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The Notorious Canary-Trainers

A Scion of the Baker Street Irregulars
for friends and fans of Sherlock Holmes
-- where it is always 1895!

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Some further 'Canary' notes

More on a notorious canary-trainer, Wilson, and Black Peter



Here are the results of some more relevant research related to our name.

* * * * * *

The Oxford edition of the Sherlock Holmes accounts suggests the reference to a "notorious canary-trainer" in Black Peter "may have been inspired by an article in the Strand on "A Phonograph School for Parrots" (Aug. 1903) about a parrot-trainer in Philadelphia who used phonographs to train birds to talk."

"Owen Dudley Edwards (The Quest for Sherlock Holmes, 1983) suggests that the name could have derived from Patrick Wilson (the pock-marked schoolmaster of the Newington Academy in Edinburgh, where ACD (Arthur Conan Doyle) was a pupil in 1867-8) taken in conjunction with the Christian name of Black Peter's killer."

The explanation some members prefer is that it's someone who teaches operatic singers how to sing.

* * * * * *

If you find yourself in East Sussex, you may want to stop by the Brambletye Hotel in Forest Row, just southeast of London, and have a drink in its Black Peter's Bar.

The hotel is mentioned in "The Adventure of Black Peter," when Inspector Stanley Hopkins remarks: "...Well, Mr. Holmes, I am very much obliged to you and to your friend for coming down to help me. As it turns out your presence was unnecessary, and I would have brought the case to this successful issue without you; but none the less I am very grateful. Rooms have been reserved for you at the Brambletye Hotel, so we can all walk down to the village together."

For more on the Brambletye, click here.

(You'll also find two Sherlocks coffee shops nearby, in East Grimstead (on the road between London and Forest Row) and about 13 miles away in Crowborough, based on word we received in September 2007.)

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Recent Cases Discussed by the
Notorious Canary-Trainers

Madison's Sherlock Holmes
society founded in 1969

Case Study for December:
'The Disappearance of Lady
Frances Carfax'

Cases reviewed in November and December 2008

Cases for September and October 2008

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