Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Inconvenient Truth of the Maybrick Watch

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #76
    Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post
    I'm unfamiliar with this $190,000 offer (I'm clearly not the watchman on any level here) but if it's true, who amongst us is so wealthy that we could look with disdain upon a working man nearing his pension seeking a bumper pay-day? Why does this have to mean anything about the authenticity or otherwise of the watch?
    I agree with you that, in itself, Albert's attempt to sell the watch doesn't prove the scratches are a hoax. (Stop the presses!)

    But that is missing the point, isn't it? (Unstop the presses!)

    I gave this account in response to the naive and highly questionable statements made in Jay Hartley's blog:

    "However, it still remains in Daisy’s possession. If the watch was created to cash in on the Maybrick diary, then why do the same family still own it 30 years on?

    Are they waiting for a bigger payday than the ones they rejected?"

    Do you not care about accuracy, Thomas? Jay is the one who raised this line of argument; I'm merely responding to it on a thread that he, himself, created for discussion.

    It appears to me that Robert E. Davis is the one that did the rejecting. And that this is truly the only reason the watch is still in the family.

    And why did Davis reject it?

    Because it was discovered that Robbie Johnson had given a false appraisal price for the watch and sold 'shares' based on this--commonly known as fraud--and thus we have two shadowy and menacing "investors" in the background whose names we do not know or at least have not been given.

    And none of that interests you, eh?

    It would seem that any serious attempt to analyze the watch would include an attempt to identify these two men, especially considering that Dr. Turgoose did not rule out a modern hoax.

    But your lack of interest in this doesn't surprise I.

    (I listen to a lot of reggae, Old Man, don't diss I and my brothers).

    Shirley Harrison doesn't respond to emails, but the question I would ask her is how these two 'menacing' figures knew of this meeting between Albert and Robert E. Davis.

    There is an aspect of her account that doesn't make a lot of sense.

    They couldn't have just shown-up out-of-the-blue. Someone--presumably Albert--must have alerted them, yet we are told that Albert himself allegedly had no knowledge that Robbie had been selling shares in the watch.

    There is more here than meets the eye, but like I say, I'm not really surprised that you have no intention or desire to go there.

    Ciao.

    By the way, my dear grammarian, is the phrase "why do the family still own it" gramatically correct?

    Comment


    • #77
      By the way, Ike, I really do need to run off for a couple or three days now, but I'll just drop this here. It appears that Caz can use some help.

      Click image for larger version  Name:	maybrick a.jpg Views:	0 Size:	5.9 KB ID:	801077


      Can you point to a signature of Maybrick's from the 1870s or 80s that includes this highly stylized "a" or are the alleged similarities between the signatures overstated?

      I'm also curious which would be more likely to steady the hand of an engraver--smoking a left-handed cigarette upstairs at Albert's place, or snorting a couple of lines of strychnine and arsenic in Maybrick's study?

      Caz seems to be trying to make a point about drug use and etchings, but I'm not sure what it is.

      Comment


      • #78

        Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
        However, it still remains in Daisy’s possession. If the watch was created to cash in on the Maybrick diary, then why do the same family still own it 30 years on?
        I think you're asking the wrong person this question. You need to ask this of someone who believes that "the watch was created to cash in on the Maybrick diary". I don't. Go figure.

        Are they waiting for a bigger payday than the ones they rejected?"
        Judging from her Facebook entries, it seems she is happy to keep the watch for its sentimental links to her grandfather, now long sadly passed.

        It appears to me that Robert E. Davis is the one that did the rejecting. And that this is truly the only reason the watch is still in the family.
        The deal was undone due to Robbie having sold some of his share in the watch without having first told Albert (nor second told him, nor third), as well you know.

        And why did Davis reject it?
        I have a strong suspicion that an illogical claim - covered in mud - is heading for some clear water somewhere around here ...

        Because it was discovered that Robbie Johnson had given a false appraisal price for the watch and sold 'shares' based on this--commonly known as fraud--and thus we have two shadowy and menacing "investors" in the background whose names we do not know or at least have not been given.
        And there it is. Muddy the Mud Boy Muddles up the Mood Music and Waters Down the Wine which - as Dostoyevsky famously claimed - brought forth the truth.

        We don't know what role the Chicago Mafia, the Milan Ultras, the Indian thuggees, or the Barnstaple Spin Class played in the watch not being sold. We are led to believe it is because Albert could not sell a watch which was partly owned by Robbie whose share he had not realised was partly owned by two of the Sopranos. It just doesn't matter, man!

        And none of that interests you, eh?
        I mean this sincerely when I say I couldn't give a **** because it is utterly irrelevant (don't let my three-legged whippet hear, though, as she's bound to reply, "It's not an elephant" - her favourite joke, sweet thing).

        It would seem that any serious attempt to analyze the watch would include an attempt to identify these two men, especially considering that Dr. Turgoose did not rule out a modern hoax.
        Honestly, your capacity for linking two totally irrelevant facts and knitting mud out of them as you pose on the banks of the Mersey or the Thames or the Tyne never ceases to amaze me.

        Shirley Harrison doesn't respond to emails, but the question I would ask her is how these two 'menacing' figures knew of this meeting between Albert and Robert E. Davis.
        Oh, give it up for Lent, man! Knit one, purl one, go and put the kettle on, we will score one more than you, water-mudder. Who cares who told them? Did someone telling them have any consequence? Did it even need to happen? All that needed to happen was that the seller and the purchaser realised that they could not transact the sale due to the legal aspect of not all sellers being present and agreeing to it! Whilst the rest of us are only off to Waterloo, you're already there, covered in mud, confused that there's no ******* water and no ******* loo!

        There is an aspect of her account that doesn't make a lot of sense.
        Oh, dear God, save me from the thing that doesn't make sense to just one of us out of 8,000,000,000.

        They couldn't have just shown-up out-of-the-blue.
        They weren't there!!!!!!

        Someone--presumably Albert--must have alerted them ...
        They were not alerted!

        ... yet we are told that Albert himself allegedly had no knowledge that Robbie had been selling shares in the watch.
        That'll be why he turned up for the discussion, for Christ's sake!

        There is more here than meets the eye ...
        What is meeting the eye is splash back from your own mud, water-mudder!

        but like I say, I'm not really surprised that you have no intention or desire to go there.
        I'm going to Waterloo, mate, for a ******* vindaloo!

        Ciao.
        As the German said with his head covered ...

        By the way, my dear grammarian, is the phrase "why do the family still own it" gramatically correct?
        Obviously not, no. It should clearly be "Why does the family still own it?" (with the question mark) - but, honestly, it's not an elephant!!!!!

        Ike
        Totally at His Wit's End with all this Water-Mudding

        Iconoclast
        Materials: HistoryvsMaybrick – Dropbox

        Comment


        • #79
          Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
          By the way, Ike, I really do need to run off for a couple or three days now, but I'll just drop this here. It appears that Caz can use some help.

          Click image for larger version Name:	maybrick a.jpg Views:	0 Size:	5.9 KB ID:	801077


          Can you point to a signature of Maybrick's from the 1870s or 80s that includes this highly stylized "a" or are the alleged similarities between the signatures overstated?

          I'm also curious which would be more likely to steady the hand of an engraver--smoking a left-handed cigarette upstairs at Albert's place, or snorting a couple of lines of strychnine and arsenic in Maybrick's study?

          Caz seems to be trying to make a point about drug use and etchings, but I'm not sure what it is.
          Don't start me ...
          Iconoclast
          Materials: HistoryvsMaybrick – Dropbox

          Comment


          • #80
            With one foot out the door...

            Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post
            They were not alerted!

            That'll be why he turned up for the discussion, for Christ's sake!
            You really haven't thought any of this through, have you mate?

            I suppose you're too busy anticipating USA v England in the World Cup.

            Robbie was dead at the time of this sale in 1999.

            It was just Albert.

            The rich Texan flew in from...wait for it...Texas and met Albert at his solicitor's office.

            How did these two knuckle draggers with connections to Robbie know about this meeting?

            A crystal ball?

            Got to run. Wish I well.




            Comment


            • #81
              Originally posted by erobitha View Post
              It was Richard Nicholas who recommended Albert get the watch tested in the first place. Which he did with his own money.
              Hi ero,

              Catching up with this thread...

              It's a fair observation that Albert paid up front for Dr Turgoose to examine and report on the watch. This was two months before the diary would be published in Shirley's book.

              If Albert had had the least suspicion that Robbie may have signed Maybrick's name in his watch, along with the other inscriptions, would he have willingly coughed up the money for tests which, for all he knew, could have sent his adored younger brother straight back to chokey?

              And if Robbie had tricked his older brother in this way, would he not have done his best to dissuade him from paying out good money to get his own handiwork tested? How confident could Robbie have been that Dr Turgoose would be fooled?

              It's mighty convenient for the modern hoax believers that they have Robbie's criminal record to play around with, but the fact that Albert was so willing to have the watch tested at his own expense surely implies that it never once crossed his mind that Robbie would - or could - have pulled one over on him and made those markings in the watch himself.

              As with the diary, nobody has yet made any useful contribution to matching up handiwork to hoaxer. And so we get veiled references to A.N. Other doing the dirty work for Mike Barrett [because the diary handwriting, in all fairness, no more resembles a Barrett's than a Maybrick's] and presumably some shady character doing the same for Robbie Johnson.

              Feldman was so quiet and unassuming wasn’t he? Why would anyone want to bring a trusted solicitor along to a meeting with Feldman? I mean he would never make wild accusations or spontaneous declarations or crazy offers would he?

              It’s simply someone being cautious and with Feldman they were right to be. To RJ a real life solicitor at a meeting like this is as a good as scratching the initials into a Victorian watch with a rusty old compass.
              Feldy promised huge wealth to the individuals who connected themselves to the diary and watch. It would not be surprising if they were tempted by such promises, but falling into temptation isn't evidence that they were behind the creation of either of these potentially valuable artefacts. In both cases it would seem that their history was completely unknown to the usual suspects, apart from how each was acquired: the scrapbook from Devereux, Lyons or Outhwaite & Litherland, depending on one's personal suspicions; the watch from Stewarts the Jewellers. Before that - nothing.

              Love,

              Caz
              X


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


              Comment


              • #82
                Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
                It sounds as if people had diverse opinions about Albert's inner desires.
                Hmmm, I suppose that's the inherent problem with trying to ascertain anyone's 'inner' desires, isn't it?

                In the end, as Anne Graham once observed, people will believe what they want.

                We can speculate on Albert's inner desires, and for all we know he may have been hoping to sell the watch for a small fortune and whisk Val off for a life of luxury they had only ever dreamed of, and been bitterly disappointed by Robbie's actions to scupper his plans. But that wouldn't help us to identify who put the scratches in the watch or when. So it's another exercise in futility. Unless the Murphys were lying, for no apparent reason, about using jeweller's rouge to minimise faint scratches they had noticed with the naked eye in 1992, those scratches would still have been present when examined under the microscope more than a year later. And yet Turgoose and Wild were able to establish that there were no visible scratch marks, even at a microscopic level, beneath the Maybrick/JtR engravings. That's not an opinion; that's just counting. In short, if the Murphys tried to improve the appearance of scratch marks before Albert bought the watch, those marks must have included the disputed engravings, ruling out Robbie and anyone known to him as their creator.

                According to Feldman, Harrison and Smith didn't want to fund the watch--they were so skeptical about the timing of the watch’s appearance and were so concerned that it would undermine the diary's credibility, that they hoped that asking Albert to pay for any tests himself would be enough to make him fade away into the shadows. He did, however, call their bluff. And after all, he had the excitable and enthusiastic Robbie pushing him.
                That would make both Harrison and Smith a damn sight more wary than RJ usually tries to make them appear, so credit where it's due.

                Calling their bluff would not usually have been the action of someone who had any qualms about their brother's role in this. On the other hand, if Albert was as certain as he could be that nobody - including Robbie - could have got access to the watch and made the engravings while it was in his possession, his own eagerness [or call it his 'inner desire'] to find out more about them at his own expense would have been both natural and innocent. Robbie may have worn his excitement and enthusiasm on his sleeve, but it was Albert putting his money where his mouth was - with no expectation of having any of it refunded at a later date.

                If Robbie had not been jumping up and down at the prospect, but had instead expressed the slightest doubts about the wisdom of testing the timepiece, that would have been far more cause for concern on everyone's part, from Albert to Shirley and Robert - and in 2023 RJ would still be using Robbie's behaviour against him.

                In short, the Johnsons were damned from the start regardless. So why even bother to speculate about their 'inner desires' or try to interpret their words and actions?

                Love,

                Caz
                X



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


                Comment


                • #83
                  Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
                  It appears to me that Robert E. Davis is the one that did the rejecting. And that this is truly the only reason the watch is still in the family.

                  And why did Davis reject it?

                  Because it was discovered that Robbie Johnson had given a false appraisal price for the watch and sold 'shares' based on this--commonly known as fraud--and thus we have two shadowy and menacing "investors" in the background whose names we do not know or at least have not been given.
                  I have little interest in the fine details here, because they don't help to show the watch engravings to be the work of hoaxers in 1993, and certainly don't rule out any alternative possibilities.

                  Once again, unless the Murphys were lying for no apparent gain, there were already visible scratches in the watch when Albert bought it, which could not have been there if it was hoaxed a year later.

                  But I'd simply ask RJ to clarify what he was saying about Robert E. Davis, because his point eludes me.

                  RJ previously posted this:

                  By the way, Robert E. Davis--that's Bob, to you--was a Texas multi-millionaire. He didn't sit in the tourist class section with you, I, and Thomas, hoping the stewardess would pass by soon with another bag of peanuts.

                  He was a busy man, and if he took the Concorde from New York to London it would have cost him $12,000 alone. A night in a five-star hotel in London and/or Liverpool, and the expenses could have well reached $15,000.


                  So if Davis flew across the pond and stayed in the best hotels, paying out many thousands of dollars, all for the sake of the watch, he was presumably still interested in paying exceedingly good money for it, and would have done so, if he hadn't learned that Robbie had sold 'shares' in it to these shadowy "investors".

                  How does this equate to Davis being the one to reject the watch, if Robbie's actions had given him no choice but to return to Texas empty-handed, angry and out of pocket? If Albert had been hoping to make a killing, he'd have been every bit as disappointed by the way things turned out, the difference being that he was not thousands of dollars down on a deal that was scuppered even before Davis boarded his outward bound flight.

                  Assuming that money was a motivating factor for both Davis and Albert Johnson to shake hands on a deal [and I can't see why not - it would have been Daisy's money after all], would they not have been equally appalled by Robbie throwing a spanner in the works from beyond the grave? I can't see Albert knowing about Robbie's shareholders in advance, let alone inviting them along for the ride, if there was no replacement bus service available.

                  I don't know, but I imagine a possible explanation would be that the solicitor the brothers had shared in life provided the death blow to Davis's hopes of owning the watch outright, and to Daisy's dreams of enjoying the spoils, when Albert turned up with the Texan in tow, not yet fully appreciating they had a problem.

                  Love,

                  Caz
                  X
                  Last edited by caz; 01-09-2023, 06:37 PM.
                  "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


                  Comment

                  Working...
                  X