"Stewart Evans, Rob Clack, Philip Hutchinson, Tom Wescott, myself and most every respected researcher..."
...as opposed to the unrespected ones?
Is this how the boards work; no matter how much value and weight a suggestion carries, if one of the presented "respected" researchers does not agree, your suggestion is rendered useless?
If so, what happens if two of the esteemed high judges at the lofty top should disagree? Is there a hierarchy that functions up there too? And how does it look? Wescott over Evans? Evans over Clack? Hutchinson over Wescott?
I would have thought that since most of the presented evidence on the thread points in the direction of Praters room NOT being directly over Kellys, one ought perhaps lend an ear to that fact. Like I said before, there seems to be every option to semantically question the former established truth when examining the texts at hand, whereas no such possibility readily offers itself when it comes to the bits pointing to Prater living over, but not EXACTLY over Kelly.
The best, all!
Fisherman
Elizabeth Prater
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Originally posted by Stephen ThomasVery touching is your 'love in' with Desperate Dan here. Cow Pies all round. Hopefully Doubting Thomas (Wescott) will be roped in shortly for similar treatment.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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Oh dear
What on earth is going on here?
ALL of the information known today points to the fact that Prater indeed lived above Kelly, but not DIRECTLY above. So she is in her room and hears things 'from the direction of the court', does she? If she lived DIRECTLY above Kelly she would have said that she heard things DIRECTLY below her, through the floorboards as it were. She quite obviously lived in Room#20 at the front of the house overlooking Dorset Street' as she states that she lived in Room#20 which was at the front of the house overlooking Dorset Street and she also states that she lived at the front of the house (as opposed to the back of the house) the front of which overlooked Dorset Street. She also states that she lived above 'the shed' which we know was the gated (thanks Chris) storage area which was the ground floor FRONT room of #26 Dorset Street. Here's the only the only picture showing the gates of the 'shed' that I know of....
And ooh look, you can see one of Prater's windows over the gates.
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Originally posted by Stephen Thomas View PostVery touching is your 'love in' with Desperate Dan here. Cow Pies all round. Hopefully Doubting Thomas (Wescott) will be roped in shortly for similar treatment. You're on very very sold ground on this one.
I honestly don't know what's wrong with some people.
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Just an (inspired?) guess - Diddles could have been on a night stroll, she probably went in and out by the (or one of the) window(s). When the cat came home that night, she jumped on the bed to wake Lizzy because she was hungry. This was when she walked over Liz's neck and woke her up. Liz heard the "murder!" cries from the court so this would mean that a) she had a court-side window and b) it was at least half open.
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If I remember correctly,didn't one of them say of the sound of the door closing,that it didn't sound as it usually did for Kelly's room.
This raises an interesting point.That is that this woman,who I think was Julia,Kelly's friend,and probably the others living in No26,knew exactly where to listen in relation to the "internal" noises in the house.Probably so that if they needed someone or something they didn't have to go trotting up and down the stairs...so what she is really saying is that she DID know how to listen for Kelly.
Prater was just above Kelly's room,literally,so she must have been fully aware of how close the sound of "Oh murder!" was and if it came from just below,inside the house,from where the usual everyday sounds of Kelly's room came from.
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Guest repliedIts quite possible, as offered by a few people including myself, that Elizabeth had fore and aft windows. The floor plans are not de facto, and if anyone believes that Elizabeth could hear a voice she said "as from the court", without having any direct access to it through a court facing window, youre probably wrong. Any voice from Dorset below would sound just as that...from Dorset below.
But that doesnt automatically mean the visual component of her testimony pertains to a court view.
There was one press report I read in which Elizabeth said she had gone down to Marys room before seeking likely some hair of the dog that morning, knocked, and left without peeking in through the side windows. Mary and Elizabeth might have been friendly.
For me personally, Im satisfied that Elizabeth had access to a courtyard window in her room, there is really no logical explanation for a voice "from" the court that didnt come to Elizabeth from the rear of the house. Her visual testimony is not where her importance lies anyway. And Sarah is all the coroberation I need to proceed based on that courtyard window assumption.
The questions are, could Elizabeth have heard that voice "as from the court" if Marys door was closed...could her voice have carried out only via her broken window panes, and was she inside her room answering the door, or outside her room entering at the time.
Diddles skittishness likely is due to sounds below, or through that same window,...and not footsteps, they would be common sounds...... so its either from someone opening the door or knocking on the door or window...or whispering through a broken pane. It cannot signal the discovery by Mary of someone she didnt know who broke in...no noise at all follows the cry.
Best regards.
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Hi,
I was under the impression that Prater knew kelly very well, according to her she was given the nickname 'My pretty] by Mary, but the report Chris Scott found in the 'Scotsman' indicates she [ Prater] only spoke to her once or twice....
one of those times, allegedly was on the thursday evening [ 8th][ around 9pm at the corner of the court as they were both 'going out'... which another account contridicts that ie.. 'I left the court around 5pm and returned at 1am.
It does therefore appear that life was so short in those days , that even after just a couple of meetings people were well aquainted, take Maxwells account for instance.'I have only spoken to her a couple of times, but she knew my name and who I was.'
A more likely explanation is the press and inaccurate reporting.
Regards Richard.
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Bolo writes:
"In other words, being sloshed may prevent a really deep sleep but if Prater only was half as drunk as me when I crawled back home from my father-in-law's birthday last year, even ten Rippers river-dancing around in the shed wouldn't have been enough to wake her up... "
Well, Bolo, as I was not crawling next to you, I have no empirical experiences to draw on in this particular case. The reason I mentioned it all from the beginning is that most people tend to believe that getting drunk and falling asleep ensures a very deep sleep. That is the way thi9ngs are presented to us on the movies. Then again, every time we see a submarine on the movies, it is accopanied by these strange metallic beeps, travelling through the water. In real life, they are of course never there - they are an invention from Hollywood. And so, to a large extent is the drunken, deep sleep, according to the scientists.
Admittedly, though, my experience from parties that I have arrived home from, travelling extremely close to the ground, seems to point in another direction. Actually, as oxygen is sparser in higher layers of the atmosphere, maybe it is the crawling close to the ground, providing a very oxygenrich environment, that sends you into such a sound sleep...?
The best!
Fisherman
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostBolo writes:
"The fact that she woke up when her cat walked over her neck does not surprise me. Even if she was very drunk..."
Those who research into matters of slepp often point out that just as alcohol makes it easier to fall asleep, it also makes you more prone to wake up easily! A "drunken sleep" is not nearly as deep as many tend to believe.
The best, Bolo!
Fisherman
In other words, being sloshed may prevent a really deep sleep but if Prater only was half as drunk as me when I crawled back home from my father-in-law's birthday last year, even ten Rippers river-dancing around in the shed wouldn't have been enough to wake her up...
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostThanks, Dan - now I know why I keep bloodying my nose every time I walk into a room
Seriously, my point was that any sound rising up the stairwell and across the landing only had to negotiate a door, rather than a solid wall, in order for Prater - or Diddles - to notice it.
Very touching is your 'love in' with Desperate Dan here. Cow Pies all round. Hopefully Doubting Thomas (Wescott) will be roped in shortly for similar treatment. You're on very very sold ground on this one. It would seem to me that Elizabeth Prater did not live DIRECTLY over Mary Kelly's room. Komm susser Herr Evans, do you have hitherto unrevealed information? If so lets have it.
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Hi all-
Now we know Isaac Newton invented the cat flap (see Forums) so there's nothing written re flaps and partitions as far as I can see......
...Seriously though...Chava it's DIDDLES!!!! who bimbled acress her neck and brought her around enough to hear the famous cry! .. close enough to know or guess where it came from though..the line about 'It was a common enough cry' cannot be discarded though...I imagine that or something close to it was a "common cry"!
Mrs P lived upstairs without a doubt and I tend to go with Sam's wonderful plans here..Without a doubt Mrs P knew/chatted to Mary on a fairly regular basis in and out of the Court and up and down Dorset Street /Commercial St and wherever....that would make sense... as would the testimonies of the other Millers Ct residents...AND Carrie Maxwell more than likely too ...and Gawd knows how many others around and about the environs....Mary was undoubtedly a 'known' chraracter I believe in the area for good or bad.
I do wonder however how that Dids got in and out of that room and if he was a kitten....perhaps he'd never been out of it!!.....was there more than one kitten here...?
Suzi
Oddly as a by the by my first kitten was called Tiddles!!!....typing error shurely(Ed)
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Bolo writes:
"The fact that she woke up when her cat walked over her neck does not surprise me. Even if she was very drunk..."
Those who research into matters of slepp often point out that just as alcohol makes it easier to fall asleep, it also makes you more prone to wake up easily! A "drunken sleep" is not nearly as deep as many tend to believe.
The best, Bolo!
Fisherman
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Originally posted by Dan Norder View PostIt would be pretty pointless to have a door if it wasn't to be able to move from one side of a wall to another.
Seriously, my point was that any sound rising up the stairwell and across the landing only had to negotiate a door, rather than a solid wall, in order for Prater - or Diddles - to notice it.
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostD'oh!! I meant to mention her door earlier, Dan. Not so sure about a wall, though - Prater was no Vestal Virgin
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