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  • Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
    If so, he was basing his conclusion on first hand information but the fact remains that Swanson didn't see the writing whereas Halse did and Pierre seems to be ignoring that. Halse, of course, was City of London Police whereas Swanson would only have been entitled as a right to Metropolitan Police reports although there might have been some sharing of information in this case.

    My focus isn't on the blurring, though, it's on the fact that Pierre said (in #97) that Swanson didn't say anything about the handwriting being in a good schoolboy or round hand. On that basis, Pierre seems to be concluding that it wasn't in a good schoolboy or round hand! My point is that he is ignoring what Detective Halse said at the inquest (as recorded in multiple newspapers) and Halse saw the writing whereas Swanson didn't.
    David

    I see your point, yes Halse was there, and we surely must take his view over that of someone who was not and who has you rightly state being from a different force, may not have had a full report anyway.

    steve

    Comment


    • Originally posted by Elamarna View Post
      This really is becoming too easy.

      Where do you get this conclusion from Pierre?
      Now, a simple analysis of the relevant newspaper articles (sampling frame is the British Newspaper Archive and a search was made for ”round hand” and ”schoolboy(s)” respectively), shows that:

      1. There is a discourse in the newspapers about the Dear Boss letter before the inquest, which

      a) contains statements about the handwriting as being in ”a round hand”.

      b)There are also statements about the education of the author of the letter and of the profession of the author of the letter.

      Conclusion: Before the GSG was known to the journalists, the Dear Boss letter, and the descriptions of that letter, were known to the them and they discussed the Dear Boss letter from the same type of perspectives as they later used when they discussed the GSG.

      Therefore there is an expectancy bias in the discourse about the GSG, since both the Dear Boss letter and the GSG is regarded by the journalists as having a possible connection to the murderer.

      Therefore, both sources (the Dear Boss letter and the GSG) are interpreted from similar perspectives: the round hand and the question about the education or profession of the author.

      These are the perspectives in the discourse about the Dear Boss letter:

      London Daily News - Friday 05 October. And other articles:

      ”a round hand, appearantly by a person indifferently educated”.

      Pall Mall Gazette - Saturday 06 October. And other articles:

      ”a good round hand, like that employed by clercs in offices”

      These are the perspectives in the discourse about the GSG:

      The Morning Post 12 October:

      ”a good round hand”

      The Times 12 October:

      ”a good schoolboy hand”

      London Daily News - Friday 12 October

      ”in good schoolboyīs handwriting”

      The Daily Telegraph 12 October:

      ”a good schoolboy's round hand”

      The Star - Saturday 13 October:

      ”a good round hand”

      Reynolds's Newspaper - Sunday 14 October 1888

      ”a good round hand”

      The problem here displayed is also important from the perspective of the original inquest sources. In these sources, there is no statement made by Halse about a ”round hand” or a ”schoolboy”.

      Given that

      A) these words are not in the original inquest source, given that
      B) the newspapers are not consistent and given that
      C) the journalists use the same categories when interpreting the GSG as when interpreting the Dear Boss letter

      we have a tendency in the sources for the GSG which is due to the expectancy bias of some of the journalists.

      Is there any evidence to support this view that they expected it to look alike.
      See above.

      Is it not something you have decided, from your own thoughts?
      See above.

      It is wrong to present such as fact!
      See above.

      Pierre, looking at the GSG, not from the point of what it meant, but purely from the point of its physical properties we can come to the following conclusions.
      1. What do you mean by "purely"?

      2. What do you mean by "physical properties"?


      1. It was not written by the killer,( as you know, my view) the word, "blurred" could support this.
      3. Do you have any data to support that?
      However on reflection, David's suggestion that blurred did not mean smudged, this being based on the police officers whom saw the GSG stating it was not smudged, but rather distorted by being written on a rough textured surface is highly likely.
      I have already pointed that out. And donīt buy the stuff David says. He has no historical education (or have you, David?). Merely pointing out the obvious.

      Steve - you have studied medicine, havenīt you? Would you let a priest or a biologist perform surgery on you? No. So why would you let a person with no academic history education try and tell you what sources mean, as he has no tool for analysing them?


      2. It was written by the killer. the same comments about blurred as given above apply.
      A list of alternatives will not help us. They are always there. But we must analyse and discuss the sources. Is this something you would like to do?

      3. It was neatly written, all the reports which you have produced say either "good round hand", "good school boy hand" or "good round schoolboy hand".
      Steve - that does NOT mean that "it was neatly written"! This is a discourse, and discourses tend to be constructed like this, using some core elements. That does NOT mean the GSG looked like the ideas in the discourse. Here you see the problem again: you have studied medicine, I have studied history.

      And Steve, donīt call newspaper articles "reports". They are merely newspaper articles. We have to distinguish them from police reports or the line between the importance of these different sources will be blurred (!).

      4 Swanson:

      from your post:

      Swanson's report is almost certainly based on second hand information, did he see the GSG?
      Just because there are problems in other sources does not mean there are no problems in the Swansons source. All sources are problematic. But since I also have other sources that I analyse, I have reasons to ask about these sources.

      The same is again probably true of the press reports.
      Given those facts,
      how can comparing second hand reports, without knowing if the first hand source was the same or not tell us anything definitive.
      If anything the sources: Swanson and the Press agree that it was neatly written.
      It canīt. That is why we have hypotheses and theories and science.

      But from where do you get the wording "neatly written"? That is not in the newspapers (or have you found that) and not in the Swanson source.


      See above for the so called discrepancies between Swanson and the press.
      However you are not discussing those views!
      What do you mean by "those views"?

      Your "hypothesis" such as it is, appears to be that the GSG was written by a left hand, this is without apparent evidence of such or reason for such to support such an hypothesis.
      Why do you use the word "evidence"? This is not a court room. And the hypothesis is not confirmed or disproved. It is just an hypothesis.

      if we want to hypothesise on which hand the text was written with, we have no copy of the physical evidence to look at to help with this, with out anything else to assist all that we can do is look at the population in 1888.
      The percentage of people who could write neat left hand as opposed to right hand is not 50% it is much nearer13-15%. In 1888 judging by the available sources that figure was around 5%.
      Yes, you said so several times and it has no meaning to my hypothesis, as I told you. I am doing idiographic history here and have no use for nomothetic thinking right now. Not that I donīt like it, but in this case we have a specific case which is not explained by the statistics.

      You contested these figures in the week, but when asked to produce data to do so, you did not and still have not.

      Well, do you have a solution for how the cat could be let out of the birdcage?

      And also, you can not see an unborn baby.


      Taking that into account to suggest that the writing was by a left hand needs a great deal of support, which has not been provided.
      I like sources that throw light on old problems. Remains to be seen if they are sufficient.

      Yes i did, and you said in post #45:

      I see nothing there about deducing that the GSG was written by a left hand, indeed you are discussing how "blurred" is used in 1888.

      OK, so you didnīt understand this. Blurred texts are being deciphered. Why would a serial killer who communicates with the police write a text days before he leaves a piece of apron under it giving people the chance to blur it by rubbing their shoulders against the wall?

      So that hypothesis gives another conclusion. Your conclusion.

      Do you have data for it?

      Nowhere in any post do you state why you chose left handed for the hypotheses. In post #90 you said the following:

      There is no attempt at an answer there.

      Strange when a whole thread is based on the answer to that question

      "What leads you to hypothesise that the GSG was written by a left hand?".
      I told you but you do not accept my answer to you.

      I see yet another attempt to hide quoting new data which you say you cannot discuss.
      Oh, I see. You thought I wanted to hide something. No. I would like to discuss it with you but as you know...the cat is in the cage.

      Therefore we have an hypotheses which is based on an idea we are not allowed to know about, that is really a waste of time.
      warmest regards

      Steve
      Kind regards, Pierre
      Last edited by Pierre; 04-24-2016, 01:52 PM.

      Comment


      • Originally posted by Pierre View Post
        The problem here displayed is also important from the perspective of the original inquest sources. In these sources, there is no statement made by Halse about a ”round hand” or a ”schoolboy”.
        Something you need to understand Pierre is that newspaper reports of court proceedings, such as inquests, will invariably be more accurate as to what a witness says in the witness box than the depositions upon which you place so much reliance, subject, basically, to the acoustics in the court room and the ability of the court reporter to decipher his notes. Further the newspaper reports will invariably contain more information than in the depositions.

        Regarding the first point, you need to be aware that the depositions are, in effect, translations of what a witness says. For example, if a deposition records a witness saying "My name is John Bloggs" it doesn't mean he said that. What could have happened is that he was asked "Is your name John Bloggs?" to which he replied "yes". Whereas the newspaper report might contain the actual question and answer.

        Regarding the second point, not everything a witness says is recorded in a deposition, only what the person writing the deposition thinks is relevant or material to include nor will the depositions ever include the wording of the questions asked. Furthermore, interjections or statements of a coroner (including his closing address to the jury) will never be included in the "original inquest sources".

        In short, it is essential for any proper historian to consider the newspaper reports of the inquests. They will usually be written by experienced court reporters and are, on the whole, reliable. They certainly cannot be discounted without good reason and to discount them simply because they contain more information than in a deposition is not a good reason. No serious historian would ever do such a thing.

        Comment


        • Pierre

          Brilliant, repeat a post, not mentioning that you are doing so, to say what people have already disagreed with. (post 81 if anyone is interested.)

          I stand by my statement in post 102:

          "Where do you get this conclusion from Pierre?
          Is there any evidence to support this view that they expected it to look alike.
          Is it not something you have decided, from your own thoughts?
          It is wrong to present such as fact!"


          Nothing from the reposted #81 dismisses that.

          Originally posted by Pierre View Post

          1. What do you mean by "purely"?

          2. What do you mean by "physical properties"?
          Sorry not here to give an English lesson.

          Originally posted by Pierre View Post

          Do you have any data to support that?
          Now you are making me laugh!
          That was a list of possibilities, I do not need to give data to support this as I am not claiming it is a fact or true, do you not understand English Pierre?
          However, there is as much data to suggest it was written by the killer as not- that is none.
          There is strong suspicion because it was found close to the apron.
          If it was indeed smudged, similar to blurred, it could mean that it was old writing. However I do not believe that is the correct interpretation of blurred in this context and said so!
          The very fact that I rejected that hypothesis for that use of "blurred" in the same point, really makes me wonder why you asked the question?


          Originally posted by Pierre View Post

          Steve - you have studied medicine, havenīt you? Would you let a priest or a biologist perform surgery on you? No. So why would you let a person with no academic history education try and tell you what sources mean, as he has no tool for analysing them?
          Two points, I have never claimed to have studied medicine, that would make me a doctor, I am not.
          I will never claim to be something I am not!

          Secondly, come down off that perch again, this is not a University, or a Class, your view is that only those with a degree in history may quote on an historical question; therefore why don't we all go home.
          You make it clear that in your eyes we are not qualified to and should not talk about the Whitechapel murders, unless we follow the rules you set.

          Originally posted by Pierre View Post

          Steve - that does NOT mean that "it was neatly written"!
          and
          Originally posted by Pierre View Post

          But from where do you get the wording "neatly written"? That is not in the newspapers (or have you found that) and not in the Swanson source.

          Of course it does, the papers all use the adjective "good" before "round hand", " or "schoolboy hand".

          of a favorable character or tendency; bountiful, fertile; handsome, attractive… See the full definition


          : of high quality

          : of somewhat high but not excellent quality

          : correct or proper


          That equates to neat handwriting.

          While Swanson says "ordinary hand" meaning ok, he does not say "poor", " hard to read", "untidy" or "badly formed words".


          Originally posted by Pierre View Post

          Why do you use the word "evidence"? This is not a court room. And the hypothesis is not confirmed or disproved. It is just an hypothesis.
          To suggest an hypotheses there must be some data to draw from, otherwise it is just a wild guess, or "gut feeling" as you have previously said.
          You use "data", I use "evidence", and yes this is not a court of law as you say, so I see no problem, you understand me perfectly.

          Originally posted by Pierre View Post

          And also, you can not see an unborn baby.
          Actually you can! Don't you know that?

          Originally posted by Pierre View Post

          OK, so you didnīt understand this. Blurred texts are being deciphered. Why would a serial killer who communicates with the police write a text before he leaves a piece of apron under it, long in advance, giving people the chance to blur it by rubbing their shoulders against the wall?

          So that hypothesis gives another conclusion. Your conclusion.

          Do you have data for it?
          Do I have data for what? I have made no conclusion, you have!

          This type of reply will no longer do, words which say nothing!

          You have suggested the writer was left handed, you even gave a link to you tube showing a left handed writer showing he did not blur the writing.

          Yet you will not say why you believe this.

          I have only asked you why you how come to this conclusion, you cannot answer!

          Originally posted by Pierre View Post

          I told you but you do not accept my answer to you.
          Where Pierre?
          You have answered another question; not the one you were asked.

          Lets make this simple for you

          Have you suggested the writer was using their left hand to write the GSG, yes or no?

          Have you said why you believe this may be the case, yes or no?

          Originally posted by Pierre View Post

          Oh, I see. You thought I wanted to hide something. No. I would like to discuss it with you but as you know...the cat is in the cage.
          I doubt that very much, I view discuss as a two way operation, not one where one of the participants tells the others what they can or cannot say,
          where any and all are prepared to admit they are wrong.

          regards

          Steve
          Last edited by Elamarna; 04-24-2016, 03:40 PM.

          Comment


          • Nothing changes

            I see the Ring Master still has them jumping through the hoops.

            Comment


            • [QUOTE=Pierre;378407]
              Originally posted by Elamarna View Post

              Yes, but the journalists used the same types of descriptions for it as for the GSG, THAT is my point. <

              So - and thanks for highlighting this - the view on the red herring became the view on the GSG. This means that we have many problems with the 1888 views on the GSG, i.e. the following:

              1. Some journalists expected the handwriting to have been looking something like the Dear Boss letter and they distributed this perspective through their newspaper articles - and here we are with it!

              2. The GSG was interpreted in different ways, so you have a variety of interpretations about the deciphering of the GSG - and on top of that you have interpretations based on the view on the Dear Boss letter.

              3. Swanson did not state anything of the above when he wrote about the GSG!

              4. Swanson had another description, in fact two:
              a) The text was written in "a normal hand".
              b) The text was "blurred".

              So I think these discrepancies between the descriptions of the journalists and Swanson - as well as the view of ripperologists on the GSG - are important to discuss.


              Hi Pierre,

              I have been considering the point # 1 about "Some journalists" who privately or in a peculiar type of cabal joined together to spread this theory regarding the "Dear Boss" letter.

              Simple question for you - and as a good researcher you must have the answer.

              What were the names of these journalists?

              Also, had any of them reputations for being pretty well regarded amateur sleuths on other cases that they stuck their collective noses into?

              It's not as stupid a question as you might think or dismiss. About the 1870s and 1880s some reporters and journalists were beginning to demonstrate such a singular strength in their finding, reporting, and analyzing the news, they were beginning to make the job of reporter less hackwork and more a profession.

              Most of the case names I can think of were American: Nelly Bly with her exposes on mistreated asylum inmates; New York Herald reporter Henry Morton Stanley, who was so good he was sent by his boss to find Dr. David Livingston in Africa in 1871, did so, and formed the exploration career we remember him for; Richard Harding Davis, who would be one of the first on the scene in his native Pennsylvania to report the Johnstown Flood tragedy of 1889, and later became a notable war correspondent; Stephen Crane, who would report on the Yukon Gold Strike, the Greek-Turkish War of 1897, and the Spanish American War of 1898 (but is better remembered for his novellas and his novels and poems); Henry De Blowitz, one of England's cleverest journalists, who once got the secret sections of a treaty published within days of the treaty being signed.

              Besides De Blowitz, and aside from a figure like Editor/writer William T. Stead of the Pall Mall Gazette, the only reporter in London I am aware of in 1888 was Harold Frederic, who worked for a U.S. newspaper. Frederic is however best known for his novels, especially "The Damnation of Theron Ware" (1897), an early example of the "naturalist school" in American fiction.

              So who did you have in mind for this cabal or group of clever individual geniuses? What were there names? And again did they actually have reputations (as did some of the New York reporters on the New York World and the New York Journal in the next decade) for doing really good sleuthing on their own?

              One thing - not quite in the same at all. Everyone on this "Blurred" thread is discussing the "round hand" description. It was a common one for that time.
              In 1877 a fictional character would use it in a stage work. In Gilbert and Sullivan's "HMS Pinafore", Sir Joseph Porter sings "When I was a Lad", and mentions that he "copied all the letters in my big round hand."

              I'm not sure, but as Sir Joseph at that point is a clerk in a law office, I suspect the "big round hand" he's describing is what used to be called "copper-plate" hand writing, which was taught in most countries to make penmanship more agreeable and legible to read. A man I knew back in the 1970s when I worked in Manhattan told me he was trained to write "copper-plate" which required much practice in doing circles and other lines and shapes until they flowed naturally from your hand.

              Regards,

              Jeff

              Comment


              • Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
                I don't know where you get that idea from as if it's a law everyone has to obey but, in any event, newspaper reports of inquests are not "secondary sources", something you would know if you were not an amateur non-historian, because the court reporters were in court reporting what they heard with their own ears and saw with their own eyes.
                The inability to tell a Primary Source from a Secondary source is just one of the things that those who are True Academic Historians point to as proof positive that Pierre hasn't studied History, Mrs Gut says that if any of the 14 year olds she has taught made such a basic mistake their work would get a big fat F.

                Yet Pierre claims to have a M.A, in history.
                G U T

                There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.

                Comment


                • [QUOTE=Mayerling;378429][QUOTE=Pierre;378407]

                  Hi Pierre,

                  I have been considering the point # 1 about "Some journalists"
                  who privately or in a peculiar type of cabal joined together
                  Did they? What are the sources for that?

                  to spread this theory regarding the "Dear Boss" letter.
                  And you say "to spread": So that was their purpose? What are the sources for that?

                  Simple question for you - and as a good researcher you must have the answer.
                  You do not define the quality of my research capability on a website. And you do not decide what answers I must have, since you do not decide what questions I pose.

                  What were the names of these journalists?
                  You mean the journalists in your proposed "peculiar cabal". Well, since you postulate there was one, do you know who they were?
                  Also, had any of them reputations for being pretty well regarded amateur sleuths on other cases that they stuck their collective noses into?
                  There you seem to have another hypothesis to research.

                  It's not as stupid a question as you might think or dismiss. About the 1870s and 1880s some reporters and journalists were beginning to demonstrate such a singular strength in their finding, reporting, and analyzing the news, they were beginning to make the job of reporter less hackwork and more a profession.

                  Most of the case names I can think of were American: Nelly Bly with her exposes on mistreated asylum inmates; New York Herald reporter Henry Morton Stanley, who was so good he was sent by his boss to find Dr. David Livingston in Africa in 1871, did so, and formed the exploration career we remember him for; Richard Harding Davis, who would be one of the first on the scene in his native Pennsylvania to report the Johnstown Flood tragedy of 1889, and later became a notable war correspondent; Stephen Crane, who would report on the Yukon Gold Strike, the Greek-Turkish War of 1897, and the Spanish American War of 1898 (but is better remembered for his novellas and his novels and poems); Henry De Blowitz, one of England's cleverest journalists, who once got the secret sections of a treaty published within days of the treaty being signed.

                  Besides De Blowitz, and aside from a figure like Editor/writer William T. Stead of the Pall Mall Gazette, the only reporter in London I am aware of in 1888 was Harold Frederic, who worked for a U.S. newspaper. Frederic is however best known for his novels, especially "The Damnation of Theron Ware" (1897), an early example of the "naturalist school" in American fiction.

                  So who did you have in mind for this cabal or group of clever individual geniuses? What were there names? And again did they actually have reputations (as did some of the New York reporters on the New York World and the New York Journal in the next decade) for doing really good sleuthing on their own?
                  You seem to have done some reading on that subject, which explains your ideas of a cabal. What were their names, according to you, since you are the one postulating this cabal? And what were their reputations?

                  One thing - not quite in the same at all. Everyone on this "Blurred" thread is discussing the "round hand" description. It was a common one for that time.
                  In 1877 a fictional character would use it in a stage work. In Gilbert and Sullivan's "HMS Pinafore", Sir Joseph Porter sings "When I was a Lad", and mentions that he "copied all the letters in my big round hand."
                  That is not an adequate source for the GSG.

                  I'm not sure, but as Sir Joseph at that point is a clerk in a law office, I suspect the "big round hand" he's describing is what used to be called "copper-plate" hand writing, which was taught in most countries to make penmanship more agreeable and legible to read. A man I knew back in the 1970s when I worked in Manhattan told me he was trained to write "copper-plate" which required much practice in doing circles and other lines and shapes until they flowed naturally from your hand.

                  Regards,

                  Jeff
                  Kind regards, Pierre

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
                    I don't know where you get that idea from as if it's a law everyone has to obey but, in any event, newspaper reports of inquests are not "secondary sources", something you would know if you were not an amateur non-historian, because the court reporters were in court reporting what they heard with their own ears and saw with their own eyes.
                    David. You talk and talk but make mistake after mistake. Consider these questions and then tell me why you believe that newspaper articles for inquest descriptions per se are primary sources:

                    What are the relations between the writing on the wall and the Dear boss letter respectively and the journalists who wrote the articles?

                    Did the journalists see the GSG?

                    How close in time to the GSG were the journalists who wrote about the GSG?

                    How close to the actual writing were the journalists who wrote about the GSG?

                    Did the journalists see the Dear Boss letter?

                    How close in time to the Dear Boss letter were the journalists who wrote about the Dear Boss letter?

                    How close to the actual writing were the journalists who wrote about the Dear Boss letter?

                    What is the value of a narrative told by an eyewitness when it is reconstructed by a journalist?

                    What possibility had the journalists to understand the narrative of the eyewitness of the GSG?

                    What possibility had the journalists to write the "truth" about the GSG?

                    What knowledge did the journalists have about the writing(s) from the killer, before they understood the eyewitness narratives about the GSG?

                    These questions focus only on the Dear Boss letter and the GSG. But you could apply them to many newspaper sources in the case of Jack the Ripper.

                    For example:

                    Why is there often a great variation between statements in different newspapers when they try to describe the same phenomenon?

                    Are the newspaper articles for the murder on Kelly reliable? Why are they talking about McCarthys mother as a finder of the victim, why are they talking about Kelly having a son?

                    Are the statements of Hutchinson "in the original"? Is there a source free from the interpretations of journalists for the statements of Hutchinson? Do we have such a source? Yes, we do.

                    Does this mean that everything in the narrative of this source is "true"? No. We need to use source criticism for it, to be able to tell.

                    Are the statements of Morris Lewis "in the original"? Are the statements of Morris Lewis "in the original"? Is there a source free from the interpretations of journalists for the statements of Lewis? Do we have such a source? No, we do not.

                    The only sources we have is newspaper articles with variation.

                    Does this mean that everything in the narratives of those sources are "false" or "true"? No. We need to use source criticism for it, to be able to tell.

                    It is a matter of source ciriticism and a matter of research question what sources are to be regarded as primary and secondary sources. To be able to argue for or against the quality of a source, you must use source criticism.

                    The sources that give the perspective of the "schoolboy / round / good hand" are the primary sources for what the journalists wrote about the GSG.

                    They can not be considered primary sources for a witness in court, since there is a variation between sources and since the journalists use the same types of descriptions for the GSG as for the Dear Boss letter - and because there is no "schoolboy / round / good hand" in the original inquest sources, which must be considered primary sources since they are produced by the legal system and not by newspapers. As long as there are sources produced by the legal system for the inquests, they are primary sources, and newspaper articles are often considered to be secondary sources.

                    David, the problem with you saying that newspapers are not secondary sources for inquests is that people here, who believe what you say, are being fooled to believe that they can read the newspapers and see what actually happened in 1888.

                    So it generates ripperology, i.e. ideas that are not academic history.


                    And one more thing: Of course we could use secondary sources. But we have to tell people that they are secondary sources, if there is a primary source. Also, we can use both primary and secondary sources for establishing facts. But we must tell others how and why we do it.

                    We can not tell others, like you do, that a certain type of sources per se is to be regarded as primary sources without having performed source criticism on them.

                    Regards, Pierre
                    Last edited by Pierre; 04-25-2016, 01:37 AM.

                    Comment



                    • We can not tell others, like you do, that a certain type of sources per se is to be regarded as primary sources without having performed source criticism on them.
                      So the great Historian is wrong about primary sources again.

                      What a surprise.
                      G U T

                      There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by GUT View Post
                        So the great Historian is wrong about primary sources again.

                        What a surprise.
                        Put simply a first year undergrad in history would (or should) know that Source criticism is whole different issue than classifying a source as Primary or Secondary.

                        Pierre would do much better if he stopped pretending to be an Historian while displaying such an appalling ignorance of the basics.
                        G U T

                        There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Pierre View Post
                          David. You talk and talk but make mistake after mistake. Consider these questions and then tell me why you believe that newspaper articles for inquest descriptions per se are primary sources:
                          Pierre,

                          Your questions, I'm afraid, reveal a basic lack of understanding.

                          The newspaper reports of the inquest proceedings are not primary sources for the GSG. They are primary sources for what Detective Halse said in evidence about the GSG. They are not "articles" about the inquest proceedings, they are actual reports as to what was said in in the coroner's court without, for the most part, any journalistic interpretation, additions or flourishes. Detective Halse saw the GSG with his own eyes and the newspaper reports, written by court reporters, were reporting what he said he saw. They were doing this on the basis of what they heard with their own ears (i.e. the words said by Detective Halse). It is, in other words, first hand reporting of the testimony of Detective Halse. That is why it is a primary source for the evidence of Halse, equivalent to his deposition.

                          In the same way that I've already explained to you why this "source criticism" that you seem to love so much is inappropriate for witness evidence and depositions, the same is true for reports of court proceedings: the reason being that there is no narrative involved here, in the usual sense of the word, and, to the extent the reports are in the form of "text", it is not the same type of text that historical methodology is designed to cope with. Given that the reporters were doing no more than recording in their notebooks what they were hearing in court, there is no question of any bias (or "tendency") on their part. Unless there is any reason to believe that they were involved in a conspiracy to falsely represent what a witness said in the witness box - a bizarre notion considering the number of people present in the court room, including the coroner and witness himself, who could have exposed the conspiracy by writing to their editors - there is absolutely no reason to believe that they were doing anything other than faithfully recording what the witness said, something which is not an easy task, thus explaining minor differences between the reports - and if you think it is an easy task you should try it yourself one day.

                          You also need to understand that copies of the depositions taken at the inquest were not provided to the police. So what records did the police, who were investigating the murders keep? Guess what, it was newspaper reports! I appreciate that your research does not extend to visiting archives and examining the original files relating to these murders but if you were to inspect the police files held at the National Archives in Kew, e.g. MEPO 3/140, you will find that the Metropolitan Police kept cuttings of the newspaper reports of the inquests: the reason being that the newspaper reporters were skilled at accurately recording oral evidence given in court which the police officers who attended the inquests were not (and the Eddowes inquest was in the City Police jurisdiction in any case). The newspaper reports were basically reliable and were relied on by the police themselves, as well as the Home Office.

                          With some of your comments about the reliability of newspapers you appear to be trying to re-argue previous arguments in other threads but the key point for this thread is that the reports of the inquests are in a different category to other newspaper reports about the murders such as whether Kelly had a son because, for the inquest reports, the court reporters were simply reporting what was being said in the witness box. As to Kelly's son, presumably someone told a reporter (wrongly) that Kelly had a son so that story was reported. Just look at the evidence of Mary Ann Malcolm at the Stride inquest. She said that the body at the mortuary was her sister, Elizabeth Watts (who was later found to be alive). Is that the fault of the newspapers who reported this or the fault of Mary Ann Malcolm for misidentifying the body? If we had the depositions from the Stride inquest we would find it stated by her that the body was Elizabeth Watts. So official primary sources can contain inaccurate information, just like newspapers. In the Eddowes depositions the spelling of the second word in the GSG is given as "Jews" and "Juwes" by different witnesses. They can't both be right (and I assume you would say neither is right) yet they are in the official depositions. You cannot just point to one inaccurate fact in a newspaper and then say that this means that every single report in every other newspaper must be discarded. It is irrational madness. It would be like saying that because Sarah Lewis' address is wrongly stated in her deposition at the Kelly inquest then we must discard not only the entirety of her deposition but also every other deposition.

                          In the case of Halse's evidence about the GSG we have at least four independent court reporters separately reporting that the GSG was written in a good hand, either "schoolboy" or "round" (both of which Halse no doubt said). The fact that there are variations in the reporting of the exact words actually shows that they are genuine because it means the reporters did not collaborate to put forward a false story. Not everyone hears everything the same in a courtroom, often due to the fact that witnesses mumble and don't always finish off words properly, and no transcript of court proceedings is ever 100% accurate. For the reasons I have already given, the fact that Halse's testimony on this point was not mentioned in the deposition is not in any way surprising, especially considering that he was answering a question from a member of the jury. The phrase "round hand" to describe handwriting was very common so there is nothing odd about the fact that this was also used by different journalists in other newspapers to describe the handwriting of the Dear Boss letter but here we have different words, i.e. "good" and "schoolboy", not used to describe the Dear Boss letter so it must be obvious to you that the reporters who used those words were not making any connection whatsoever with the Dear Boss letter and no-one who read their reports would have made the connection either. The inquest reports were not in the words of the journalists reporting them in any case but the words spoken by Detective Halse and heard by the journalists. If there was any bias or "tendency" involved it would be on the part of Detective Halse, not the reporters, but why would he have given false evidence about the nature of the GSG?

                          The short point, Pierre, is that any attempt to deny that the GSG was written in a good schoolboy (round) hand has no credibility and, indeed, no basis whatsoever because we have multiple reports of a first-hand witness account by a very reliable witness, being a police officer, given under oath that it was.

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                          • David, your patience with Pierre is commendable, I take my hat off to you!
                            Regards
                            Albert

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                            • I second your comments Albert,

                              Best regards.
                              wigngown 🇬🇧

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                              • [QUOTE=Pierre;378407]
                                Originally posted by Elamarna View Post

                                Yes, but the journalists used the same types of descriptions for it as for the GSG, THAT is my point. <

                                So - and thanks for highlighting this - the view on the red herring became the view on the GSG. This means that we have many problems with the 1888 views on the GSG, i.e. the following:

                                1. Some journalists expected the handwriting to have been looking something like the Dear Boss letter and they distributed this perspective through their newspaper articles - and here we are with it!

                                Kind regards, Pierre
                                Gee, it's funny.

                                You like to break down sentence structure - always been doing that. I take it that it's a combination of a hopeless pedant and an attempt at a version of reduction ad absurdum. If so it is not appreciated, and very irritating.

                                Don't do it to me again please...and I strongly urge you (so your responses are more acceptable) not to do it to anyone else. You might find your counter-arguments more acceptable.

                                You were the source (that you enquired of me) for this cabal or group of journalists. It came from your opening in comment # 97 on this thread when you began responding to a comment Steve had put down earlier: "The Dear Boss letter is a red herring".

                                For a change you seemed to be heading towards an interesting comment about the journalists acting the same way about the letter and the graffito.
                                At least that was how I read it. I never bothered with this issue - it never seemed really important. But you suddenly made it look interesting. Boy, now that I know you did not know of such a thing (or now claim you don't) you've blown that out of the water! I was considering that you might know of a group of newsmen, admittedly working for rival papers, who were comparing notes and trying to aid in the case by pushing in the same direction regarding the various clues. Now it seems that is totally false.

                                Moreover I thought you believed they linked the GSG and the Dear Boss letter handwriting somehow. I see I may have misunderstood you in some way. Pardon me for that (and don't say, "You're pardoned"), but I was crediting you with some kind of new insight. Serves me right for thinking that.

                                As for the comment about HMS Pinafore, as it was a well known and popular work, and it's music sung throughout the English speaking world - people would have known of it in 1888. Also Gilbert probably knew the expression "round hand" when he used it. So he probably was using that phrase because his audiences identified it.

                                By the way. On another thread you mentioned how April 18th was significant. Historically it represents the date of Paul Revere's ride in 1775 and the day of the San Francisco Earthquake/Fire of 1906. What was the reason you found it interesting?

                                Jeff

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