More Tumblety in the Evening Post

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  • PaulB
    replied
    Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
    Thank you for your support

    The answer surely depends on what side you are on, the historians or the investigators.
    There are no "sides" Trevor. Trying to understand the past is history. The investigators are the people properly equipped to do that job and they are historians.

    Leave a comment:


  • Debra A
    replied
    Originally posted by Monty View Post
    Do we know the nature of the correspondence?

    I suspect it would be in the form of telegrams and, purely going by the ages of Brice and Doughty (around 19 in 88 if Chris Scotts research is spot on), could we be dealing with Telegram Boys a la Cleveland Street?

    Just random thoughts.

    Monty
    Hi Neil
    Good thought but looking at the Postal Service Appointment Books (in which the names of all the telegram boys who were involved in the Cleveland St scandal do appear) there are none of the names associated with Tumblety's charge.

    Leave a comment:


  • Monty
    replied
    Originally posted by GUT View Post
    Which I've already said it is second hand hearsay, there is actually no such thing in law as a secondary source.
    That being a fairly recent thing. Hearsay is only admissible in certain circumstances, however this is not the point I'm trying to make.

    I am stating that there may be some confusion of the terms used, and contexts, when dealing with different posters. Secondary sources to Paul and Jonathan may mean something different to Trevor.

    I don't wish to get into a debate on this, so please accept my apologies as I withdraw on the subject.

    Monty

    Leave a comment:


  • Trevor Marriott
    replied
    Originally posted by GUT View Post
    Which I've already said it is second hand hearsay, there is actually no such thing in law as a secondary source.
    What a ridiculous statement !

    Leave a comment:


  • Monty
    replied
    Re the correspondence

    Do we know the nature of the correspondence?

    I suspect it would be in the form of telegrams and, purely going by the ages of Brice and Doughty (around 19 in 88 if Chris Scotts research is spot on), could we be dealing with Telegram Boys a la Cleveland Street?

    Just random thoughts.

    Monty

    Leave a comment:


  • GUT
    replied
    Originally posted by Monty View Post
    I suspect here.

    Get an answer for 'Are newspapers considered a primary source or a secondary source?' and find homework help for other Reference questions at eNotes


    However, in Trevors defence, he is correct in his definition from a legal point of view.

    Question is, are we debating the legal or historical here?

    Monty
    Which I've already said it is second hand hearsay, there is actually no such thing in law as a secondary source.

    Leave a comment:


  • Trevor Marriott
    replied
    Originally posted by Monty View Post
    I suspect here.

    Get an answer for 'Are newspapers considered a primary source or a secondary source?' and find homework help for other Reference questions at eNotes


    However, in Trevors defence, he is correct in his definition from a legal point of view.

    Question is, are we debating the legal or historical here?

    Monty
    Thank you for your support

    The answer surely depends on what side you are on, the historians or the investigators.

    Leave a comment:


  • Monty
    replied
    Originally posted by GUT View Post
    Trevor

    Please give us YOUR definition of primary and secondary sources.
    I suspect here.

    Get an answer for 'Are newspapers considered a primary source or a secondary source?' and find homework help for other Reference questions at eNotes


    However, in Trevors defence, he is correct in his definition from a legal point of view.

    Question is, are we debating the legal or historical here?

    Monty

    Leave a comment:


  • GUT
    replied
    But isn't the real issue it's reliability and not its classification.

    Leave a comment:


  • GUT
    replied
    From Robert C. Williams, The Historian's Toolbox: A Student's Guide to the Theory and Craft of History, p.58

    "A primary source is a document, image, or artifact that provides evidence about the past. It is an original document created contemporaneously with the event under discussion. A direct quote from such a document is classified as a primary source. A secondary source is a book, article, film, or museum that displays primary sources selectively in order to interpret the past."

    Leave a comment:


  • GUT
    replied
    Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
    Hi GUT.
    You may notice that second link you offered, in the Primary section we read:
    "Published materials can be viewed as primary resources if they come from the time period that is being discussed, and were written or produced by someone with firsthand experience of the event."

    In the Secondary section a similar acknowledgement is given:
    "A secondary source is generally one or more steps removed from the event or time period and are written or produced after the fact..."

    This is the principal difference between a Primary source and a Secondary source, the fact one is essentially eyewitness, the other is at arms length.

    Referring to a Newspaper as a Primary source when reporting on the incident in question in paraphrase (accurate or not), is a contradiction in terms.
    This is why it is the article in question that is either Primary or Secondary, not the Newspaper.

    G'day Jon

    As I said everyone that have ever spoken to, who has qualifications in history, including Dr's Lecturers and Professors says that any Newspaoper article published at the time is Primary.

    Can you explain how a novel is primary if a newspaper report isn't?

    I sure can't.

    Leave a comment:


  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by GUT View Post
    Actually Jon we can define a newspaper report as primary or secondary, if it is contemporary it is primary, historically speaking that is, within the article itself rests the question of weight not of classification.

    Just look at the link I posted from Princeton even a novel published at the time is historically a primary source, now is it necessarily right? No. But it is still a primary source.
    Hi GUT.
    You may notice that second link you offered, in the Primary section we read:
    "Published materials can be viewed as primary resources if they come from the time period that is being discussed, and were written or produced by someone with firsthand experience of the event."

    In the Secondary section a similar acknowledgement is given:
    "A secondary source is generally one or more steps removed from the event or time period and are written or produced after the fact..."

    This is the principal difference between a Primary source and a Secondary source, the fact one is essentially eyewitness, the other is at arms length.

    Referring to a Newspaper as a Primary source when reporting on the incident in question in paraphrase (accurate or not), is a contradiction in terms.
    This is why it is the article in question that is either Primary or Secondary, not the Newspaper.

    Leave a comment:


  • mklhawley
    replied
    Originally posted by GUT View Post
    Just a thought could the Tumblety / Kumblety have been as simple as an extra dot or dash in the morse code.
    Hi GUT,

    Read my earlier post. The November 19 New York World report explains it was not a mere mistake. The NY World London chief correspondent, Tracy Greaves, sent to the US the name of 'Kumblety' in the November 17 news cable and he did not know who this American from New York was. The World did indeed publish the news cable on November 18 just like the Boston Globe and SF Chronicle, but they opted to take out the 'Kumblety' story (they kept in the Sir George Arthur story). Why? Because they found out who this 'Kumblety' was, but called him Twomblety. They spent the extra day digging up more info.

    Sincerely,

    Mike

    Leave a comment:


  • GUT
    replied
    Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
    Actually, I think the identification of a source as Primary or Secondary does not lie with the published medium, it rests with the article itself.

    A Reporter can give his own account of a fire at the docks, if he was present his article is a Primary source.
    If he was not present, but is retelling, in his own words or in paraphrase, the accounts of others who were present, then this is a Secondary source.

    We cannot define a Newspaper as either Primary or Secondary, such definition rests with the specific article within that newspaper and how it was written.
    Actually Jon we can define a newspaper report as primary or secondary, if it is contemporary it is primary, historically speaking that is, within the article itself rests the question of weight not of classification.

    Just look at the link I posted from Princeton even a novel published at the time is historically a primary source, now is it necessarily right? No. But it is still a primary source.

    Leave a comment:


  • Wickerman
    replied
    Actually, I think the identification of a source as Primary or Secondary does not lie with the published medium, it rests with the article itself.

    A Reporter can give his own account of a fire at the docks, if he was present his article is a Primary source.
    If he was not present, but is retelling, in his own words or in paraphrase, the accounts of others who were present, then this is a Secondary source.

    We cannot define a Newspaper as either Primary or Secondary, such definition rests with the specific article within that newspaper and how it was written.

    Leave a comment:

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