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Ethel Proudlock case

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The Ethel Proudlock case refers to a 1911 shooting by Proudlock, her trial for murder, and the cause célèbre scandalising British colonial society in Kuala Lumpur, Federated Malay States it created.

W. Somerset Maugham wrote a short story about the case which he subsequently turned into a successful 1927 play, The Letter, which in turn received several film and TV adaptions, most notably William Wyler's 1940 film.

History

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The incident

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Ethel Proudlock, née Charter, was a Eurasian who married William Proudlock, acting headmaster of the prestigious Victoria Institution for boys in Kuala Lumpur, at the age of 19 in 1907.

Montage of historical maps of the Klang River, taken at the Pasar Seni MRT/LRT station. The Victoria Institution was located on its eastern bank when the murder occurred. The school's site was located several meters south of the present-day station, marked 'You Are Here'.

On the evening of 23 April 1911, she was alone in the VI headmaster's bungalow (3°8′28″N 101°41′40″E / 3.14111°N 101.69444°E / 3.14111; 101.69444, near the present-day Pasar Seni LRT/MRT station[1][1][2]) while her husband dined with a fellow teacher. In the course of that evening she shot dead William Steward, a mine manager. He had arrived by rickshaw, and had told the rickshaw boy to wait outside. Shortly afterwards the boy heard two shots and saw Steward stumble out of the house across the veranda, followed by Proudlock carrying a revolver, who emptied the remaining four chambers into him.

Proudlock stood trial for murder in June 1911. Her non-jury trial was heard by a judge and two assessors. It lasted 10 days and attracted intense local interest. Proudlock claimed that Steward had attempted to rape her and that she was acting in self-defence. However, the judge found her guilty of murder on the basis of inconsistencies in her testimony and other circumstantial evidence and sentenced her to death.

The verdict caused a furore in the local community, prompting The Malay Mail to issue a notice reading:[3]

We decline to associate ourselves with the hysterical outbursts which have followed the judicial decision...Correspondence has already appeared in our columns touching upon the case, and the opinions of our readers will receive publicity within limits. But for those who have gone to all kinds of adjectival extremes in the attempt to splutter forth their wrath against the judge and assessors, it may be added that their effusions will find the oblivion of the wastepaper basket.

Aftermath

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Proudlock appealed the verdict and spent five months in Pudu jail awaiting her appeal. During the course of that time a number of petitions were created for her, including one from her husband and the boys of the Victoria Institution, prompting Sultan Sulaiman of Selangor to pardon her. She immediately left the colony with her three-year-old daughter for England and eventually America.

Her husband left soon after for England. It's not known whether he ever rejoined her, but he did keep in touch. By 1931, he had moved to South Africa and ultimately to Argentina to teach at St. George's College, Quilmes. He died in 1958.

Legacy

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In addition to the 1927 Maugham play and 1940 Wyler movie, the incident was referenced in the 1977 film East of Elephant Rock by Don Boyd.

It was also the subject of a 2000 book by Eric Lawlor, Murder on the Verandah.[4]

In 2023, it appeared in the novel The House of Doors by Tan Twan Eng, which includes a supposed reason why Proudlock killed Steward.[5]

Notes

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1. ^ The Klang River was straightened later; the site of the now-demolished bungalow currently lies on the opposite side of the river, in front of the KTM Komuter station

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "SBK Pasar Seni". Mass Rapid Transit Corporation. Retrieved 9 November 2018.
  2. ^ "The School at the River Bend". Victoria Institution Web Page. Retrieved 20 November 2018.
  3. ^ Grimond, Kate (20 February 1999). "Bored Sojourners in the East". The Spectator.
  4. ^ Lawlor, Eric (March 2000). Murder on the Verandah: Love and Betrayal in British Malaysia. Flamingo. ISBN 0-00-655065-7.
  5. ^ Brooks, Xan (11 May 2023). "The House of Doors by Tan Twan Eng review – tragedy in the tropics". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 August 2024.

5. Tan Twan Eng, The House of Doors, Canongate Books 2023

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