Hi again,
Chris, thanks for taking the time to post the various press versions. I see that Sam has decided that the evidence suggests that she lived over the shed facing Dorset Street, despite just re-reading these sections within your post......they are numbered in order of their appearance in Chris's post....
1)..."I did not take much notice of the cries as I frequently hear such cries from the back of the lodging house where the windows look into Millers Court", attributed to Elizabeth Prater
2)..."I live at No 20 Room in Millers Court up stairs. I lived in the room over where deceased lived"....."I went up to my room. On the stairs I could see a glimmer through the partition if there had been a light in the deceased's room. I might not have noticed it. I did not take particular notice"...."I could have heard her moving if she had moved"
3)...." I was deserted by my husband five years ago. I live at No. 20 in Miller's Court"....."I did not hear the cry a second time. I did not hear any bed or table being pulled about".
4)...."Elizabeth Prater, a married woman, said: My husband, William Prater, was a boot machinist, and he has deserted me. I live at 20 Room, in Miller's-court, above the shed. Deceased occupied a room below"
5)....."Elizabeth Prater, wife of a boot machinist, deposed , "I live at No. 20 Room in Miller's-court. Deceased lived in the room below me"
6)....."I was deserted by my husband five years ago. I live at No. 20, in Miller's-court."
7)...."Elizabeth Prater, wife of a boot machinist living in No 20 Room, Miller's court, said that the deceased lived in the room below her"
8)......"a young married woman living apart from her husband, in 20 Room, Miller's-court, said: My room is just over that of the deceased"
9)...."Elizabeth Prater, a married woman, living apart from her husband, said she occupied No. 20 room, Miller's-court, her room being just over that occupied by the deceased. If deceased moved about in her room much witness could hear her". No less than the London Times as the source.
One quote of 9 alledges that the room was over the shed, and in that quote it also alledges her room was above Marys. They are not compatible locations.....using both the floor plans available and their numbers as reflective of their actual state the morning of the 9th. So the only quote that refers to the shed must be discounted due to the phrasing that suggests a geographical impossibility, an error that a tenant of some length of time likley wouldnt make,.. but by the quote, did. That leaves all the remaining quotes, .....(I think the number of errors on the address being 20 Millers Court is almost universal, so that evens out)...either not specifying a location or specifying the location as "over" or "above" Marys Janes room. In one quote the windows backing onto the court is referred to specifically by Elizabeth as being how she hears calls on other nights.
She refers specifically to hearing furniture if being moved about in Marys room after Elizabeth is in her room.
She refers to the cry heard "as if from the court"...after she has told us of the windows facing them.
I respect anyones right to their own opinion, but to suggest that the overwhelming ratio of "over the room" to "over the shed" is a contest is a stretch. It is the floor plans that we have all seen and some used as gospel that dictated #20 was over the shed, and what precise shape the room was, well......Im guessing when Liz lived there, after the original layout had been modified, room 20 looked different.....We have made that mistake. Because clearly what we have used to determine who was where in the house is not accurate on those floor plans when juxtaposed with Liz's statements.....as I said before, numerous times, unless the blueprints are from that month and that year, you have no way of knowing the exact configuration of the rooms themselves on November 8th, 1888. The names may have been written into rooms on older blueprints that were nothing like the configuration looked like their current layout, but to show who was in what number, an older version might have seemed ok. That floor plan may have been filled in by McCarthy for all we know, using the older layout prints.
Its our own fault, well, those of us that rely on old blueprints, which isnt me.....because "weve" been assuming that the floor plans refelected the actual layout as well as numeration, when that is hardly likely since the floor plans are not current to the date.
Best regards all.
Chris, thanks for taking the time to post the various press versions. I see that Sam has decided that the evidence suggests that she lived over the shed facing Dorset Street, despite just re-reading these sections within your post......they are numbered in order of their appearance in Chris's post....
1)..."I did not take much notice of the cries as I frequently hear such cries from the back of the lodging house where the windows look into Millers Court", attributed to Elizabeth Prater
2)..."I live at No 20 Room in Millers Court up stairs. I lived in the room over where deceased lived"....."I went up to my room. On the stairs I could see a glimmer through the partition if there had been a light in the deceased's room. I might not have noticed it. I did not take particular notice"...."I could have heard her moving if she had moved"
3)...." I was deserted by my husband five years ago. I live at No. 20 in Miller's Court"....."I did not hear the cry a second time. I did not hear any bed or table being pulled about".
4)...."Elizabeth Prater, a married woman, said: My husband, William Prater, was a boot machinist, and he has deserted me. I live at 20 Room, in Miller's-court, above the shed. Deceased occupied a room below"
5)....."Elizabeth Prater, wife of a boot machinist, deposed , "I live at No. 20 Room in Miller's-court. Deceased lived in the room below me"
6)....."I was deserted by my husband five years ago. I live at No. 20, in Miller's-court."
7)...."Elizabeth Prater, wife of a boot machinist living in No 20 Room, Miller's court, said that the deceased lived in the room below her"
8)......"a young married woman living apart from her husband, in 20 Room, Miller's-court, said: My room is just over that of the deceased"
9)...."Elizabeth Prater, a married woman, living apart from her husband, said she occupied No. 20 room, Miller's-court, her room being just over that occupied by the deceased. If deceased moved about in her room much witness could hear her". No less than the London Times as the source.
One quote of 9 alledges that the room was over the shed, and in that quote it also alledges her room was above Marys. They are not compatible locations.....using both the floor plans available and their numbers as reflective of their actual state the morning of the 9th. So the only quote that refers to the shed must be discounted due to the phrasing that suggests a geographical impossibility, an error that a tenant of some length of time likley wouldnt make,.. but by the quote, did. That leaves all the remaining quotes, .....(I think the number of errors on the address being 20 Millers Court is almost universal, so that evens out)...either not specifying a location or specifying the location as "over" or "above" Marys Janes room. In one quote the windows backing onto the court is referred to specifically by Elizabeth as being how she hears calls on other nights.
She refers specifically to hearing furniture if being moved about in Marys room after Elizabeth is in her room.
She refers to the cry heard "as if from the court"...after she has told us of the windows facing them.
I respect anyones right to their own opinion, but to suggest that the overwhelming ratio of "over the room" to "over the shed" is a contest is a stretch. It is the floor plans that we have all seen and some used as gospel that dictated #20 was over the shed, and what precise shape the room was, well......Im guessing when Liz lived there, after the original layout had been modified, room 20 looked different.....We have made that mistake. Because clearly what we have used to determine who was where in the house is not accurate on those floor plans when juxtaposed with Liz's statements.....as I said before, numerous times, unless the blueprints are from that month and that year, you have no way of knowing the exact configuration of the rooms themselves on November 8th, 1888. The names may have been written into rooms on older blueprints that were nothing like the configuration looked like their current layout, but to show who was in what number, an older version might have seemed ok. That floor plan may have been filled in by McCarthy for all we know, using the older layout prints.
Its our own fault, well, those of us that rely on old blueprints, which isnt me.....because "weve" been assuming that the floor plans refelected the actual layout as well as numeration, when that is hardly likely since the floor plans are not current to the date.
Best regards all.
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