Mmm, yes, and it's strange that the taxi-driver who JH claimed took him from Paddington to Euston never came forward. And mmm, yes, perhaps a cabbie dropping off a fare to a cornfield may well have thought it odd once he had read about what eventually happened there. But think on this -
maybe Hanratty never even wanted to go the cornfield in the first place, and IF he took a cab from wherever he'd been that evening, could be he was dropped off in Taplow, and walked - or more likely wandered the rest of the way, and maybe he got lost. Who knows? And another mmmm - before I forget, just down the road from the cornfield is a large stately home called Dorney Court. These days it's a posh place for weddings and corporate events; not sure if it was just private in 1961, but you can bet your next pint that visitors to it arrived via classy car, chauffeur-driven car, or taxi. I only suggested a taxi, not claimed that he used one, but you seem to leap upon mere suggestions as though I believed in them utterly.
Yet another mmmm - what if JH had carried the gun and ammo in a bag until he saw the Morris, then discared the bag in the hedge? I have (an admittedly vague) memory of reading that the police never actually carried out a thorough inspection of the cornfield and the gate to it.
Who suggested that Dixie France was the only crook known to Hanratty? Not me. You said that 'you know as well as I do who I was referring to', so it seemed obvious to me that it was Dixie. JH knew a whole bunch of ne-er do wells, but I don't believe he mixed with, or would have been accepted by, any of the big-time bad boys who were rife at the time.
JH was a house-breaker, and not a very good one at that, but it suited him at a period in our history when people were becoming more and more affluent, and there was plenty of valuable stuff adorning the up-market houses he preferred to burgle. Raffles The Gentleman Crook he was not, but he had a good go. Trouble was, he got caught.
And one final point: JH freely admitted that he had gone to see Donald Slack about getting a gun, as in his, JH's, words, "House-breaking is all played out. These days you need a shooter and go after cash". He didn't say "get a shooter and blow peoples' heads off", but tragically that is what happened, and it happened when his first attempt at armed robbery went disastrously awry. (By the way, JH left a folder of photos and 'personal information' with Slack the day he went to see him; Slack later said that the police had taken it away as 'evidence' and it was never seen again. I wonder what was in it?).
Graham
maybe Hanratty never even wanted to go the cornfield in the first place, and IF he took a cab from wherever he'd been that evening, could be he was dropped off in Taplow, and walked - or more likely wandered the rest of the way, and maybe he got lost. Who knows? And another mmmm - before I forget, just down the road from the cornfield is a large stately home called Dorney Court. These days it's a posh place for weddings and corporate events; not sure if it was just private in 1961, but you can bet your next pint that visitors to it arrived via classy car, chauffeur-driven car, or taxi. I only suggested a taxi, not claimed that he used one, but you seem to leap upon mere suggestions as though I believed in them utterly.
Yet another mmmm - what if JH had carried the gun and ammo in a bag until he saw the Morris, then discared the bag in the hedge? I have (an admittedly vague) memory of reading that the police never actually carried out a thorough inspection of the cornfield and the gate to it.
Who suggested that Dixie France was the only crook known to Hanratty? Not me. You said that 'you know as well as I do who I was referring to', so it seemed obvious to me that it was Dixie. JH knew a whole bunch of ne-er do wells, but I don't believe he mixed with, or would have been accepted by, any of the big-time bad boys who were rife at the time.
JH was a house-breaker, and not a very good one at that, but it suited him at a period in our history when people were becoming more and more affluent, and there was plenty of valuable stuff adorning the up-market houses he preferred to burgle. Raffles The Gentleman Crook he was not, but he had a good go. Trouble was, he got caught.
And one final point: JH freely admitted that he had gone to see Donald Slack about getting a gun, as in his, JH's, words, "House-breaking is all played out. These days you need a shooter and go after cash". He didn't say "get a shooter and blow peoples' heads off", but tragically that is what happened, and it happened when his first attempt at armed robbery went disastrously awry. (By the way, JH left a folder of photos and 'personal information' with Slack the day he went to see him; Slack later said that the police had taken it away as 'evidence' and it was never seen again. I wonder what was in it?).
Graham
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