Timeline of the Taman Shud Case

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  • 1903 Estimated year of birth of the Somerton Man.
  • 1906 April 16th, Alf Boxall is born in Hammersmith, UK.
  • 1937 November 16, Alf Boxall marries Dulcie Sue Smith.
  • 1948 November 30th, the Somerton Man presumably arrives in Adelaide by train sometime between 8:30am and 10:54am.
  • 1948 November 30th, a suitcase allegedly belonging to the Somerton Man was checked into Adelaide Train Station cloak room sometime between 11.00am and 12noon. R. Craig issues the luggage receipt.
  • 1948 November 30th, the Somerton Man buys a train ticket to Henley. The ticket is in his pocket. He doesn't take this train but instead takes a bus to Somerton.
  • 1948 November 30th, sometime after 11:15am the Somerton Man buys a 7d bus ticket from conductor Arthur Holdernesse at some point between North Terrace and South Terrace. The bus is headed for Somerton.
  • 1948 November 30th, an allegedly unrelated man in Glenelg finds a copy of the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam on the back seat of his car.
  • 1948 November 30th, at some point the Somerton Man eats a pasty.
  • 1948 November 30th, in the evening John Lyons and his wife notice the man slumped lying adjacent to the steps in front of the crippled children's home. The Somerton Man raised his right arm and dropped it.
  • 1948 November 30th, Gordon Strapps and Olive Neill notice the body somewhere between 7:30pm and 8pm.
  • 1948 December 1st, estimated time of death of man 2:00am.
  • 1948 December 1st, man found dead at 6.30am, Somerton Beach, Adelaide, by Lyons and two men with a horse. Constable John Moss arrives 6:45am. In an ambulance outside the Royal Adelaide Hospital at 9:40am the body was officially pronounced dead by Dr John Barclay Bennett and the body was then transferred to the city mortuary.
  • 1948 December 2nd, the post-mortem is carried out at 7:30am at the City Mortuary by Dr John Dwyer, a government pathologist.
  • 1948 December 2nd, Robert Cowan tests samples of the body for traces of poison. None detected.
  • 1948 December 2nd, The Advertiser newspaper in an article "Body found on beach" suggests that "E. C. Johnson" is the deceased man.[1]
  • 1948 December 3rd, Police photographer Patrick Durham fingerprints the body and photographs the body.
  • 1948 December 3rd, Johnson walks into a police station to prove he is alive. This possibility is thus eliminated.
  • 1948 December 4th, Police announce that the Somerton Man's fingerprints were not on South Australian police records.
  • 1948 December 5th, Police search military records in response to a reported sighting of a military man named 'Solomonson', resembling the Somerton Man, was sighted drinking at a hotel in Glenelg on November 30th, 1948.
  • 1948 December 10th, the dead body was embalmed in formaldehyde to preserve it. This was a usual custom in those days.
  • 1949 January, two people identified the body as that of 63 year old former wood cutter Robert Walsh. This possibility was ruled out as the dead body looked too young to be Walsh. Also Walsh was a Woodcutter and the hands of the Somerton man showed no signs of manual labor. Elizabeth Thompson,who had identified the body as Walsh, retracted her statement.
  • 1949 January 14th, Adelaide Railway Station find a brown suitcase apparently belonging to the dead man.
  • 1949 January 14th, police detectives Lionel Leane and Len Brown are assigned to the case.
  • 1949 February, there were eight different possible identifications of the body, including a missing stablehand, a worker on a steamship, a Swedish man, and a man from Darwin.
  • 1949 June 6th, the dead body of Clive Mangnoson is found 20 km away from Somerton by Neil McRae.
  • 1949 June 7th, Paul Lawson makes a plaster cast og the head & shoulders of the Somerton Man.
  • 1949 June 17th, the adjourned coronial inquest recommenced and Sir John Cleland re-examined the body and noticed the dead man's shoe's were remarkably clean and polished for someone who had been supposedly walking on a beach. About this time the piece of paper bearing the inscription "Tamám Shud" was found in the dead man's pocket. This led to the Glenelg doctor contacting the police about the copy of the Rubayat found in his car. The book was matched to the piece of paper, and it contained one penciled telephone number plus a sequence of 50 letters presumed to be a secret code. The sequence is in 5 lines and contains 3 spaces. One line is possibly crossed out.
  • 1959 November, E. B. Collins an inmate of Wanganui Prison, New Zealand, claimed he knew the identity of the Somerton Man.
  • 1978 The ABC TV documentary show called Inside Story screened an episode of "The Somerton Beach Mystery" at 8pm, Thursday, August 24th, 1978 (Sydney time). The documentary was put together by Stuart Littlemore.
  • 1986 The Somerton Man's brown suitcase was destroyed.
  • 1995 August 17, Alf Boxall dies.
  • 2009 March 19th, The Adelaide University project team, with an ABC film crew, all visit the SA Police Museum and examine the bust of the Somerton man closely, noting that hair is definitely embedded in the plaster cast and that the ears have an unusual ridge across them.
  • 2009 March 19th, Dr Matthew Berryman notices rocks placed at the foot of the Somerton Man's grave in the Jewish tradition. This most likely indicates that a Jewish person recently visited the gravesite. The longshot possibility of a Jewish connection, if the man's name really was Solomonson, is unlikely as the body was uncircumcised.
  • 2009 March 19th, Prof Derek Abbott checks Adelaide Uni/RAH Pathology Autopsy Reports of 1948 and 1949, finding that there is no entry for the Somerton Man. Next step is to check Coroner's office for them. Also the Barr Smith Library's collection of Cleland's notes did not contain anything on the case.

See also

Notes

  1. The Advertiser, "Body found on Beach", 2 December 1948, p. 3

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