** This is an archived, static copy of the Casebook messages boards dating from 1998 to 2003. These threads cannot be replied to here. If you want to participate in our current forums please go to https://forum.casebook.org **
Casebook Message Boards: General Discussion: Research Issues / Philosophy: Dr. Joseph Bell and Dr. Henry Littlejohn
Author: Jeff Bloomfield Monday, 12 February 2001 - 11:21 pm | |
About thirty years ago, I read a book by Irving Wallace called THE SUNDAY GENTLEMAN. It was about ten or more essays on subjects that were unusual, like the French Detective, Edmond Locard, the Nazi prisoners in Spandau Prison, and the famed bordello, the Everleigh Club in Chicago. Wallace had written one essay for an earlier book called THE FABULOUS ORIGINALS. It was an essay on Dr. Joseph Bell, the teacher of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle who Wallace said was the original for Sherlock Holmes. More correctly, Bell had some of Holmes's remarkable abilities to glance at people or items and make deductions about them that most people could never guess. According to Wallace, Bell was approached by the authorities to help on several murder cases, usually with the assistance of the forensic expert Dr. Henry Littlejohn. Both supposedly helped in the investigation of Eugene Chantrelle, who poisoned his wife in 1878 in Glasgow. But both were also supposed to have helped in looking for Jack the Ripper. If Wallace is to be believed, both men followed their own set of clues, and compared their findings - supposedly both had written the same name of the same suspect on different pieces of paper that they exchanged. Has anybody thought of looking into Bell or Littlejohn to see if this story could be true? I must add, Wallace got considerable flack from Adrian Conan Doyle when the essay was published, and actually had to defend his research. So I can't say if this is true or not...but it might be worth looking into. Jeff
|