Originally posted by Mike J. G.
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Before post offices there were post houses, typically inns, serving food and drink, where the post was delivered or picked up, and if it was a coaching inn the horses could be watered while their riders took a spot of liquid refreshment. When the railways came, things changed and the old post houses gradually lost their postal services to post offices built for purpose, while retaining their status as public houses or hotels.
Ike, the clue is in the fact that Maybrick supposedly "took refreshment" there. The fact that you laughably have to invent a story about the writer actually meaning to claim Sir Jim was sitting in a post office having a glass of beer in a fruitless attempt to try and quash the fact that the writer actually made a staggering, factual error, is nothing short of embarrassing, but whatever keeps this dream alive for you, mate.
'Sir Jim' misspells 'post haste' with a rogue e: 'poste haste', so there's no reason why a hoaxer couldn't have done the same with post house, to produce the 'Poste House'. There used to be a sign 'Poste Restante', where postal services were offered, so anyone, including the real JM, might have picked up the rogue e from that. If this is what our hoaxer had in mind, I would suggest they were creating the text at a time when the pub in Cumberland Street was yet to be renamed the Poste House, so they had no idea this would trip them up when their hoax emerged in 1992.
Love,
Caz
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