back Caz, your deep knowledge and your sense of fair play are very much missed. As is your sense of humour, a rarity here these days.'

                  Grahan
                  We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by Graham View Post
                    I started reading Robinson some time ago, but after a while began to wonder if I had sufficient life-force left at my time of life to finish it. Have juts dug it out again for another bash.

                    Inside Story is a must-read, and I'm disappointed that lovely Caz no longer posts on these boards; I'm sure I speak for most when I say, 'Come back Caz, your deep knowledge and your sense of fair play are very much missed. As is your sense of humour, a rarity here these days.'

                    Grahan
                    I know Robinson points the finger at Michael Maybrick and I am just getting to that part of the book. I am skeptical but will remain open minded. In the first half the book he sets the premise of "What if the police didn't want to find the Ripper?" and looking at the world of Jack The Ripper through that prism, does give a whole different slant to proceedings. Factor in the equivalent of today's rolling 24 hour news and social media outrages with the height of the newspaper press in London at the time, and you get a sense the higher levels of the London police forces might have been more pre-occupied and concerned on simply covering their own proverbial arses. The link to masonry is also well-documented I know originally by Stephen Knight, but Robinson's research goes much deeper. Once you are willing to be open-minded to these concepts, suddenly the coronor inquests, the witnesses called and the destroying of vital evidence such as the Galston Street Graffito - you begin to sense he may well have a very valid point. What if the killer was a mason and such revelation would not only make a mockery of the police force, but also the very fabric of the highest levels of the establishment who took masonry astoundingly seriously. Not a new angle, but very well explored by Robinson. He has conclusively proved James Maybrick was indeed a mason, despite the masons claiming he wasn't. Fishy stuff indeed.
                    Last edited by erobitha; 11-06-2019, 12:42 PM.
                    Author of 'Jack the Ripper: Threads' out now on Amazon > UK | USA | CA | AUS
                    JayHartley.com

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by Graham View Post
                      Inside Story is a must-read, and I'm disappointed that lovely Caz no longer posts on these boards; I'm sure I speak for most when I say, 'Come back Caz, your deep knowledge and your sense of fair play are very much missed. As is your sense of humour, a rarity here these days.'
                      Grahan
                      Hear hear Graham - it is a national scandal that Caz no longer posts on Casebook and I for one demand action by the powers that be.

                      What do we want? Caz posts!
                      When do we want them? Now!

                      Okay, fingers crossed …

                      Ike
                      Iconoclast
                      Materials: HistoryvsMaybrick – Dropbox

                      Comment


                      • He has conclusively proved James Maybrick was indeed a mason, despite the masons claiming he wasn't. Fishy stuff indeed
                        Do masons actually admit to anyone being a member of their order? I ask, because ages ago there were rumours about a member of the Royal Family - was he a Mason, or what - and as far as I can recall the masons kept mum about the matter.

                        Graham
                        We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post

                          Hear hear Graham - it is a national scandal that Caz no longer posts on Casebook and I for one demand action by the powers that be.

                          What do we want? Caz posts!
                          When do we want them? Now!

                          Okay, fingers crossed …

                          Ike
                          I'm wid yez on dat, Ted.

                          Graham
                          We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by Graham View Post

                            Do masons actually admit to anyone being a member of their order? I ask, because ages ago there were rumours about a member of the Royal Family - was he a Mason, or what - and as far as I can recall the masons kept mum about the matter.

                            Graham
                            Whether they do or they don't, I can't imagine they see any obvious benefit to them from doing so so I would err on the side of they tend to keep schtum.

                            I'm probably one, for goodness sake (they've never denied it, after all).

                            I'll bet He Who Must Not Be Named is one. Hopefully not in the Lower Whottlington on the Whottle Order, where I am most likely to be inducted if it turns out I'm not already one.

                            Ike
                            Future Funny Handshake Boy
                            Iconoclast
                            Materials: HistoryvsMaybrick – Dropbox

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by StevenOwl View Post
                              I honestly think that to suggest the Diary was written by Bongo Barrett is more ludicrous than to suggest it was written by Maybrick. And surely if Barrett created the Diary then he's also responsible for the watch, so we now have him being capable of embedding old metal particles in the watch in such a way as to fool experts, and then selling the watch to a jewellers shop in the hope his engravings will be discovered and back up the Diary? And if he created (or was part of the nest of forgers who created) both then why make the signature on the watch match JM's but not the one in the Diary?? Did Barrett ever speak of the watch or Albert Johnson on record? Just wondering what his thoughts were.
                              Hi Steven,

                              Finally catching up with this thread after a looong absence...

                              Mike Barrett did tell private investigator, Alan Gray, during a recorded conversation, that he put the scratches in the watch himself, but those who profess to be 100% satisfied that he told the truth about his part in the diary's creation, and that anyone who doubts it must be stupid, have been a lot less forthcoming concerning his claim to have hoaxed the watch too. I can't think why.

                              I can't recall Mike saying much if anything about Albert Johnson. However, I was once in Anne's company, with Albert and Val Johnson in the same room, and I asked her what she thought about the watch, and what she had gathered about it from the Johnsons, who were not quite in earshot. She looked a bit flustered, muttering something non-specific before going off to talk to someone else. I got the distinct impression she had never had that conversation with the Johnsons, and had no intention of having it now, with anyone. I found this odd, considering her own story regarding the diary. If I knew it to be genuinely decades old, I'd have been extremely interested in the watch and what the Johnsons felt about it.

                              Anne's reaction could be taken in two ways. If she had helped create the diary in the early 1990s, she'd have known the watch was a bandwagon hoax from 1993, with a Johnson at the centre of operations. If she suspected the diary had been stolen and sold on to Mike in March 1992, she may have suspected the watch had been stolen from the same place, and sold on to Albert later the same year.

                              Either way, it might explain Anne's reluctance to engage with me or the Johnsons about it.

                              Love,

                              Caz
                              X
                              "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by c.d. View Post
                                Hey! I got mentioned by name in David's article. Well I'll be damned. Number 3 on the list I might add and in front of Caz. Take that Caz! I didn't think I was that important but the buttons are now flying off my inflated chest. My immediate response is to devote my life to reading countless obscure plumbing journals to prove David wrong. On second thought I'll just politely ask David to research the first usage of the expression "go pound sand up your ass."

                                c.d.
                                First I've heard of this, c.d. Mind you, I'm only 14 months late to the party.

                                Love,

                                Caz
                                X
                                "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


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