Ruth Ellis, 26, meets David Blakely in the summer of 1953 when he is 24. The accounts describe Blakely as taller and physically imposing, while Ellis is portrayed as shorter in height. Both sources present the relationship as occurring across a social and class divide, suggesting that differences in background create tension when it comes to introducing Ellis to Blakely’s family. The material emphasizes that while their relationship continues for a period, barriers linked to social standing are depicted as a major factor in how Blakely’s family and broader social expectations respond to Ellis. Rather than focusing on a single immediate event, the narratives frame the couple’s eventual “bloody” outcome as connected to these unresolved social tensions. The coverage cited here is centered on questions about whether class prejudice plays a decisive role in Ellis’s fate, tying the relationship’s strain and family dynamics to later events.