Originally posted by Iconoclast
View Post
The Diary — Old Hoax or New or Not a Hoax at All?
Collapse
X
-
Regards
Herlock Sholmes
”I think that Herlock is a genius.” Trevor Marriott
-
Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View PostIf you don't believe me, why don't you just ask Keith Skinner? Because he wrote a very full and detailed description of the 1891 diary which did not include those words! And, unlike the supplier of the 1891 diary, he was fully aware of the context as to why Mike claimed he wanted the diary.
Now, I need to be clear that these are questions directly from Keith himself so I trust I have represented them accurately.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View PostSo your entire objection to the 1891 diary hinges on the fact that, in your mind, Barrett simply must have asked the question: "Blank as in there are no dates on each page?". You cannot conceive of any possible alternative scenario in which Barrett did not ask that question? Is that seriously what you're telling us?
Obviously, we are at cross purposes (as Keith has reminded us): you - aligned as you are to the Jan 5, 1995, affidavit - must actually believe that it was Anne who did all the hard yards. Does Anne strike anyone as stupid enough to order up an 1891 diary without asking first what evidence there is in it that it is for 1891 or was she simply not thinking straight rather than Mike? Or do you not believe that bit of Alan Gray's Jan 5, 1995, affidavit either?
I desperately want you to wake up to the very real scenario here whereby you have created a series of apologetics for Michael Barrett who - in reality - had nothing whatsoever to do with the hoaxing of the James Maybrick scrapbook (if hoax it be). I can see that I am making little progress which surely reflects very badly on one of us (if not both)?Last edited by Iconoclast; Today, 02:57 PM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
I have no idea what this means, or what you're asking.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post
Could you clarify where Keith wrote a very full and detailed description of the 1891 diary and made it clear he was fully aware of the context as to why Mike claimed he wanted the diary as I'm sure Keith will want to check the accuracy of your claim?
Here is what C.A.B. wrote back in 2021:
"Keith Skinner has it in his possession and has described it as:
'...a small 1891 De La Rue's Indelible Diary and Memorandum Book… 2.25" by 4", dated 1891 throughout – three or four dates to a page. Nearly all of the pages are blank and at the end of the diary are two Memoranda pages. On one of the two pages someone has written in blue biro 'EATON PLACE' and on the other 'ETON RISE'. Then there are four blank pages and on the last one is written in blue biro '19 W at 3 = 57 19 W at 4 = 76'.'"
These are Keith's words, not Earl's, whose description to Barrett is not documented, and may have been vague since it's no proven that Earl ever saw the maroon diary.
I think what Herlock is suggesting is that if Earl had said something along the lines of "nearly all the pages are blank" (as Keith did) Barrett might have assumed that the pages had no printing on them. In Keith's description he does say 'three or four dates to a page" but we don't know that Earl made a similar comment and even if he did, Barrett might have understood this to mean handwritten dates on blank paper.
I hardly think you can pretend to read Mike Barrett's thoughts. I've been accused of reading Anne's--even when I merely quote her own words--but you seem to have escaped a similar accusation, though you continually tell us what Barrett thought and even invent imaginary conversations between Barrett and Earl.
Is that really a sound investigative approach? Or is it, to uses your own term, "special pleading"?
No matter what song & dance you and Caroline provide, you readers are NOT going to forget what is actually documented: Martin Earl's advertisement in Bookdealer, showing what Barrett had requested. It's not going to go away.
It's not like Herlock, Yabs, and I are anything other than interested members of the reading public. We're not lying when we say we aren't convinced by your arguments, nor are we lying when we tell you we see Barrett's request as highly suspicious.
You're insulting the intelligence of your readers, the police, Paul Dodd, Mike Barrett, and everyone else with your "doppelganger" theory.
No one who buys an allegedly stolen Diary of Jack the Ripper in the back booth of a pub is going to assume that the rightful owner won't be able to give a precise description of it.
This doppelganger business is barking mad.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
What are you babbling about, Ike? Do you really need someone to give you fictional dialogues before you can understand anything?
It's not difficult:
Supplier to Earl: "I don't have any diaries from 1880 to 1890 but I do have an 1891 De La Rue's Indelible Diary and Memorandum Book in good condition, size 2.25 inches by 4 inches with a red or maroon cover and four days to a page. Nearly all of the pages are blank and, at the end of the diary, are two Memoranda pages. On one of the two pages someone has written in blue biro 'EATON PLACE' and on the other 'ETON RISE'. Then there are four blank pages and on the last one is written in blue biro '19 W at 3 = 57 19 W at 4 = 76'. I'll sell it to you for [£20]".
Earl to Barrett: "I haven't been able to locate any diaries from 1880 to 1890 but I can offer you an 1891 De La Rue's Indelible Diary and Memorandum Book in good condition, size 2.25 inches by 4 inches with a red or maroon cover and four days to a page. Nearly all of the pages are blank and, at the end of the diary, are two Memoranda pages. On one of the two pages someone has written in blue biro 'EATON PLACE' and on the other 'ETON RISE'. Then there are four blank pages and on the last one is written in blue biro '19 W at 3 = 57 19 W at 4 = 76'. The cost to you will be £25."
Barrett to Earl: "Okay if that's all you can find I'll take it. It's great that nearly all the pages are blank which is what I asked for. Please send immediately and I'll pay once received."
Earl to Barrett: "No problem, will do."
Happy now?
Your dialogue (above) is EXACTLY the dialogue Barrett might very well have had with Martin Earl. How are you getting on so far? Keeping up?
It is the dialogue of a man who does not need a document to write up a hoaxed diary of Jack the Ripper ... Still with me (James Maybrick died in May 1889, you see)?
... but - rather - is the dialogue of a man who wants a document he can produce if someone accuses him of recently coming into possession of a document bearing the records of Jack the Ripper's thoughts ... I know this is where I'll have lost you - but that's your one-way vision troubling you rather than my inability to explain a simple idea simply.
So your dialogue shows us clearly why a diary from 1889 or even 1890 was ordered and why one from 1891 was accepted: it was because he just wanted an insurance policy - plausible deniability if asked if he had recently come into possession of the record of Jack the Ripper's thoughts.
It's beautifully simplistic though I know in advance that even this simplicity will not seep into even the periphery of your one-way vision.
PS As I said the other day, yes, he would very soon have to show the real thing to Doreen Montgomery, but it was inevitable that the genie would be out of the bottle at that point whereas it was not necessarily inevitable that he would have to hand his priceless scrapbook back between mid-March and mid-April 1992 if he was able to source something he could try to pass off of an old document he had recently received which was marked by it having at least twenty blank pages. You can say it's gibberish or stupid or you can't understand it - do so all you like - but it works better than your desperately implausible notion that it is evidence that Barrett was creating an original hoaxed Jack the Ripper diary.
Comment
-
Originally posted by rjpalmer View PostNo one who buys an allegedly stolen Diary of Jack the Ripper in the back booth of a pub is going to assume that the rightful owner won't be able to give a precise description of it.
All Mike Barrett had to know was that he could simply deny all knowledge of such an old document - but, then, he wouldn't know that Eddie Lyons hadn't admitted that he'd sold it to Barrett.
All Mike Barrett then had to think was what could he possibly do to keep possession of the Maybrick scrapbook in the event that he felt really cornered. He could say that he did have it but that he'd thrown it away. He could certainly have said that.
Or he might have thought that it would be so much better if he could agree that he had recently received an old Victorian document which did indeed have a load of blank pages at the back (at this point, he could not know what the eventual purchase would look like). Maybe he could throw his accuser off his scent that way?
It doesn't matter what you and I thought was or think is rational. We only need to imagine the possibility that Mike Barrett might have thought it was. That's all you have to get your head around whether you think my thinking it is 'barking mad' or not.Last edited by Iconoclast; Today, 03:23 PM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by rjpalmer View PostNo matter what song & dance you and Caroline provide, you readers are NOT going to forget what is actually documented: Martin Earl's advertisement in Bookdealer, showing what Barrett had requested. It's not going to go away.
If his aim was to create a hoaxed record of Jack the Ripper's thoughts, he needed to be clear that he could not possibly be offered a document from a period of time after his intended foil had passed away. And yet he wasn't clear. Which points away from the notion of a hoax and points firmly towards some other purpose for seeking such a document (and most definitely not because he wanted to see what one looked like).
Now, my 'other Victorian document' theory (I've stopped saying 'copy' or 'doppelgänger' or 'facsimile' because I thought you'd use your brain regrading what I meant but you either couldn't or didn't want to or I just plain confused you all) may well be wrong, and that's fine, but it at least explains the facts which the Barrett Hoax theory most certainly does not.
Comment
-
Originally posted by rjpalmer View PostThis has been gone over dozens of times, Ike. Why are you so constantly in a state of confusion?
I did think I'd made that really rather clear in my short post but evidently nothing I ever type makes any sense to Barrett Believers. I wonder why that could be as I don't seem to have any challenges over my use of the English language with anyone else?Last edited by Iconoclast; Today, 03:20 PM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Iconoclast View PostNow, I need to be clear that these are questions directly from Keith himself so I trust I have represented them accurately.
Shirley Harrison implies that it was at the 'Caringbah Hospital,' but no such hospital exists, and it is not clear from Shirley's writing if Anne confirmed this, or whether it was just Steve Powell's suggestion.
I can eventually find out on my own, as Australian nurses needed to register each year, and these registration papers almost certainly still exist, but it would save time.
Thanks.
Comment
-
Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
I understand that Keith doesn't care to cooperate with Diary skeptics, but if he's monitoring these boards, I wonder if he could confirm what hospital or clinic Anne Graham worked at 'near Sydney' in around 1973-1975?
Shirley Harrison implies that it was at the 'Caringbah Hospital,' but no such hospital exists, and it is not clear from Shirley's writing if Anne confirmed this, or whether it was just Steve Powell's suggestion.
I can eventually find out on my own, as Australian nurses needed to register each year, and these registration papers almost certainly still exist, but it would save time.
Thanks.
Can I ask why it matters?
Comment
-
By the way, Barrett Believers, if Earl's ad had stated 1880-1888, I'd have still been able to pursue my 'other Victorian document' theory, but - honestly - I'd have been stretching.
It is the phrasing of the ad which is inexplicable if he is seeking a diary to do his hoaxing worst in - as is the request for a 'diary'. And, then, he compounds this all by agreeing to take an 1891 diary - actions which can only be explained if he truly is stupendously thick (okay, we might be getting somewhere there ...).
But, then, he goes and reveals the truth in his Jan 5, 1995, affidavit. No forgetting dates this time - this time he reveals for the first time that his wife Anne Barrett had ordered an 1889 or 1890 diary and then accepted an 1891 one without any difficult questions like "Would it actually work for a hoax?".
Nope, the ad should have said, "Brainless Scouse scally is seeking a DOCUMENT from no later than 1888 - the year that Jack the Ripper famously murdered those women in London and Manchester. Must have quite a lot of pages to write in. I wonder why?".
To save money, he could instead have just asked for, "Document from no later than 1888 with at least twenty blank consecutive pages".
The fact that he didn't simply has to be a problem for the Barrett Hoax Believers.Last edited by Iconoclast; Today, 03:48 PM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by rjpalmer View PostI think it is best to proceed from the principle of facts first, theories later.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post
**** me, I almost spilt me Newkky Broon!"The Lechmere theory never shoehorns facts. It deals in facts."
Comment
Comment