On behalve of Operation Essex I would like to thank Frank Kehl (@SirMicroChip) and Christian Vandendorpe for...
On behalve of Operation Essex I would like to thank Frank Kehl (@SirMicroChip) and Christian Vandendorpe for recovering and publishing this breadcrumb.
http://storage.googleapis.com/objx/lrg/viatorjourney/g4JnR1eWiDZcpmFmIDE0fuUP0TCg8GOwMuLPycy6bJzRxAESIqYXN3g0AgFqbdUk.png
http://storage.googleapis.com/objx/lrg/viatorjourney/g4JnR1eWiDZcpmFmIDE0fuUP0TCg8GOwMuLPycy6bJzRxAESIqYXN3g0AgFqbdUk.png
The Strange Case of Doctor Jekyll and Mr Hyde. One story I do know.
ReplyDeleteIn pop culture there have been posits both League of Extraordinary Gentlemen and slightly more dubious in Van Helsing that Edward Hyde was the murderer in Rue Morgue.
In real life Deacon William Brodie has been mentioned as the inspiration for Mr Hyde.
There's a pub in Edinburgh called Deacon Brodie's Tavern along the Royal Mile. Also there is a stone in West Princes Street Garden which is inscribed with the letters RLS.
I'm not sure if they've been checked for breadcrumbs but they could be somewhere useful.
Stevenson spent his last years in Samoa, where he died of TB. He traveled in the 1880s across the US, from NY to SF.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.royal-mile.com/princes-st.gnds/robert-louis-stevenson.html
ReplyDeleteHere's a link to a site which includes the stone I mentioned.
Edward Parkes one of our Scottish agents did indeed hack this same piece of media from that stone
ReplyDeleteThanks Valerie. Guess I was one step behind on that one.
ReplyDeleteI must admit, I hacked this breadcrumb out of the jeckel and hyde bar portal in Edinburgh yesterday morning.
ReplyDeleteYes that is the one.
ReplyDeleteWill Hack the Stevenson portals in Bristol, particularly Hole in the Wall and Llandoger Trow, which appear in treasure Island
ReplyDelete