Cornflowers bloom in Spring and Summer. (#9)

OSB 1

By Alan Hamill

What happened on Somerton Beach and in Adelaide from the 1930’s to the 1980’s?

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A search of his pockets revealed an unused second-class rail ticket from Adelaide to Henley Beach, a bus ticket from the city that could not be proved to have been used, a narrow aluminium American comb, a brown plastic comb, a half-empty packet of Juicy Fruit chewing gum, an Army Club cigarette packet containing seven cigarettes of the Kensitas brand, and a quarter-full box of Bryant & May matches*.

(*note:- It is likely that Police presumed Somerton Man carried matches because he was carrying cigarettes, but this is a false presumption, there were no matches.)

How can the name “Kensitas” as per this Kensitas cigarette packet (below), ->

Kensitas Pack

-> and this flower (below), ->

WikiLogo 1
Centaurea cyanus, commonly known as cornflower or bachelor’s button, is an annual flowering plant in the family Asteraceae native to Europe. Centaurea cyanus is now also naturalised in many other parts of the world, including North America and parts of Australia through introduction as an ornamental plant in gardens.
Cornflower is also the National Flower of Germany!

Cornflower A

-> as well as the flower underneath, ->

Carnation A

WikiLogo 1
The carnation’s scientific name, Dianthus, comes from a combination of two Latin words: “dios,” meaning gods, and “anthos,” meaning flower. Carnations are referred to as the flowers of the gods.

During Victorian times, flowers often sent a secret, coded message to a suitor or secret admirer. Sometimes, they also answered a secret question.

-> be related to the situation that occurred on Wednesday December 1st 1948 when we talk about Somerton Man?

Easy!

And now here’s the reason our Somerton Man had the seven Kensitas in his pocket at the time of his death:-

An Army Club packet containing seven cigarettes of the Kensitas brand was found in the pockets of the body on the beach hey!

Harold Bickford A

Harold Bickford

Bickford Label a

plus

AmerFlag 1

United States of America

plus

Army Club C

 

 

Kensitas Flowers Logo

Carnation Card A1Carnation Card B1cornflower card B

These beautiful, unique, Kensitas woven silk flowers, issued by Wix, were given away free inside each packet of Kensitas Cigarettes in the 1930’s and 1940’s.

Each Kensitas woven silk flower came with its own descriptive, and protective cover.

Now!

The purpose of the seven Kensitas cigarettes in the Army Club packet was to draw attention to the motor car traders in Adelaide, and one in particular. The #7 Kensitas Card was a Carnation, as in CAR NATION!

Car-nation 1

 

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adelaide, alexander, barbour, blood, carl, charlie, code, cutlack, dowling, ect, electro, hamill, jessica, jestyn, kean, keane, khayyam, lipstick, loneranger6, lonerangeraus, omar, pathology, poison, prosper, shud, somerton, spy, tamam, webb, alan h.

 

Is that lipstick on your collar Chuck? No, it’s all my blood! (#8)

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By Alan Hamill

What happened on Somerton Beach and in Adelaide from the 1930’s to the 1980’s?

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Lipstick A

In this post I will attempt to deconstruct the coroner’s queries from a file that has a last entry dated in 1970. This may have been a file that lasted till that date by being in a “corner” somewhere and contains the coroner’s thoughts as to some of the questions he needed to ask when the case proved more complex than originally considered.

report 13

View original document here and marked up document here.

Even though the sites that discuss this case on the various interweb locations (including this one) have tended to indicate that the printed reports used from time to time came from the hand (or typewriter) of Leane. In fact quite a few of these reports to the Coroner were produced by Detective Len Brown and Brown was the unofficial lead investigator and did all the legwork. However, the case was overseen and managed by Leane.

report 1

The report attached does not list a date of compilation, nor does it nominate its author, however, it does mention trying on the clothes found in the suitcase and this is why it’s likely to be by the hand of Len Brown.

 

A Barley Grass seed head was found in the suitcase in a pair of trousers in a similar position to the trousers SM was wearing. This would indicate that the grass seeds didn’t come from walking locally at Somerton during the evening of the 30th of November, but at some time before the suitcase was lodged at the Railway Station.

Barley A

 

 

Why is it that Detective Brown would misspell Somerton? When you go through the document there are quite a few corrections so maybe he did this report hurriedly?

 

report 4

It is here that it may get interesting as it mentions the mark on his face which has been discussed widely as an entry point for a prefrontal lobotomy.

During the late 1930’s and up to the mid 1940’s, severely disturbed mental patients may have been treated by surgeons employing prefrontal lobotomy (leukotomy) surgery in what was called “the wire loop leukotomy” method where a hole would be drilled in a patients skull at the point where the top of the nose met the forehead. From the late 1940’s the “transorbital leucotome” method was employed where the entry holes were made in the eye sockets by lifting up the eyelids and going in behind them in front of the eye.

xray

A semi-trained pair of hands possibly tried a wire loop leukotomy through the top of the nose as they had little faith in their workmanship to go in through the eyes and get all the angles right. They were probably right handed as the facial entry was off centre to the right allowing them to work from the left hand side of poor old Charlie.

Leucotome tool

Or:-

Was the query about “Mark on Face” about a scar that wasn’t mentioned under his chin? An outward sign of an earlier broken jaw listed on a report for another “Joe” or should I say Alex?

Where conventional anaesthesia was unavailable, or inconvenient to utilise, electroconvulsive therapy could be used to render the patient unconscious for the purposes of administering this brain treatment.

SM x    ECT A

 

You will see (above) where the Coroner wanted to know about Carl’s shirt having a large blood stain on the back behind his head near a tear and whether this blood came from the mark on his face. This blood-staining was not on his coat even though he was wearing his coat and any stain should have been found on the coat before it made it to his shirt. He wanted to question the person who removed SM’s clothing to verify this query. This notation appears more than once in this document.

Given that the medical examiner and his staff were supposed to be highly regarded at the time, it is unlikely they would have placed SM on a dirty slab so the question remains, why wasn’t this reported in earlier studies and documents?

 

Oddly enough, in this case there has been discussion about another phone number being that of a local bank. Now we see a notation about a Bank Clerk and reference to another case.

 

What could these two possible chemicals be? Are they the Coroner’s next best guess as to a poison?

 

This note indicates SM’s right hand and fingers were closed (bent) as if they were holding something or were being clenched in pain or anger.

 

As indicated in the section at the top about grass seeds in the suitcase, there were also the same seeds  found in the clothes he was wearing when on the beach. As the seeds were in both the suitcase and his clothes, they had to be present before the suitcase was lodged at the Railway Station.

Were all these clothes part of the rapid delivery from Broken Hill by our lad on the motor bike, tipped out on the grass to be sorted, and some put back in to the case while the rest was left to float away?

How long could someone tolerate a grass seed in their singlet? Never, never, never! Or perhaps only if you were unconscious.

 

More queries about blood stains and seeds.

 

 

The trousers SM was wearing on the morning of Wednesday December 1st 1948 had tobacco remnants in the right hip pocket but no remnants in either side pocket. And the coat had tobacco remnants in both side pockets.

So it’s likely that whoever owned the clothes, whether it was SM or someone else prior, smoked “rollies” or “roll your own” as they would not be able to carry “tailor-made” or filter cigarettes in their back pocket as they would be irreparably broken and unusable almost instantly when you sat down. This renders the ArmyClub/Kensitas cigarettes as planted items most likely.

And the clothes’ owner was right handed given the placement in the right hip pocket. We’re yet to confirm SM as left handed or right handed.

Army Club B

 

 

minx a

And was it a Hillman Minx that had the ROK lodged into it or was it a Ford Utility truck?

According to a later update (5-5-70 Addenda) the Hillman Minx Sedan that was part of the ROK search was not the car that the mutilated ROK was actually thrown into. The ROK was thrown into the back of a utility truck in Glenelg!

Like this one below!

Ford Ute A

ute a

Like the one the brother in law of Freeman had access to. The actual Freeman member to be involved in this case was likely Mick Freeman, not a chemist, but a visiting bank manager from New South Wales. The delivery of the ROK to Police was carefully delivered by the chemist knowing Mick had a criminal wrap sheet as long as the road is from Charters Towers is to Adelaide. Or did the Chemist know anything about it at all?

Is the concept of a chemist being part of this case completely irrelevant or malicious?

Did the bank manager deliver the instructions and £50,000 to George for his past and upcoming efforts?

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adelaide, alexander, barbour, blood, carl, charlie, code, cutlack, dowling, ect, electro, hamill, jessica, jestyn, kean, keane, khayyam, lipstick, loneranger6, lonerangeraus, omar, pathology, poison, prosper, shud, somerton, spy, tamam, webb, alan h.

The Hands of a Sous Chef. (#7)

OSB 1

By Alan Hamill    

What happened on Somerton Beach and in Adelaide from the 1930’s to the 1980’s?

Back to Home Page

Take me to the Contents Page please!

Fingerprints A

The Somerton Man (aka SM) was described in Leane’s submission as having “3 small scars inside the left wrist, one scar inside the left elbow, curved and about an inch long, one scar or boil mark about an inch in size in the upper left forearm.”

These marks are colloquially referred to in some food circles as “cooks’ wrist”

They are obtained when a cook reaches across a hot or sharp edged pot or pan on a stove and touches these implements with the underside of their arm.

But were these descriptions just included to sooth those who wanted to see Carl despatched and weren’t counting on it being Alexander Arthur Dowling?

This commentary only serves to suggest his baking service and to explain the marks on SM’s left arm.

wrist marks
Marks left by reaching across hot pans.

However:-

Marks Z

in the words of Dwyer in his submission (above) :-
“The nails were I thought just carefully trimmed, probably with scissors, not with a file or nail clippers”

“just carefully trimmed”        “just carefully trimmed”.  “JUST carefully trimmed”.   As in recently!

finger length a

If a SAPOL picture were available of Carl’s hand I would suggest it would look like the hand on the right in the diagram above.

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adelaide, alexander, barbour, blood, carl, charlie, code, cutlack, dowling, ect, electro, hamill, jessica, jestyn, kean, keane, khayyam, lipstick, loneranger6, lonerangeraus, omar, pathology, poison, prosper, shud, somerton, spy, tamam, webb, alan h.