Dr. Thorndyke


Dr John Evelyn Thorndyke is a fictional detective in a long series of 21 novels and 40 short stories by British author R. Austin Freeman. Thorndyke was described by his author as a 'medical jurispractitioner': originally a medical doctor, he turned to the bar and became one of the first — in modern parlance — forensic scientists. His solutions were based on his method of collecting all possible data and making inferences from them before looking at any of the protagonists and motives in the crimes. Freeman ensured that his methods were practical by conducting all experiments mentioned in the stories himself.

Attributes

John Evelyn Thorndyke was born on 4 July 1870. He received his medical education at St Margaret's Hospital, where he got his primary degree. Instead of the leaving the hospital however, he remained there, taking up any small appointments that were goingassistant demonstratoror curatorships and such like. He hung around the chemical and physical laboratories, the museum and port mortem room and meanwhile qualified as an M. D. and a D. Sc. Then he got called to the Bar with an eye to getting an appointment as coroner, but the lecturer on Medical Jurisprudence at St. Margarets retired unexpectedly, and Thorndyke applied for the vacant post. He was appointed to the post and then set himself up in chambers. His first case was when he appeared for the defence in Regina v. Gummer.
Thorndyke resided at 5A King's Bench Walk, Inner Temple.
Thornton's office and reception room were on the first floor, with the workshop and laboratory on the second floor, and the bedrooms in the attic floor.
He was often assisted by his friend and foil Christopher Jervis, who usually acts as narrator, and always by the resourceful Nathaniel Polton, his crinkly-faced lab technician. Thorndyke had rescued Polton from poverty, after he had been hospitalised for starvation. Polton helped Thorndyke set up the laboratory after he took the rooms at King's Bench Walk. Thorndyke tended to have a better relationship with the police than Sherlock Holmes did, despite proving them wrong on numerous occasions. Thorndyke, although tall, athletic, handsome, and clever, never married.
Freeman wrote that Dr. Thorndyke was not based on any person, real or fictitious. He was deliberately invented. In a professional sense he may have been suggested to me by Dr. Alfred Swayne Taylor... but his personality was designed in accordance with certain principles and what I believed to be the probabilities as to what such a man would be like.
Freeman put a great deal of effort into ensuring the accuracy of the Thorndyke stories, including carrying out the described experiments himself and visiting the locations described in the stories. Freeman had his own lab and workshop on the top floor of his house at Gravesend where he tested the methods used by Thorndyke. One example of his approach is in The Red Thumb Mark. The story revolves in part around the Thumbograph. This was launched on the market in 1904 by the stationer and publisher Dow & Lester. It consisted of a book of blank pages, with a single page of instructions, and an ink pad attached to one of the covers. Thorndyke noted on the fly-lead of his own copy of the Red Thumb Mark that the Thumbograph was available at all the railway book-stalls, and that he either bought one or got one as a gift. However, he considered it an dangerous invention, as his observations in the Finger-print Department, led him to think it possible to make false fingerprints from a copy of a fingerprint. He experimented with his own fingerprints and made a stamps that could reproduce them. Thus he tested the method that the villain uses in the book, and that Thorndyke uses to convince the court, before he wrote about it.
Such is the accuracy of Freeman's writing that P. R. Gordon wrote to The Queenslander in 1913 to suggest that they should publish the description of the life history of the liver fluke that Freeman gives in The Eye of Orisis as it was so well and tersely told that it would be read with great interest by sheep owners and others." Leadbeatter describes Thorndyke as on of the two pre-eminent fictional forensic pathologists, but notes that Thorndyke sometimes over-interprets the forensic evidence for the sake of the plot. Thus Leadbeatter faults Thorndyke for excluding the possibility that the odontoid process of a corpse had been broken by the collapse of the house during the fire in Mr Polton Explains.

Works

Between 1907 and 1942, Thorndyke appeared in 21 novels and 40 short stories.

Novels

  1. The Red Thumb Mark
  2. The Eye of Osiris, published in the US as The Vanishing Man
  3. The Mystery of 31, New Inn
  4. A Silent Witness
  5. Helen Vardon's Confession
  6. The Cat's Eye
  7. The Mystery of Angelina Frood
  8. The Shadow of the Wolf -- inverted mystery
  9. The D'Arblay Mystery
  10. A Certain Dr Thorndyke
  11. As a Thief in the Night
  12. Mr Pottermack's Oversight -- inverted mystery
  13. Pontifex, Son and Thorndyke
  14. When Rogues Fall Out, published in the US as Dr. Thorndyke's Discovery
  15. Dr Thorndyke Intervenes
  16. For the Defence: Dr Thorndyke
  17. The Penrose Mystery
  18. Felo de se?, published in the US as Death at the Inn
  19. The Stoneware Monkey
  20. Mr Polton Explains
  21. The Jacob Street Mystery, published in the US as The Unconscious Witness
The short-story collections are:
  1. John Thorndyke's Cases .
  2. The Singing Bone .
  3. Dr. Thorndyke's Casebook
  4. The Puzzle Lock
  5. The Magic Casket
Two different omnibus editions of the collected Dr. Thorndyke short stories exist. The British edition is R. Austin Freeman, The Famous Cases of Dr. Thorndyke: Thirty-seven of His Criminal Investigations as set down by R. Austin Freeman. The American edition is R. Austin Freeman, The Dr. Thorndyke Omnibus: 38 of His Criminal Investigations as set down by R. Austin Freeman. The American edition includes one story, The Mandarin's Pearl, printed in the first Thorndyke short-story collection, John Thorndyke's Cases, but omitted from the British omnibus. Two other stories, "The Man with the Nailed Shoes" and "A Message from the Deep Sea", though also appearing in the first Dr. Thorndyke short-story collection, John Thorndyke's Cases, were omitted from the British and American editions of the omnibus collection.
The order in the list appearing below is that of the American edition, which reprinted the five collections of stories in the following order : The Singing Bone, Dr. Thorndyke's Cases, The Magic Casket, The Puzzle Lock, and The Blue Scarab. The British edition gives the stories in a different order from that of the American edition, indicated below by a bracketed note appearing after each story title giving its place in the British edition, denoted by the abbreviation UK and a two-digit number.
The first six stories of the list are "inverted" detective stories, divided into two parts. In the first part of each story, Freeman presented an account of the commission of a crime; in the second part, he presented an account, by Thorndyke's colleague Dr. Christopher Jervis, of Dr. Thorndyke's solution of the crime. The remaining stories are called "direct" stories.
A modern publisher, Battered Silicon Dispatch Box, issued a 9-volume edition of the complete works of R. Austin Freeman, including all the Thorndyke novels and short stories, with additional volumes of commentary and criticism. Volume 10 of the collection was second edition of In search of Dr. Thorndyke: The story of R. Austin Freeman's great scientific investigator and his creator by Norman Donaldson. Amazon released two volumes of electronic versions of "Dr. Thorndyke Mysteries Collection", each containing four of the original books. Delphi Classics have issued a Complete Works of R. Austin Freeman, but this is not for sale in the United States due to copyright reasons. Instead there is a Collected Works edition for the US market. Many of the Thorndyke stories are available on Project Gutenberg Australia.
  1. The Case of Oscar Brodski
  2. A Case of Premeditation
  3. The Echo of a Mutiny
  4. A Wastrel's Romance
  5. The Missing Mortgagee
  6. Percival Bland's Proxy
  7. The Old Lag
  8. The Stranger's Latchkey
  9. The Anthropologist at Large
  10. The Blue Sequin
  11. The Moabite Cipher
  12. The Mandarin's Pearl
  13. The Aluminium Dagger
  14. The Magic Casket
  15. The Case of the White Footprints
  16. The Blue Scarab
  17. The New Jersey Sphinx
  18. The Touchstone
  19. A Fisher of Men
  20. The Stolen Ingots
  21. The Funeral Pyre
  22. The Puzzle Lock
  23. The Green Check Jacket
  24. The Seal of Nebuchadnezzar
  25. Phyllis Annesley's Peril
  26. A Sower of Pestilence
  27. Rex v. Burnaby
  28. A Mystery of the Sand-hills
  29. The Apparition of Burling Court
  30. The Mysterious Visitor
  31. The Contents of a Mare's Nest
  32. The Stalking Horse
  33. The Naturalist at Law
  34. Mr. Ponting's Alibi
  35. Pandora's Box
  36. The Trail of Behemoth
  37. The Pathologist to the Rescue
  38. Gleanings from the Wreckage
  39. The Man with the Nailed Shoes
  40. A Message from the Deep Sea

    Example of the illustration of a Doctor Thorndyke book

John Thorndyke's cases, supposedly related by Christopher Jervis and edited by Richard Austin Freeman first appeared as serial stories in Pearson's Magazine in 1908. The first story was The Blue Sequin which appeared in the Christmas double number of the magazine in December 1908. The stories were illustrated by H. M. Brock with both pen and ink drawings and colour wash drawings, as well as photographs showing the evidence in the cases. The stories were published as a book by Chatto and Windus in late 1909. It is not clear if this edition of the book was illustrated, but the later 1916 edition certainly was. However the book had far fewer illustrations than the magazines, with only the six drawings by H. M. Brock shown here and only nine photographs.

Adaptations

Television adaptations

A short series featuring Dr Thorndyke was produced by the BBC in 1964, entitled Thorndyke. The title character was played by veteran British actor Peter Copley.
Based on the stories written by R Austin Freeman, the episodes, all of which except the pilot are missing from the BBC archive, were as follows:
Two stories were also adapted as part of the Thames TV series The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes, in 1971–3. These were:
Both series are available on DVD: in the UK from Network Video and in the US from Acornmedia.

Radio adaptation

On September 14, 1963 Mollie Hardwick adapted Mr. Pottermack's Oversight on Saturday Night Theatre for the BBC Home Service in the Series Murder for Pleasure.
Starting in 2011 the BBC aired radio adaptations of some of the Thorndyke short stories, Thorndyke: Forensic Investigator on BBC Radio 4 Extra.

Series 1

November 2011 read by Jim Norton
March 2013 read by William Gaminara
In January 2015, Tim McInnerny played Dr. Thorndyke opposite James Fleet's Inspector Lestrade in Chris Harrald's adaptation of "The Moabite Cipher" in the third series of the BBC Radio 4 series The Rivals.