Originally posted by Harry D
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For Ellen Bury I would argue there are mitigating circumstances. It was his wife who he had known for almost a year. More significantly I think is the location. He was known to have travelled from the east end. A repeat of Kelly could only have resulted in the biggest manhunt in police history I suspect. Bury would have gone from well off to a life on the run, living in the shadows. He could have gone anywhere, but realistically, could he have got away with it? His description would have been rapidly circulated. Any boats travelling long distances could easily have been searched when they docked. What he saw and heard during those two days listening to court cases before he went to the police must have persuaded him he could get away with it. I do think he planned to kill Ellen in Dundee, just not the way it transpired.
I can imagine Ellen frustrated Bury greatly. A misogynist beholden to his wife for his money and status was only going to result in brutality IMO. Perhaps Bury had a lifelong festering hatred of women and his marriage to Ellen tipped him over the edge. Perhaps once she was gone he just gave up.
I also don’t think Bury moving to Dundee to get Ellen away from her family stacks up. Bury assaulted his wife on numerous occasions throughout 1888, in public and in front of witnesses, and didn’t leave. James martin also said he regularly saw Ellen with a disfigured face. Ellen’s sister told him off and he still wasn’t bothered. He clearly wasn’t bothered who knew what he was doing, so why would he suddenly up sticks and leave all the way to Dundee just to carry on abusing her? The one key exception being when his landlady threatened to call the police after the knife incident – this was only a few days after the Wilson attack. Guilty conscience I wonder?
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