Originally posted by NickB
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That's quite damaging if Hanratty only added Tarleton Road in the wake of Mrs Dinwoodie's evidence. Giving two very common, but distinct street names - Carlton or Talbot - in the first place didn't do him that much of a favour.
As far as I can gather from a quick look at my Liverpool A-Z, there is a Tarleton Street in the centre of Liverpool and a Carlton Street near the docks, either of which could have been the subject of an enquiry in Scotland Road, a short bus ride away. Plenty of Talbots in other districts further afield (also other Carltons), but none of them near the centre.
Clearly Mrs D's certainty about the day didn't help, but that might not have mattered if other details had matched. For instance, if they had both just said Tarleton Street, independently, and if Mrs D had heard a cockney accent asking for it, I doubt getting her Monday and Tuesday confused would have been a deal breaker.
Did Mrs D not have a radio in 1961? Did she never get to the cinema, unlike nearly everyone of that generation? How was it possible for a Liverpudlian not to have instantly recognised the cockney accent prevalent in so many British films of the era? What accent did she think he had - Irish or Scottish? With so many Irish people in Liverpool I don't understand how she could have got that so wrong, in addition to the day and which road the man had asked for. Yet she claimed to recall what he looked like, and that he resembled the (only) photo she was shown, that of Hanratty.
And of course, no mention by anyone in Liverpool or Rhyl of a ruddy face smothered in high summer freckles.
Even though I accept that Sherrard and Kleinman were not neutral when commenting at later dates about the Rhyl evidence, Sherrard clearly felt at the time of the original appeal, when he had much to gain from winning the case and getting Hanratty's conviction overturned, that it was better left well alone.
Love,
Caz
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