I'm not sure whether assumptions are being made about the origin of letters MJK was receiving...I believe McCarthy said she received letters...what did Barnett have to say? McCarthy might well have no way of knowing where the letters came from...Barnett on the other hand might...
The reason I ask the question is that at this time, many Post Offices still applied a simple "Killer" frank to the stamp, which bore no reference to a town of origin...it was simply a set of bars with a number therein (my own stamp collection, alas, contains hundreds of these - I say alas because they are worth far less than the CDS handstamps - which contain the postal town of origin and a date)...Do we know for certain these letters came from Ireland?
How unfortunate for us that this murder took place in England, and perhaps concerned postmarks from Ireland, rather than Scotland - owing to a well known murder there in 1857, (google Madeleine Smith), Scottish postmarks were modified from that time onwards...a practise which was only gradually introduced in England...
Food for thought?
Dave
The reason I ask the question is that at this time, many Post Offices still applied a simple "Killer" frank to the stamp, which bore no reference to a town of origin...it was simply a set of bars with a number therein (my own stamp collection, alas, contains hundreds of these - I say alas because they are worth far less than the CDS handstamps - which contain the postal town of origin and a date)...Do we know for certain these letters came from Ireland?
How unfortunate for us that this murder took place in England, and perhaps concerned postmarks from Ireland, rather than Scotland - owing to a well known murder there in 1857, (google Madeleine Smith), Scottish postmarks were modified from that time onwards...a practise which was only gradually introduced in England...
Food for thought?
Dave
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