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Abel Fosdyk papers : ウィキペディア英語版 | Abel Fosdyk papers The Abel Fosdyk papers (or "Abel Fosdyk's Story") is an apocryphal explanation of the fate of the ''Mary Celeste'' which was presented on its original publication in 1913 as true but which is most likely a literary hoax. ==Publication== In 1913, the highly successful monthly fiction magazine the ''Strand Magazine'' invited its contributors and readers to suggest possible solutions to the mystery of the ''Mary Celeste''. Among the many responses was an account from an apparently impeccable source which claimed to be true. A letter from Mr. A. Howard Linford MA, of Magdalen College, Oxford, the headmaster of Peterborough Lodge, Hampstead's largest prep school, claimed to have found an account of the ''Mary Celeste'' among papers given to him by an old servant, Abel Fosdyk, on his deathbed. In addition to Fosdyk's supposed manuscript, Linford included as support a photograph of a little girl plus some drawings made by Linford's son. The account appeared in the November 1913 edition of ''The Strand Magazine'' under the title "Abel Fosdyk's Story".〔
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