Sir William Gull - Freemason?

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • DirectorDave
    *
    • Sep 2009
    • 355

    #16
    I think we have a genuine find here, well done SZ.

    Comment

    • DJA
      *
      • May 2015
      • 4700

      #17
      Certainly looks like Gull's signature,however he had been living at 8 Finsbury Square for 13 years prior.

      Comment

      • DirectorDave
        *
        • Sep 2009
        • 355

        #18
        Certainly looks like Gull's signature,however he had been living at 8 Finsbury Square for 13 years prior.
        The names all look to be in the same handwriting, I don't think they are signatures.

        Comment

        • DJA
          *
          • May 2015
          • 4700

          #19
          Did notice that.
          Nonetheless,apart from the "l"s, it is close to Gull's signature.
          Last edited by DJA; 04-04-2018, 05:31 AM. Reason: Punctuation.

          Comment

          • David Orsam
            *
            • Nov 2014
            • 7916

            #20
            Might that particular William Gull be Mr William Gull, the owner of a bricklaying company who, in 1861, aged 45, was living at 60 High Street, Brightlingsea, Essex?

            Comment

            • DJA
              *
              • May 2015
              • 4700

              #21
              Well,he is a mason

              Comment

              • Sam Flynn
                Casebook Supporter
                • Feb 2008
                • 13322

                #22
                Originally posted by DirectorDave View Post
                The names all look to be in the same handwriting, I don't think they are signatures.
                Quite so. This looks to me to have been a set of entries in a register completed by a registrar.
                Kind regards, Sam Flynn

                "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

                Comment

                • DJA
                  *
                  • May 2015
                  • 4700

                  #23
                  Reckon the dual "William"s are a bit of a giveaway.

                  Comment

                  • Geddy2112
                    Inspector
                    • Dec 2015
                    • 1300

                    #24
                    Originally posted by DJA View Post
                    Reckon the dual "William"s are a bit of a giveaway.
                    I was looking for a William Sparrow.... mmmmm

                    Comment

                    • Mayerling
                      Superintendent
                      • Feb 2008
                      • 2762

                      #25
                      Originally posted by SuspectZero View Post
                      Even though he had been a non-paying member of the lodge in earlier years, Gull was initiated into the Masons in 1861.
                      Rather interesting coincidence here but the other "William" on the list for 1861 has the name of "William Dove". The coincidence is that five years earlier (1856) a man named William Dove had been so fascinated by the crimes then just attributed to Dr. William Palmer he decided to copy them and poisoned his wife. There was some insurance involved, but when one reads that case Dove seems to have been somewhat cracked (he wrote a letter that was found to the Devil, selling his soul if he could succeed in killing his spouse, and then getting away with it. He was executed after being found guilty of the murder of his wife. Sir James Fitzjames Stephen, in his History of English Criminal Law, wrote a small separate account of Dove's case.

                      Jeff

                      Comment

                      Working...
                      X