Constable
Thom testified that on Sunday January 29th he had a conversation
with the defendant before an electric fire sitting in the Head Constable’s
office of Newry Police Station. In
further explanation he stated that the previous day he had been at Upper
Damolly with Head Constable O’Hara where Robert McCullough (the man who first
raised the alarm the previous morning when he discovered torn and discarded
clothing in the vicinity) pointed out to them a bicycle lying in a field on the
Belfast Road side of the Damolly Crossroads – where Damolly and Upper Damolly
Roads meet and just yards from the Gamble home. The bicycle was taken possession of by Sergeant John Berry for expert
examination of it. When found the
lighting switch of the dynamo was in the off position.
It
was to be many months later before all the evidence came together at McGladdery’s
trial. The defendant alleged that he
left the dance near its end at about 1.50 am and it was evident to all that he
could not have walked to Damolly cross-roads in time to intercept the victim
who got a lift in a car and probably arrived there very shortly after 2
am. He alleged that he saw Pearl get into a car ‘with two boys’ but no other witness
testified to seeing him there and then.
The
probable answer was that he stole a bicycle and sped to the interception point
as fast as he could. It could be cycled
in about fifteen minutes.
Sergeant
Gibson gave evidence of several timed journeys by bicycle and on foot from the
Orange Hall (on Downshire Road) to both McGladdery’s home (Damolly Terrace) and
Upper Damolly crossroads (these destinations being about a kilometre apart as
the crow flies but further via the Belfast Road and the Rathfriland Roads
respectively).
He
found it took 8 minutes 10 seconds to cycle to McGladdery’s home: just over 20 minutes to Damolly crossroads by
the longer Belfast Road
route; and 15 minutes 40 seconds via Church
Avenue and Rathfriland Road; using Windsor Avenue it
could be done in 15 minutes. Walking
times for the comparable routes were 14 minutes odd to McGladdery’s home; 44
minutes via Belfast Road
to Damolly crossroads; and 30 minutes and 27 minutes 35 seconds for the
latter-named routes.
There
was contradictory evidence. Joseph
Clydesdale apprentice motor mechanic of Ashgrove Newry testified that he
arrived at the dance at the Orange Hall about 12.30 am. He saw Pearl Gamble whom he knew and he
danced with her.
“I
danced the last dance with Pearl Gamble and walked down to the entrance of the
Orange Hall with her. We walked about 15
yards up Church Avenue
and stood on the Grammar School side of it. We stood there about fifteen minutes and a car arrived from the Belfast Road and
stopped opposite us. Pearl got into the car and I walked back to
the Orange Hall. I did not see her since
she got into the car. I collected my
bicycle and went out the Belfast
Road home.”
……..
more later …………