Hi all,
Ive had this discussion with some members here, but I dont believe we discussed this on its own thread.....so here it is....
At approx 3:45am on November 9th, 1888, both Elizabeth Prater...just woken by her cat Diddles, and Sarah Lewis.....dozing in a chair at the Keylers, heard a woman cry out "oh-murder". Elizabeth said she heard it "as if from the court", and Sarah heard it "as if at her door".
Elizabeth Prater testified that she could hear when Mary moved about in her room when within her own room. I would think that means she could also hear a cry from Mary if made from inside the house. She didnt describe it that way though....she heard it "as if from the court".
We also know that no noise was heard by either woman following that cry.
We know that Marys 2 windows were either 3 rows of 5 small panes across, or 5 rows of 3 panes...(I cant find the picture at the moment that shows this best in my files)...and 2 panes were broken...in the lower right portion, and the upper left portion. One was blocked that night by a pilot coat....and the curtains were closed.
I submit that those 2 small holes would not have been sufficient to allow a cry to be heard semi loudly in Sarahs case and "as if from the court" in Liz Praters case. So, I believe that the cry, if from Mary, was while her door was open.
That would mean she;
1. Opened from the outside by herself and cried out for some reason which is unclear
2. She opened it from inside while alone in response to a knock or a sound that woke her
3. She opened it from inside while with company to find someone unexpected standing there
4. She opened it from the outside while with company and exclaimed for some reason that is unclear
The cat upstairs woke Elizabeth seconds before she heard the voice, suggesting that perhaps the cat was startled by noise from the court or the ground floor of the house. That would support a noise or a knock that precedes the voice.
This may seem a trivial point to some, but it isnt, because if the voice was Marys we know that no noise following it means it wasnt the start of a physical engagement between her and her killer. And its quite likely to me that it would mean that her door was open at the time. If she was alone asleep and wakened by sounds at the door or window, and she answered the door and made her exclamation...then its likely one of surprise, not fear. Which is essentially the import it was given by those 2 women....neither assumed a murder was actually occurring based on their impression of the voice. Despite the obvious use of the word in the exclamation. They had heard this kind of thing before....we hear that from a few witnesses throughout the Canonical cases.
Thats the overview of my position to support the primary question Id love some input on.....assuming the call was from room 13......Could Marys voice have been heard as described by the women if her door was closed?
If it was opened, and done by her from inside.....what does that say about her visitor? At the very least that he intentionally woke her to answer her door.
Best regards all.
Ive had this discussion with some members here, but I dont believe we discussed this on its own thread.....so here it is....
At approx 3:45am on November 9th, 1888, both Elizabeth Prater...just woken by her cat Diddles, and Sarah Lewis.....dozing in a chair at the Keylers, heard a woman cry out "oh-murder". Elizabeth said she heard it "as if from the court", and Sarah heard it "as if at her door".
Elizabeth Prater testified that she could hear when Mary moved about in her room when within her own room. I would think that means she could also hear a cry from Mary if made from inside the house. She didnt describe it that way though....she heard it "as if from the court".
We also know that no noise was heard by either woman following that cry.
We know that Marys 2 windows were either 3 rows of 5 small panes across, or 5 rows of 3 panes...(I cant find the picture at the moment that shows this best in my files)...and 2 panes were broken...in the lower right portion, and the upper left portion. One was blocked that night by a pilot coat....and the curtains were closed.
I submit that those 2 small holes would not have been sufficient to allow a cry to be heard semi loudly in Sarahs case and "as if from the court" in Liz Praters case. So, I believe that the cry, if from Mary, was while her door was open.
That would mean she;
1. Opened from the outside by herself and cried out for some reason which is unclear
2. She opened it from inside while alone in response to a knock or a sound that woke her
3. She opened it from inside while with company to find someone unexpected standing there
4. She opened it from the outside while with company and exclaimed for some reason that is unclear
The cat upstairs woke Elizabeth seconds before she heard the voice, suggesting that perhaps the cat was startled by noise from the court or the ground floor of the house. That would support a noise or a knock that precedes the voice.
This may seem a trivial point to some, but it isnt, because if the voice was Marys we know that no noise following it means it wasnt the start of a physical engagement between her and her killer. And its quite likely to me that it would mean that her door was open at the time. If she was alone asleep and wakened by sounds at the door or window, and she answered the door and made her exclamation...then its likely one of surprise, not fear. Which is essentially the import it was given by those 2 women....neither assumed a murder was actually occurring based on their impression of the voice. Despite the obvious use of the word in the exclamation. They had heard this kind of thing before....we hear that from a few witnesses throughout the Canonical cases.
Thats the overview of my position to support the primary question Id love some input on.....assuming the call was from room 13......Could Marys voice have been heard as described by the women if her door was closed?
If it was opened, and done by her from inside.....what does that say about her visitor? At the very least that he intentionally woke her to answer her door.
Best regards all.
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