Alexander Howland Smith

Alexander Howland Smith

Alexander Howland Smith, (?-?), also known as the "Antique Smith", was a Scottish document forger in the 1880's. His forgeries still surface today.

Methods

Howland Smith began his forging career in the 1880's in Edinburgh. Scotland. At first, he began to visit second hand bookshops and bought all kinds of old books with blank fly leaves. He always carried them home himself, a habit that some bookshop owners thought unusual, since the books were old and heavy. When these materials ran out, he resorted to modern paper.

Smith began to sell his forgeries in 1886 and continued for the next five years. He sold them to bookshops, auctions and pawnshops, usually at modest prices.

Smith forged manuscripts from various historical people, from Mary Queen of Scots to Oliver Cromwell and Sir Walter Scott. Smith forged the signatures without tracing the originals. He created poems, autographs and historical letters. He made the documents appear old by dipping them in weak tea.

Afterwards experts said that the forgeries were very clumsy and should have not deceived anyone. Letters were dated wrongly, sometimes after the death of their supposed writer, and had been written on modern paper with new writing implements.

Rillbank collection

In May 1891 manuscript collector James Mackenzie decided to sell some of the letters of his Rillbank Collection by auction in Edinburgh. Before the start of the auction, the auctioneer stated that some people had claimed that the items were forgeries and refused to personally vouch for them, which significantly decreased the prices.

Three months later Mackenzie published one old letter, supposedly from the poet Robert Burns, in the "Cumnock Express" newspaper. One reader of the paper found out that the person the letter had been addressed to, weaver John Hill, had never existed and begun to suspect the authenticity of the whole collection. Colvill Scott of Surrey, historical document expert, also announced that there were dozens of letter forgeries all over Scotland.

Mackenzie answered by publishing two unpublished poems purporting to be by Burns in the paper. Another reader noticed that one of them, "The Poor Man's Prayer", had been published when Burns had been only a child and was the work of William Hayward Roberts, who had also written the other poem.

When Mackenzie was asked how he had acquired the letters, he claimed that he had found them in a secret drawer in an old cabinet. Contemporaries did not believe him. He had probably bought all of them in Edinburgh and it is unclear whether he knew them to be forgeries or not. He was not charged with anything.

James Stillie

An American collector, who had bought 2020 letters from a manuscript seller, James Stillie, in Edinburgh, heard the rumors about forgeries and sent them to the British Museum to be verified. The museum's handwriting experts found out that at least 201 of them were forgeries. The American charged Stillie in the Court of Session and demanded that Stillie return the $750 he had paid for the letters. Stillie pleaded mercy because of poor health and the American withdrew the suit. Stillie probably knew the letters were fakes.

Unraveling begins

In November 1892 the "Edinburgh Evening Dispatch" published articles about the forgeries, including facsimiles of some of the notes that had been with the letters. One reader recognized the handwriting of a clerk he knew as Alexander Howland Smith. Smith had been working in various law offices in Edinburgh and dealt in ephemera and old documents.

When police questioned Smith, he said that he had been employed as a chief clerk of the lawyer Thomas Henry Ferrie, who had asked him to get rid of old documents in the cellars of his law office. Smith had taken them home, found them to be valuable and begun to sell them. When the supply had run out, he had begun to create new forgeries. He claimed that he could create any kind of document. Smith was arrested.

Trial and sentence

On June 26 1893 Smith's trial begun in the High Court of Justiciary. He was not charged with forgery but selling the forgeries under false pretences. One of the witnesses was a bookseller Bristo Brown, who had bought large number of Smith's letters and said that he had believed them to be genuine.

The jury convicted Smith but recommended leniency and he was sentenced to 12 months in prison.

The exact amount of Smith's forgeries is unknown. They were widely sold in the British Isles and abroad and are still occasionally sold as real in the British Isles and the USA.

References

* [http://textualities.net/collecting/profiles/fergusd01.php David Fergus - "Antique Smith the Affable Forger"]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Alexander Smith — may refer to:*Alexander Smith (poet) (1830 ndash;1867) *Alexander Smith (chemist) (1865 1922), American chemist and author *Alexander Gordon Smith (born 1979), British author of books for children and young adults *Alexander Hale Smith (1838… …   Wikipedia

  • Alexander Manning — Alexander Henderson Manning (* 11. Mai 1819 in Dublin; † 20. Oktober 1903 in Toronto) war ein kanadischer Unternehmer, Politiker und 20. Bürgermeister von Toronto. Seine erste Amtszeit war von 1873 bis 1874, die zweite dauerte 1885 bis 1886.… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Alexander Campbell (Kanada) — Alexander Campbell Sir Alexander Campbell, PC, KCMG, QC (* 9. März 1822 in Hedon, Yorkshire; † 24. Mai 1892 in Toronto) war ein kanadischer Politiker. Als einer der Väter der Konföderatio …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Dean Smith — This article is about the basketball coach. For other uses, see Dean Smith (disambiguation). Dean Smith Dean Smith at a North Carolina game on February 10, 2007. Photo credit: Zeke Smith. Sport(s) Basketball …   Wikipedia

  • William Holmes Howland — (* 11. Juni 1844 in Lambton Mills (Etobicoke); † 12. Dezember 1893 in Toronto) ist ein kanadischer Kaufmann, Sozialreformer und Politiker. Howland war von 1886 bis 1887 der 25. Bürgermeister Torontos. William Holmes Howland ist der älteste Sohn… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • William Pearce Howland — Sir William Pearce Howland, PC, KCMG (* 29. Mai 1811 in Pawling, New York; † 1. Januar 1907 in Toronto) war ein kanadischer Politiker. Von 1867 bis 1868 war er Abgeordneter des …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Donald Alexander Macdonald — For other people named Donald MacDonald, see Donald MacDonald (disambiguation). Donald Alexander Macdonald Source: Library and Archives Canada Donald Alexander Macdonald, PC (February 17, 1817 – June 10, 1896) was a Canadian politician. Born in… …   Wikipedia

  • Donald Alexander Macdonald — Donald Alexander Macdonald, PC (* 17. Februar 1817 in St. Raphael s, Ontario; † 10. Juni 1896 in Montreal) war ein kanadischer Politiker und Unternehmer. Von 1867 bis 1875 war er …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Huitieme parlement de la province du Canada — Huitième parlement de la province du Canada La Huitième parlement de la province du Canada siégea de 1863 jusqu en juillet 1866. Les sessions furent tenues à Québec au Canada Est jusqu en 1865, et la dernière session fut tenue à Ottawa au Canada… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Huitième Parlement De La Province Du Canada — La Huitième parlement de la province du Canada siégea de 1863 jusqu en juillet 1866. Les sessions furent tenues à Québec au Canada Est jusqu en 1865, et la dernière session fut tenue à Ottawa au Canada Ouest. La dissolution fut effective lors de… …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”