If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
Well, we can all go back to writing novels or playing videogames or downloading porn... Ripperology is dead. RIP, Rippoerologist, Ripper Notes and Whitechapel Society Journal, et. al. ...
Karen Trenouth has solved the case, so time to pack it all up, the rest of us:
Sam, the list seems to contain mining disasters with 5 or more fatalities only. We do not know how many people died during the incident, maybe he died in a freak accident?
Of course her ex might not have been the topic of daily conversation so Barnett could have simply mixed things up.
The mining incident possibly took place in MJK's stage of life. But not necessarily the way she told it. Davis/Davies could have been, for example, a former boy-friend of hers. And if she turned his first-name "Dave" into "Davies", then it's the same circle as with MJK's real or "real" name!
Anyway, talking about the possibility of Mary Ballina being Mary Jane Kelly, the following things could match:
1. Being an actress, she had got used to pretend.
-Thus, the clever cover-up, that we can never solve, was a role to misslead people.
-If she really was Mary Ballina and had run away from home, she definitely had a very good reason for her cover-up. Especially ending up the way she was in the East End.
-Besides, she would have been a minor, while running away from home.
2. The song she sang could have been a tribute to her "bygone happy days" from her music hall career.
They've been discussed previously on Casebook (try Googling "penygraig inurl:casebook" as a good starter), but we've come up against brick walls each time.
Is there a "researchers list" of all the Welsh mining accidents that meet our timeline ?
If so, rather than tie ourselves down looking for a Davies/Davis link, can we check what information we have of these mining towns or villages looking for a John, Henry and Mary etc ?
Surely, our most likely way of tracing Kelly, is through the mining explosion in Wales that "killed her husband Davis"?
God knows, we've tried, Jon! Sadly, although the casualties of most of the mining disasters in Wales were meticulously documented, we've found no clear candidate for "Davies" amongst them. I've conjectured in the past that "Davies" might have died above-ground (e.g. when a detonator blew up in his hand, or was run over by a dram), or in a mining accident that didn't involve a disaster down 't pit (e.g. he was the sole casualty of a minor explosion underground).
If someone could find a poster of the group of players, maybe there is Mary Ballina.
What an interesting thought, Jukka! Sadly, she was only visiting them at the time. Perhaps she was just passing through (Bristol being a natural stopping-off point on the way from Cardiff to London) en route to the West End, perhaps? We can but dream...
Mary "Ballina" (salvaged from Google cache)
Did Kelly run away to the circus?
There is a 17 year-old "Mary Ballina", born in Cardiff, visiting an address housing what appears to be a troupe of strolling players in Bristol in the 1881 England Census. Her occupation is given as "Actress/Comedian".
Some unverified stories stated that Kelly was an artist of no mean degree - but there's no indication which of the "arts" was meant. There are also the rumours of connections with the stage, and Mary's fondness for singing Irish songs.
There's also Barnett's comment about the gentleman taking Kelly to France and her "not liking the part". I've always taken this to mean "the part" of France where she ended up, but could it possibly mean that she was lured there with a promise of a "part" on the stage?
Note that "Mary Ballina" was almost certainly a stage name - she doesn't crop up in any other census, and the surname is also unique in Britain as far as I've been able to ascertain.
There is a village called Ballina located some 20 miles from the city of Limerick.
Leave a comment: