A new piece of research has been published on the Bury website and very intriguing it is too (http://williambury.org/blog6/2022/01...am-burys-neck/).
It turns out that Bury's 1884 police file records a cut on the right side of his neck as a noteworthy physical feature. It seems Bury made a great fuss about having his collar removed before his execution and Berry the hangman had to take it off him, and thought he would have hung on to it until the last. If Bury did carry a scar on his neck, this would be yet another potential point of correspondence between Bury and the FBI profile as: "he (the ripper) would be expected to have some type of physical abnormality. However, although not severe, he perceives this as being psychologically crippling”.
More interesting is the fact that Annie Farmer's attacker is noted as having a scar or abscess on the side of his neck. The author of the Bury website dismisses this link as it was stated that on Farmer's man the scar was on the left side. However, some reports give it as the back of the neck. Some reports say the man had a fair mustache (like Bury), others a dark mustache. My point is, is it totally beyond the realms of possibility that the the side of the neck the scar was on was uncertain. Someone could have misremembered or been confused. There was a fair old commotion associated with he Farmer attacker - a pursuit, punch thrown according to one witness, and a man being struck with a whip. I think it is possible. Note that most people dismiss Caroline Maxwell's stubborn statement as being mistaken about the day. Surely a mistake about which side of the neck a scar is on is feasible?
Not only does the description of the man fit with the other witnesses (he wore speckled grey trousers and neckerchief (Lawende's salt and pepper?) and hard felt)), it is a very good match for Bury. Not only in the general sense, but also in the specifics of carrying a whip (this attack was before Bury sold his horse and cart), being handy with his fists (allegedly punching one pursuer to fend him off), the man was a drinker and 'ill used' Farmer 12 months previous. 'Ill use' is the same term Ellen's sister used to tell Bury off for beating her sister up so badly she was bed ridden. 12 months previous would have been prior to Bury marrying Ellen.
''Do you know him?' and the woman answered 'I knew him about a twelvemonth ago. I drank in his company, and he made himself known to me this morning. He paid 8d for the bed and gave me 6d whilst in the room. I brought him in about 6.30, and when I was half-asleep I felt a knife cross my throat, which woke me up, and I screamed.' 'What has he done?' and she replied, 'He has cut my throat.' I asked for a light, and a woman brought a candle, for the room was very dark. I then saw that there were five or six wounds in the neck, which seemed to me to be gaping and at least 3in long. It was said that Dr Phillips stitched her throat in one report.
After the attack, a lot people got a good look at the attacker and police issued a detailed description carried by all the main papers. Shortly after, in early December, Bury sells his horse and cart and very likely abandoned Whitechapel.
Although there is no way to know for certain if the noteworthy cut turned to a scar, or even if the word 'cut' was in fact referencing a scar, Bury's seeming vanity about exposing his neck is certainly interesting and the possible link to Farmer is tantalising.
It turns out that Bury's 1884 police file records a cut on the right side of his neck as a noteworthy physical feature. It seems Bury made a great fuss about having his collar removed before his execution and Berry the hangman had to take it off him, and thought he would have hung on to it until the last. If Bury did carry a scar on his neck, this would be yet another potential point of correspondence between Bury and the FBI profile as: "he (the ripper) would be expected to have some type of physical abnormality. However, although not severe, he perceives this as being psychologically crippling”.
More interesting is the fact that Annie Farmer's attacker is noted as having a scar or abscess on the side of his neck. The author of the Bury website dismisses this link as it was stated that on Farmer's man the scar was on the left side. However, some reports give it as the back of the neck. Some reports say the man had a fair mustache (like Bury), others a dark mustache. My point is, is it totally beyond the realms of possibility that the the side of the neck the scar was on was uncertain. Someone could have misremembered or been confused. There was a fair old commotion associated with he Farmer attacker - a pursuit, punch thrown according to one witness, and a man being struck with a whip. I think it is possible. Note that most people dismiss Caroline Maxwell's stubborn statement as being mistaken about the day. Surely a mistake about which side of the neck a scar is on is feasible?
Not only does the description of the man fit with the other witnesses (he wore speckled grey trousers and neckerchief (Lawende's salt and pepper?) and hard felt)), it is a very good match for Bury. Not only in the general sense, but also in the specifics of carrying a whip (this attack was before Bury sold his horse and cart), being handy with his fists (allegedly punching one pursuer to fend him off), the man was a drinker and 'ill used' Farmer 12 months previous. 'Ill use' is the same term Ellen's sister used to tell Bury off for beating her sister up so badly she was bed ridden. 12 months previous would have been prior to Bury marrying Ellen.
''Do you know him?' and the woman answered 'I knew him about a twelvemonth ago. I drank in his company, and he made himself known to me this morning. He paid 8d for the bed and gave me 6d whilst in the room. I brought him in about 6.30, and when I was half-asleep I felt a knife cross my throat, which woke me up, and I screamed.' 'What has he done?' and she replied, 'He has cut my throat.' I asked for a light, and a woman brought a candle, for the room was very dark. I then saw that there were five or six wounds in the neck, which seemed to me to be gaping and at least 3in long. It was said that Dr Phillips stitched her throat in one report.
After the attack, a lot people got a good look at the attacker and police issued a detailed description carried by all the main papers. Shortly after, in early December, Bury sells his horse and cart and very likely abandoned Whitechapel.
Although there is no way to know for certain if the noteworthy cut turned to a scar, or even if the word 'cut' was in fact referencing a scar, Bury's seeming vanity about exposing his neck is certainly interesting and the possible link to Farmer is tantalising.
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