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The Man In The Cylinder
I don’t know if this case has ever been discussed on the board, my apologies if it already has. I read the tale in a book by Richard Whittington-Egan, which I think was called “Liverpool Colonnade” but which I haven’t seen since the mid-sixties.
It referred to a cylinder, which was found near the junction of Great Homer Street and Kirkdale Road, although my memory is a bit hazy on this. The site had been bombed and burned out during the blitz and when the area was cleared after the war, the cylinder, which was about seven feet long and two feet in diameter, was dislodged from the ruins of one of the buildings which had stood there and left on the waste ground where it lay for a year or so. While some children were playing round it one day, one of them noticed a mummified human foot poking out of one end and fetched the police. It was naturally assumed that the body inside must have been a casualty of the blitz and the cylinder was taken to the city mortuary to be opened. When it was, it caused something of a stir. The body inside was not a casualty of the 1940s but was that of a man dressed in the fashion of the late Victorian period and he had been dead for about seventy years. Far from being in the cylinder by accident, he was actually lying on a rough bed with a pillow at his head. The ends of the cylinder had been hammered shut from outside.
Some documentation was found on him, with letters dated from the 1870s and a forensic scientist was able to decipher his name and address from what he found. I can’t remember the name but do remember he was a tallow dealer in the city and lived in Clifton Road. A search through old company records also revealed that he had been involved in bankruptcy proceedings in the 1870s and there was some record of the fact that he was missing. I can’t remember any more than that and have never been able to find the story again. I have been fascinated by this tale ever since I read it but have never been able to find out anything more than was in the book. How on earth did the man get into the cylinder and why? Who hammered the ends shut? A real mystery. Has anyone else ever come across this story or found out anything more on it?
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I'm sure Tom Slemen wrote about it once, but didn't know any more than you do.
It's a strange story, but a plausible one. Maybe the guy wanted to fake his own death? Quite how he intended to stay alive, who knows?
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I'm sure this must have been discussed here but I've just looked through the folklore/oddities section and done some searches and found nothing. I think you've covered it Birdseye, there hasnt been anything published on it except by Tom Slemen, who just re-hashed what Whittington Egan wrote
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Love a mystery and also an interesting story... Had to read it twice.. Hemmmmm...Okay.. let me play Sherlock Holmes a bit.. LOL..
First:
Seems to me, he had someone that cared enough for him to see his request carried through ..Maybe some workers that he once befriended..from his soap or Tallow making company.. ? Bankrupted or not, he probably was a likeable man.. and being down and out.. doesn't mean someone didn't care... obviously they did...to send him off and with identity..
Since he was a Tallow dealer..and tallow was extracted by melting the meats of animals for candles, etc.. maybe this cylinder was a troth for the animals that were slaughtered for their fat..??? Maybe, he knew it would preserve his body the wax that melted around the cylinder mummifying him.... ?? A cylinder..being able to withstand the climates and distruction.. Metal...
All, of course, speculation ....
The cylinder being lodged in the old building..well, Maybe, it was going to its last burial place.. and got lost in the shovel of the blitz.. and it was a holding area ..Anyway.. Those our my Sherlock Holmes thoughts.. anyone else..... :rolleyes:
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I have this story in his (RWE) Liverpool tales and curiosities book. I'll try and scan it to here. The site became a childrens playground at the foot of Marwood Tower where Greaty joins Kirkdale road at a point. The site now houses a ships buoy and anchor.
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I had Liverpool Colonade, and loads of other books on Liverpool folklore and tales, ut whatever happened to them is a book itself. You are right this story was in it. Now, I recall the Echo doing a series on a lot of these stories, and they came to a good conclusion on this one. If my memory serves me, the end was' nt hammered over, but was done due to bomb damage or during the demolition. You were right they had a pathologist look at the body, no visable cause of death. They did establish it was the man who went bancrupt, I can't recall the name! No doubt the Echo may be able to help in their archives! :PDT11