I did some digging and by forensic reports it seems evident that Julia's skirt WAS burned by the fireplace in the parlor. This is proven because the burns are in a horizontal pattern, which is consistent with the grid of the fireplace (they had a Sunbeam brand fireplace by the way).
I also saw something I didn't realize before. Apparently Julia was on the RIGHT side of the room (by the window) when struck down.
So here is how she was killed and how the skirt came to be burnt:
Julia bends down to light the fireplace, she does this successfully. As she begins to rise, she is hit from the left side (the point of impact is behind her left ear). This force causes her body to fall left into the fireplace at which point her skirt is burned. The attacker pulls Julia out from the fire, probably by her hair according to forensics. The fact she fell sideways is corroborated by the evidence that the part of the skirt which was burned was typically worn on the side of the woman. For some reason it had been twisted into a different position, which I don't understand.
So the attacker with Julia alight, may then have panicked and thrown the mackintosh he was wearing onto her to put out flames... However, what confuses me is that the mackintosh was burnt more than the skirt? How could this be? Was a purposeful incineration attempted and aborted? Or was it in fact true that Julia HAD worn it around her shoulders and that the mackintosh, with her body, fell into the flames? Or is a mackintosh simply far more flammable than a skirt? Was the skirt put out first and the mackintosh thrown aside and stomped out (which would take a bit longer).
Mrs. Johnston is the one who actually suggested that theory that she had been wearing it around her shoulders due to the cold to answer the door to someone. However, because it seems neighbors could easily hear doors opening and closing (based on statements of hearing doors close on milk boys etc.) I rather suspect if anyone else had entered it would have been through the back... Apparently the Johnstons left their yard door unbolted when they went out. Is it true that Julia always bolted it behind him too? Did he really always go out the back during daylight hours and by the front door at night?
Keep in mind - the time he left the house was near 7 P.M., which is night, and would have been dark out. So by his own words shouldn't he have used the front door? Instead he chooses the back. I think there's some importance to that... He says she followed him down the entry. He retracted this. Was it true? If so obviously as I said someone could slip in. Or did he go out the back while someone else entered in his place? Or did he simply bring someone in the back and was present when Julia was attacked?
I don't want to sound like a total fruitcake here, but has anyone seen Dial M for Murder? Considering I now know she was on the OTHER side of the room, it makes you wonder if the attacker could have slipped in while Wallace walked Julia down the entry, then hid behind their thick curtains. Emerging to batter her when she set up the parlor at Wallace's request. He may have even come back in with her. This would of course leave William free from any splatter. It's also possible but less likely that Julia was told to set up the parlor for William's return at 8 PM (which may be why he seemed to put significance on that time) and the killer had hidden there all that time. The curtains would have been drawn since it was night. So literally almost identical to the plot of Dial M for Murder lmfao.
If this is wrong then Gannon's book has the facts wrong. Because he claims the blood was sprayed above the double seated sofa (so the one by the window).
I have made a short list of contradictions of the facts, by the way:
1) Mrs. Johnston claimed she said "whatever have they used".
In court it was put to Wallace that he had said it, and he agreed.
2) Mrs. Johnston claimed in a first statement that she asked if it was Julia's matchbox (which William confirmed).
In a second statement, Mrs. Johnston claimed she asked if it was William's matchbox (which William confirmed).
3) William claimed he found £4 was missing from the cash box after Mr. Johnston had left for the police. Mr. Johnston claimed he asked William if anything was taken and it was at this point that William found £4 missing.
4) William and the Johnston's originally made statements that William had told them to wait outside. All parties changed this statement to say that Mr. Johnston told him to go inside while they wait outside.
5) The Johnstons claimed they had not seen rooms in the Wallace's apart from the parlor. Unfortunately this is untrue because they had previously housesat for the Wallace's while they were away on vacation.
6) Mr. Johnston claimed in a press statement that Wallace had to force the door open. In court he said the precise opposite that it opened easily in the usual way, with no violence in the opening.
7) Suspicious but plausible: Despite being on postcard and housesitting and petsitting terms, and having confirmed conversations from their back yards (e.g. Flo and Julia at 4.30 pm the day of the murder) Johnston claimed he did not even know her name was Julia. They were neighbors for a decade. It's plausible but very weird.
His court testimony is weird as well since he first says he heard William call out "a name" and then says "a word". He then uses "word" again before being asked if it sounded like a name and he replied in the affirmative and added that he did not even know her name.
8) There's actually a lot more differences but because I haven't seen the files I don't know what are legit contradictions/retracted statements, and what things the author has just got wrong or mixed up. Every book on the case describes the series of events when he go home until the police arrived in a different sequence or with different phrases/actions.
For example one book claims Mr. Johnston said immediately he will go for the police - though I'm not sure this could be true since he and William then went around investigating the burglary.
Remember there's a whole street of people - they could have "investigated" while Flo or one of their other relatives or ANY other neighbor ran off to alert the authorities.
The complete silence of their discovery until John gets the police is every bit as peculiar as the total silence of the murder (should it have truly been a robbery).
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Also keep in mind, the Johnston's were leaving their home at 20 to 9 at night. Most people are still awake at this time, but it's an odd time to go visiting huh? I mean by the time they arrived their relative could very well be getting ready to go to bed?
Also I'm sorry Herlock but my idea that Wallace KNEW they were going out through Julia (who had been told by Florence) has been proven false by Goodman's book, in which it is stated that they had not even decided that they would be going out visiting until John got home from work at 6 PM. Then again that's before William went out, so perhaps he could've got into a brief conversation where that information came to light... But that has never been mentioned.
According to Mrs. Johnston, Julia's body was warm when discovered, but when alone with William it had become cold. See what you make of all this information I've compiled.
I also saw something I didn't realize before. Apparently Julia was on the RIGHT side of the room (by the window) when struck down.
So here is how she was killed and how the skirt came to be burnt:
Julia bends down to light the fireplace, she does this successfully. As she begins to rise, she is hit from the left side (the point of impact is behind her left ear). This force causes her body to fall left into the fireplace at which point her skirt is burned. The attacker pulls Julia out from the fire, probably by her hair according to forensics. The fact she fell sideways is corroborated by the evidence that the part of the skirt which was burned was typically worn on the side of the woman. For some reason it had been twisted into a different position, which I don't understand.
So the attacker with Julia alight, may then have panicked and thrown the mackintosh he was wearing onto her to put out flames... However, what confuses me is that the mackintosh was burnt more than the skirt? How could this be? Was a purposeful incineration attempted and aborted? Or was it in fact true that Julia HAD worn it around her shoulders and that the mackintosh, with her body, fell into the flames? Or is a mackintosh simply far more flammable than a skirt? Was the skirt put out first and the mackintosh thrown aside and stomped out (which would take a bit longer).
Mrs. Johnston is the one who actually suggested that theory that she had been wearing it around her shoulders due to the cold to answer the door to someone. However, because it seems neighbors could easily hear doors opening and closing (based on statements of hearing doors close on milk boys etc.) I rather suspect if anyone else had entered it would have been through the back... Apparently the Johnstons left their yard door unbolted when they went out. Is it true that Julia always bolted it behind him too? Did he really always go out the back during daylight hours and by the front door at night?
Keep in mind - the time he left the house was near 7 P.M., which is night, and would have been dark out. So by his own words shouldn't he have used the front door? Instead he chooses the back. I think there's some importance to that... He says she followed him down the entry. He retracted this. Was it true? If so obviously as I said someone could slip in. Or did he go out the back while someone else entered in his place? Or did he simply bring someone in the back and was present when Julia was attacked?
I don't want to sound like a total fruitcake here, but has anyone seen Dial M for Murder? Considering I now know she was on the OTHER side of the room, it makes you wonder if the attacker could have slipped in while Wallace walked Julia down the entry, then hid behind their thick curtains. Emerging to batter her when she set up the parlor at Wallace's request. He may have even come back in with her. This would of course leave William free from any splatter. It's also possible but less likely that Julia was told to set up the parlor for William's return at 8 PM (which may be why he seemed to put significance on that time) and the killer had hidden there all that time. The curtains would have been drawn since it was night. So literally almost identical to the plot of Dial M for Murder lmfao.
If this is wrong then Gannon's book has the facts wrong. Because he claims the blood was sprayed above the double seated sofa (so the one by the window).
I have made a short list of contradictions of the facts, by the way:
1) Mrs. Johnston claimed she said "whatever have they used".
In court it was put to Wallace that he had said it, and he agreed.
2) Mrs. Johnston claimed in a first statement that she asked if it was Julia's matchbox (which William confirmed).
In a second statement, Mrs. Johnston claimed she asked if it was William's matchbox (which William confirmed).
3) William claimed he found £4 was missing from the cash box after Mr. Johnston had left for the police. Mr. Johnston claimed he asked William if anything was taken and it was at this point that William found £4 missing.
4) William and the Johnston's originally made statements that William had told them to wait outside. All parties changed this statement to say that Mr. Johnston told him to go inside while they wait outside.
5) The Johnstons claimed they had not seen rooms in the Wallace's apart from the parlor. Unfortunately this is untrue because they had previously housesat for the Wallace's while they were away on vacation.
6) Mr. Johnston claimed in a press statement that Wallace had to force the door open. In court he said the precise opposite that it opened easily in the usual way, with no violence in the opening.
7) Suspicious but plausible: Despite being on postcard and housesitting and petsitting terms, and having confirmed conversations from their back yards (e.g. Flo and Julia at 4.30 pm the day of the murder) Johnston claimed he did not even know her name was Julia. They were neighbors for a decade. It's plausible but very weird.
His court testimony is weird as well since he first says he heard William call out "a name" and then says "a word". He then uses "word" again before being asked if it sounded like a name and he replied in the affirmative and added that he did not even know her name.
8) There's actually a lot more differences but because I haven't seen the files I don't know what are legit contradictions/retracted statements, and what things the author has just got wrong or mixed up. Every book on the case describes the series of events when he go home until the police arrived in a different sequence or with different phrases/actions.
For example one book claims Mr. Johnston said immediately he will go for the police - though I'm not sure this could be true since he and William then went around investigating the burglary.
Remember there's a whole street of people - they could have "investigated" while Flo or one of their other relatives or ANY other neighbor ran off to alert the authorities.
The complete silence of their discovery until John gets the police is every bit as peculiar as the total silence of the murder (should it have truly been a robbery).
---
Also keep in mind, the Johnston's were leaving their home at 20 to 9 at night. Most people are still awake at this time, but it's an odd time to go visiting huh? I mean by the time they arrived their relative could very well be getting ready to go to bed?
Also I'm sorry Herlock but my idea that Wallace KNEW they were going out through Julia (who had been told by Florence) has been proven false by Goodman's book, in which it is stated that they had not even decided that they would be going out visiting until John got home from work at 6 PM. Then again that's before William went out, so perhaps he could've got into a brief conversation where that information came to light... But that has never been mentioned.
According to Mrs. Johnston, Julia's body was warm when discovered, but when alone with William it had become cold. See what you make of all this information I've compiled.
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