September 14, 1889: The Gasfitters’ Ball was held. [IDEN]
September 14, 1902: Holmes and Kitty Winter pleaded with Violet de Merville. [ILLU]
The Open and Inclusive Worldwide Online Sherlockian Society (Really, We're about Having Fun)
September 14, 1889: The Gasfitters’ Ball was held. [IDEN]
September 14, 1902: Holmes and Kitty Winter pleaded with Violet de Merville. [ILLU]
September 13, 1889: James Windibank left for his first trip to France. [IDEN]
September 13, 1902: Sir James Damery consulted Holmes. [ILLU]
September 13, 1902: Holmes visited Baron Adelbert Gruner. [ILLU]
September 12, 1902: Sir James Damery wrote to Holmes asking for an appointment. [ILLU]
September 12, 1903: Professor Presbury was seriously injured by his wolfhound, Roy. [CREE]
September 11, 1903: Professor Presbury received a ninth packet from Dorak. [CREE]
September 8, 1889: Victor Hatherley lost his thumb about 2:00 am [ENGR]
September 8, 1889: Holmes, Watson, Inspector Bradstreet, an unnamed plain-clothes man, and Victor Hatherley took the train to Eyeford [ENGR]
September 8, 1889: Dr. Becher’s house, where Colonel Lysander Stark was counterfeiting half-crowns, burned down [ENGR]
September 7, 1889: Colonel Lysander Stark visited and hired Victor Hatherley. [ENGR]
September 7, 1889: Victor Hatherley took the train from London to Eyford arriving at about 11:15 pm. [ENGR]
September 7, 1903: Holmes and Watson first met Professor Presbury. [CREE]
As you recover from the mental exertions of the Treasure Hunt, try out this short quiz on “The Solitary Cyclist”. There are five questions, each of which has a two part answer, for a total of 10 points. Submit your answers by email to Selena by Sunday, September 18.
September 6, 1903: Trevor Bennett asked Holmes for his services. [CREE]
September 5, 1903: Edith Presbury saw her father’s face outside her bedroom window. [CREE]
September 4, 1903: Trevor Bennett saw Professor Presbury crawling down a hallway. [CREE]
September 3, 1903: Professor Presbury took Lowenstein’s elixir of life an eighth time. [CREE]
Hi All:
You will find attached the answer file for the Treasure Hunt just ended. I had hoped to add the accepted alternative answers to this file but time does not permit. I did add just one alternative answer to the document; see question #12. As no competitors submitted the answer sought for #12, and 99% submitted the same alternative answer, that alternative was accepted.
I hope you had fun with the 2016 version of the hunt and, like me, you are looking forward to the 2017 edition when the amazing Michele Lopez serves as Treasure Hunt Master.
Please let me know if you have any questions.
Thanks,
Margie
“…I can congratulate ourselves upon several most happy results…”
The month of August is, as always, Treasure Hunt month for the John H Watson Society. Knowing the many hours required to finish the Treasure Hunt, we are always gratified to see the number of entries submitted. After many hours of scoring yesterday with the help of Sheila Holtgrieve (JHWS ‘Daisy’), I am happy to announce the results of the 4th Annual John H Watson Society Treasure Hunt.
Team Competition
With 144 available points this year, our returning 2015 High Honors team from Italy, Uno Studio In Holmes, has earned High Honors again this year with an incredible 142 points. Team members include Michele Lopez, Enrico Solito, Stefano Guerra, Vera Mazzotta, and Gabriele Mazzoni. Congratulations again to this amazing team.
Team Honors this year is shared between returning competitors The Retired Beekeepers of Sussex with 135 points and the newly formed team An Experience of Canon Which Extends Over Four Players and Three Separate States with 134 points. The UK-based Beekeepers are represented by Elinor Gray, Rowan MacBean, Tweedisgood, Spacefall, and Cheryl LeBlanc-Weldon of the Halifax Spence Munros in Nova Scotia. An Experience of Canon Which Extends Over Four Players and Three Separate States team members are Rob Nunn and Brad Keefauver (Two Guys Down In Illinois team from last year), Beth Gallego (California), and Ron Lies (Colorado). Giving this team an extra award for the-longest-possible-team-name was briefly considered.
Two teams earn the O.V.E (Order of Valiant Effort) award this year: First time competitor, The White Rose Irregulars of York, Pennsylvania, with 126 points, and the returning team from Canada, The Bootmakers Of Toronto, with 122 points. Beth Austin, Debbie Clark, Denny Dobry, Tom Drucker, and Flo Specter represent the Irregulars, while Peter Calamai, Chris Redmond, Cliff Goldfarb, Doug Wrigglesworth and John Gehan represent the Bootmakers.
Honorable Mention this year to two teams that began the hunt but due to unfortunate circumstances could not complete it: The Sherlock Holmes Society of India and The Sound of the Baskervilles of Seattle. We hope the fates are kinder next year and these teams can return to hunt again. 2016 marks the first time La Fayette of La Societe Sherlock Holmes de France could not participate due to schedule conflicts; we sincerely hope kind fates extend to that excellent team next year too.
Individual Competition
High Honors in the very difficult Individual category goes to first time US competitor Michael Ellis with 128 points. Mark Doyle of Australia, another first time competitor, has earned Honors in the Individual category with 105 points. Honorable Mention to Anne Nelson of Washington, DC, who also began the hunt but could not complete it due to unforeseen complications; we warmly invite her back next year to give it another try.
Thank you all for competing this year. A post will be made on the Quiz page soon with the answers to the hunt. We will be contacting all the participants concerning addresses for the delivery of the small mementos. I have enjoyed serving as Treasure Hunt Master for 2015 and 2016. I appreciate your participation, patience and good humor. You have taught me many good things.
Margie
JHWS Gwen
It’s the end of August, and there are only a few days remaining before the close of the Fourth Annual JHWS Treasure Hunt. I would like to thank and congratulate everyone who participated, including my teammates in “An Experience of Canon Extending Over Four Teammates and Three Separate States”. I think we did pretty well, but we will see what “Gwen”, our Treasure Hunt Master has to say about our answers!
Margie Deck, JHWS “Gwen”, is the mastermind behind this year’s test, and some of those questions certainly showed how she earned the name of “Pawky Puzzler”! She will be stepping down from the role of Treasure Hunt Master so that she can play along with the rest of us next year. Before she hands off the baton, I want to thank her for all her hard work!
Now that the Treasure Hunt is ending, I’d like to remind everyone that we are currently looking for a Quizmaster to preside over our regular quizzes. This person would create and post short quizzes every two weeks (except during August, the month of the Treasure Hunt). Some of our past quizzes can be found on the Quiz Page. We are also looking for submissions of individual quizzes, if you would like to just try it out. Have you been bitten by the bug to create your own Canonical Quiz? Send it to selena @ johnhwatsonsociety.com!
There are no events on file for the rest of the month. I would like to leave you with the following Writing. It was written by a Sherlockian of Note who co-founded the only Scion society recognized by the Baker Street Irregulars in a nursing home. Known as Inspector Baynes in his postings he was Jody Baker in real life. His postings and his gazettes he published are really some of the best around.. I will post some more about Jody, his wonderful Sherlockian wife, his soulmate. But now here is his incomparable style.
Dr. Watson, with pen for a brush and his words for his paints,
pictures for us vivid landscapes of the Devonshire countryside.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
“The journey was a swift and pleasant one …. In a very few hours the
brown earth had become ruddy, the brick had changed to granite, and
red cows grazed in well-hedged fields where the lush grasses and more
luxuriant vegetation spoke of a richer, if a damper, climate.”
*******
“Over the green squares of the fields and the low curve of a wood
there rose in the distance a gray, melancholy hill, with a strange
jagged summit, dim and vague in the distance, like some fantastic
landscape in a dream. “
*******
“The wagonette swung round into a side road, and we curved upward
through deep lanes worn by centuries of wheels, high banks on either
side, heavy with dripping moss and fleshy hart’s-tongue ferns.
Bronzing bracken and mottled bramble gleamed in the light of the
sinking sun. Still steadily rising, we passed over a narrow granite
bridge and skirted a noisy stream which gushed swiftly down, foaming
and roaring amid the gray boulders. Both road and stream wound up
through a valley dense with scrub oak and fir.”
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Those Hounds, among us, who think of Watson as a dunce or a dullard
(as depicted by Nigel Bruce, in days of yore) may want to pause and
reflect upon Watson’s writings.Respectfully,
Inspector Baynes.
So on to September my dear Watsonians, Ron aka Chips
August 25, 1903: Professor Presbury took Lowenstein’s elixir of life a seventh time. [CREE]
Hello Treasure Hunters!
We are now at the final ten days of this edition of the Treasure Hunt. I hope you are having some fun and are not too discouraged if you lack an answer or two. The final week is always the time for (re)attempting the questions that seem a bit impossible.
If you are not finished on September 1, please submit what you have accomplished. As always, the John H Watson Society will want to acknowledge your work here on the site and with a small keepsake via mail. Even if you do not have an answer to every part of every question, you could still come away with High Honors. The scoring is on a point system for each part of each question so results may vary greatly among the various submissions. You could earn bragging rights yet!
Thank you for participation, patience, and good humor.
Margie
JHWS Gwen
2016 Treasure Hunt Master
Let me know what you think of this song, as I promised the author I would let her know the comments I received.
There is no event on file for August 21st, but let’s consider these words:
And to this day we read of them
their ventures have no end.
(Kredens, Diane. “The Ballad of Sherlock Holmes,” BSP, No. 30 (December 1967), 1.)
August 20, 1889: Jabez Wilson started copying the Encyclopaedia Britannica. [REDH]