Originally posted by Abby Normal
View Post
Good question, and others have wondered that.
So far as I know there is only speculation why Bury left not just London, but the country.
Plus, remember, he went to the trouble of forging a letter(s) to prove he had a job in Dundee. Why in the world do such a thing?
Some have suggested that Bury relocated to get Ellen away from her family in order to kill her, using the size of the boxes as proof he intended to murder her and stuff her in one even before he left London.
Now, if he wanted rid of Ellen, why not just leave? Even if he wanted the few trinkets she had left, he could have beaten her (as he seemed to have done), grabbed the box and moved simply to another section of London -- or made the trip to Dundee alone. No apparent reason to take her at all.
As for the large trunks he ordered made, I can think of a couple of reasons:
1. Perhaps he had no idea how much room their things would need and he would rather have too much room than too little. That way, they could always add things along their journey.
2. Bury seems to me to have always liked to be thought more than he was. Perhaps the extra large cases were to impress fellow travelers. (It is this trait that has made me consider his almost confession as JtR in line with his character.)
Or a combination of the two.
Why leave London if he were not the Ripper?
I don’t have an answer.
If he were the Ripper, I think his own terror of being caught could certainly have fueled his departure. Perhaps he had been seen with one of the victims, perhaps one of the descriptions was too close.
He was becoming paranoid.
His own guilt could have caused him to think people were looking at him, knowingly. He left the country to get away from Jack the Ripper, but learned that the Dundee papers had Jack the Ripper stories and Scottish folks were too interested in JtR.
Living in the port, it’s likely he encountered sailors who traveled all over and he learned that JtR was known about all over the world. There seemed to be no escaping.
It seems to me that had Bury intended to kill Ellen, he would never have taken an apartment and settled in -- under his own name. That fact alone suggests to me that he had no intention of killing Ellen. His intention appears to have been to get out of London, out of England.
Another thought is that William Henry Bury had been “SOMEONE” all his life. He was the child whose arrival appeared to have brought disaster to his family. His sister died of seizures, his father was killed in a horrific cart accident and his mother died in an insane asylum, all within months of his birth.
Don’t you think that from before he could remember, people were looking at him, stopped talking when he came into a room or started whispering? He saw either horror from the superstitious or sympathy from the kind hearted.
How would those years of being known have affected his seeming belief following Ellen’s murder that there was no where he could go to hide?
I don't have the answer to your question or hundreds of others . . . hope others will comment here.
curious
Comment