If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
Yes, I nearly choked on my cuppa when I read that one.
Love,
Caz
X
I wrote that in the knowledge that Wolf has made errors in some of his writings in the past. I would hate to see such a well respected reseracher lambasted as others have been on here of late
Re the Leicester connections......Popped into Mrs Bridges' tea-shop yesterday(first time in 20 years!)....then Age concern book shop opposite....Got Feldman,Cornwell & Knight for 50p each.........All of which I'd only had from the library...........NOT recommendations...Just...Completeness........
For Barnardo to have remembered her, I'd suggest she must have had a few words while she "stood around me in the kitchen...". This even if it wasn't she who had spoken up.
However, Dr. Barnardo did claim that Stride spoke up at the meeting, which is what caused him to remember her.
OK, Tom. I was just going by Barnardo's letter to The Times of October 9th, where he says:
The pathetic part of my story is that my remarks were manifestly followed with deep interest by all the women. Not a single scoffing voice was raised in ridicule or opposition. One poor creature, who had evidently been drinking, exclaimed somewhat bitterly to the following effect: "We're all up to no good, and no one cares what becomes of us. Perhaps some of us will be killed next!" And then she added, " If anybody had helped the likes of us long ago we would never have come to this!" ... I have since visited the mortuary in which were lying the remains of the poor woman Stride, and I at once recognized her as one of those who stood around me in the kitchen of the common lodging-house on the occasion of my visit last Wednesday week.
That sounds to me as though one of the women spoke up at the meeting, but it wasn't Stride.
Anyway, as I say, it's a very minor point and detracts not a jot from your well-presented, well-researched article.
Thank you Don, very nice of you to say. I'll add, as I think I have in the past, that I can't wait to finish it so that I can read the damned thing. This always gets a laugh, but the story of Brown's murder is filled with many twists and turns and several people who I have talked to about the book have assumed that it must be a work of fiction. One guy thought it was a movie script and everyone is amazed that it's all true.
Wolf.
Perhaps you might want to let me read it before you go to press. Just to ensure you have all your facts right this time
(I disagree, from what I've read, that Liz actually spoke to Barnardo in the kitchen at 32 F&D Street; I believe he only stated that she was present, but that's a minor point.)
Thanks for the compliment, GM. However, Dr. Barnardo did claim that Stride spoke up at the meeting, which is what caused him to remember her.
Wolf,
Glad to hear the Carrie Brown book is still in the hopper. I am sure it will be a gem and is long awaited by most of us.
Don.
Thank you Don, very nice of you to say. I'll add, as I think I have in the past, that I can't wait to finish it so that I can read the damned thing. This always gets a laugh, but the story of Brown's murder is filled with many twists and turns and several people who I have talked to about the book have assumed that it must be a work of fiction. One guy thought it was a movie script and everyone is amazed that it's all true.
I really enjoyed this inaugural issue. I learned something from all the articles. Tom's piece was extremely well written. (I disagree, from what I've read, that Liz actually spoke to Barnardo in the kitchen at 32 F&D Street; I believe he only stated that she was present, but that's a minor point.) Palmer's Andrews article was very informative, and Neil and Jennifer's piece has sent me off in new research areas of my own interest. The book reviews were dead-on, and SPE's advice on book collecting will be invaluable to a novice. And all this for free! My thanks and congratulations to all concerned in its production.
Cap'n! So nice to see you back. I, for one, missed your contributions. I don't quite get the gist of your current beef; but, I'm sure that you'll expand upon it...at length.
So then star troopers we will just gloss over this little exchange between the jury and Kidney at Stride's inquest shall we?
'Did the deceased have a child by you? - No.
Or by a policeman?'
And while we have the gloss out we might as well ignore the statement of Catherine Lane that Stride spoke the languange of the people she worked for at the time of her death. That would be Jews I guess.
And then just plainly, and blatantly ignore the fact that one of Stride's close relations was a Metropolitan police officer.
It narks me.
Leave a comment: