Showing posts with label long missing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label long missing. Show all posts

Lorraine Judith Chance -- Missing Since 1948

Original Time of Writing: January 1st, 2021
All articles are subject to editing after the original posting.


Missing person: Lorraine Judith Chance
Last-seen date: January 3rd, 1948
Last-seen location: Sacramento, California (no, the Original Night Stalker wasn't close to active at this time)
NamUs # and Link: #MP22091
Ethnicity/Race: White
Sex: Female
Age at time of disappearance: 26 years old
Hair: Brown
Eye color: Brown
Height and weight at the time of disappearance: 4'11" to 5'5"
Clothing: Maybe size 3.5 high heels
Other: protruding teeth

Recommended Reading on this Case:

"On January 3, 1948 twenty-six-year-old Lorraine 'Lee' Judith Barrie Chance took her daughter Donna to a sitter’s house in Santa Cruz, California with the promise of returning later in the evening. There is no record of where she was headed or with whom (if anyone) she departed. Lee never retrieved her daughter and no one has seen or heard from her since.""

Betty Marie Roberts -- Last Known to be With a Man Named Charles

Author: Shane Lambert
Original Time of Writing: December 31st, 2020
All articles are subject to editing after the original posting.

Betty Marie Roberts: The Unsolved Missing Person Case

Missing Person Overview: Betty Marie Roberts

"She left with a man from Charlotte, NC and went to Baltimore, Maryland. Her sister received a letter 3 days later. The letter stated she was doing fine and she would write later. The letter was postmarked Baltimore, Maryland. Never heard from her again." NamUs profile: Qtd March 19th, 2025.

Key Details of Betty Marie Roberts' Disappearance

Last-seen date: November 6th, 1959
Last-known communication: November 9th, 1959
Last-seen location: Baltimore, Maryland or Charlotte, North Carolina


Identification and Physical Description

NamUs # and Link: #MP7259
Ethnicity/Race: White
Sex: Female
Age at time of disappearance: 29 years old
Hair: Brown
Eye color: Hazel
Height and weight at the time of disappearance: 5'6" to 5'7" and 135 pounds
Other: Dentures, scar on stomach, and tattoo saying "Jeff" on left forearm

Background of Betty Marie Roberts' Case

The case of Betty Marie Roberts is a memorable one for the last interaction that she had at her last time. Her sister, who was probably angry with being left in charge of Betty's two children, reportedly said “If you walk out, you’re not my sister. Don’t ever come back.”

In the years that followed, the two children ended up in an orphanage and a foster home. At some point, Louise Doane, the sister, searched for a reference to Betty Marie via her Social Security Number and driver's license. Nothing matched up after the year 1959.

Discrepancies in Missing Person Databases

This is a case with some contradictions when one consults multiple missing person's databases. At the time of writing, I noted the following:
  • NamUs said she went missing on November 6th, 1959; CharleyProject said it was November 3rd of that year
  • NamUs said she disappeared from Baltimore, Maryland; the same source said this: "She left with a man from Charlotte, NC and went to Baltimore, Maryland." That would suggest she's missing from Charlotte, not Baltimore.
The contradiction can be reconciled if we take a letter to be her last-seen date. However, technically she was last seen on November 3rd, 1959 in what looks to be Charlotte, North Carolina and her last communication was from Baltimore three days later according to a postmarked letter.

That would make the CharleyProject's date of November 3rd make more sense (ie. that's when she was last seen). The November 6th date is more like when she was last heard from.

Potential Leads to Find Betty Marie Roberts

In this case, I submit that the potential for finding her is grounded in two things, one firm and physical and the other much more tenuous.

Physical Evidence: Dentures as a Clue

Firstly, there are the dentures to consider. This is a physical characteristic of Betty's that is unlike the scar on her abdomen and the tattoo on her forearm. If a Jane Doe is found that is skeletonized the dentures will remain a clue for identity. Importantly, "dentures" is a searchable term in some unidentified remains databases, like the one with NamUs.

Websleuths or amateurs that come across a Jane Doe where dentures are mentioned in the report should cross-reference other details of the Jane Doe with Betty Marie Roberts. On that note, remember to note the contradictions above and to keep an open mind to both cities, Baltimore and Charlotte.

The Mysterious Companion: Charles Wegman

The tenuous lead on Betty Marie Roberts has to do with the man who saw her last. She was running off with a man that Louise, Betty's sister, said was named Charles Wegman. CharleyProject offers this: "Roberts's sister sent photos of Roberts and Wegman to the FBI, and an agent told her Wegman was actually named Charles Dennison but didn't disclose any further information about him."

Investigating Charles Dennison: Who Was He?

The identification of Charles Dennison is a subject that some work has been done on. I've consulted AndTheyWere.com's contribution to this case. The description there of Dennison is as follows: “tall and thick, and pleasant-looking, in his late 30s.” Charles also said he was from Houston which, if taken at face value, might be a lead. It's with assumptions like this that efforts start to get tenuous.

Charles Dennison’s Criminal Background

The AndTheyWere.com blogger wrote this:

"I was unable to find information about Charles Wegman, but there were two entries in Texas inmate records for Charles C. Dennison. While some of the demographics differ slightly, Charles was a native-born Texan serving time in the late 1940s and early 1950s for burglary and theft. He had served in the Army and/or merchant marines and at one time lived in New York. This individual likely died in 1983 according to Social Security death records."

Linking Charles Dennison and Charles Wegman

Unifying the identity of Charles Dennison with Charles Wegman is a challenge in this case. Wegman said he was from Houston and Dennison was from there as well. However, that hardly makes them a lock for being one and the same people.

The differing demographics between the Dennison files alluded to in the quote above, have to do with two different birthdates across the two files for Charles C. Dennison in the Texas Convict and Conduct records. However, despite those two different birthdates, it is clear that the two files are for the same person. When I consulted the documents, they were linked by a remark in the latter one that referenced the file number of the former.

Texas Convict Records Analysis

According to the Texas Convict and Conduct Records, there is a Charles Clifford Dennison with a record date of August 3rd, 1949. This individual has a convict number of 114392 and a birth year of 1922. There is also a Charles C Dennison with the birth year of 1920 and a convict number of 120126. Of course, those could be different people except that someone who worked with the document wrote some chicken scratch in the final column which appears to be directing whoever reads it (ie. me) to convict number 120126.


Also, there is some writing near the convict's name which encourages the reader of the document (ie. me) to look at convict 120126 in conjunction with 114392. The two Dennison's with different birth dates are actually the same person and the birth years are just wrong.


Charles C. Dennison: Biography and Timeline

I think Charles C. Dennison was all of the following according to the documentary records:
  • Born: either 22 Sep 1923 in Houston, Texas or 22 Sep 1922 in Houston, Texas
  • Died: either 10 Aug 1983 Harris County, Texas or 15 Aug 1983
  • Death certificate: 076838
  • Possible stepfather: Arthur L Nurse
  • Possible biological father: might be James Radley Malin
  • Last name: probably connected to Geo K Dennison, a romantic interest of his mother's
  • Possible mother: Majorie Pearl Lewis or Mable Lewis
  • He was a convicted burglar and thief
  • Known to be in custody as of July 25th, 1949; was said to be of New York before this time; appeared to be in prison all the way to Jan 12th, 1953
    • His four-year sentence would have ended July 25th, 1953 but a comment suggests that he might have been out as of May 15th, 1951; that date is listed with "Revoked" written beside it on his Texas conviction record
    • However, the next record for him suggests that he was not out of prison until January 12th, 1953; I think the first record for Convict #114392 is for a first sentence that lasted from July 25th, 1949 until it was revoked on May 15th, 1951; the Convict #120126 pertains to his second sentence starting without any time out of prison; it ends Jan 12 1953
That he might have been in New York is supported by a passenger list that I found. The passenger list for the Queen Mary vessel is listed as arriving in New York on January 3rd, 1946 as per the records I looked at with Ancestry. They show an "Inf" (infantry?) named Charles C. Dennison on that vessel. There is an Army Serial Number there if anyone wants to have a look and expand further.

Physical Characteristics of Charles Dennison

If someone can read the following then please remark on it. It appears to be something to do with a physical characteristic in the region under his left eye, I think. As far as I can see it says "ct sc under lf eye. app sc st storm."


Also, what does this say exactly? I see "2 at wheel upper rt arm. Scr lo. lft arm." which I interpret to mean he has a scar on his lower left arm and 2 on his upper right?

Challenges in Unifying Identities

I was not able to find anything that substantially unified the identities of Charles C. Dennison and Charles Wegman together. The premise is all based on the description of the FBI's response to the picture of Charles Wegman. One connection I could make, besides both being of Houston, is tenuous: Charles C Dennison had aliases and his real name is hard to find.

Firstly, the C initial for his middle name might stand for Clifford or Clinton. Secondly, according to the 1940 census he might have been Charles Nurse at the age of 17 and of 7427 Avenue O, Houston, Texas in relation to someone who I think was his stepfather (see below). He also might have been known as Charles Malin at birth in relation to his biological father. Charles Dennison comes later in relation to a George K. Dennison. A user on Ancestry wrote this:

"Charles was the biological child of James R. Malin and Marjorie P. Lewis. Marjorie's second husband was George K. Dennison. (Mable Emogene Lewis was Marjorie's sister and the aunt of Charles C. Malin Dennison.)" (postkrispykritters on 1/17/2017).

The Classified Ad: A Possible Clue in Betty’s Disappearance

It was my hope that the classified advertisement that Betty replied to would yield some clue. However, finding the advertisement wasn't easy. My best guess is that it was the following:

Sat, Sep 19, 1959 – 23 · The Charlotte News (Charlotte, North Carolina) · Newspapers.com

The date of the advertisement is about right. Furthermore, Betty's age fits the age range in the ad. Also, it says that she has to be free to travel and she did up and leave. Furthermore, it mentions photography and that's true to the description of Betty's missing person webpages.

Analyzing the Advertisement’s Details

In an expanded look at this ad, it appeared in the Charlotte area newspapers between February 22nd, 1957, and November 3rd, 1961 according to what I found. The wording in the advertisement changed here and there. The alphanumeric code at the end would be a mailbox number or even a phone number, I think, as there is no other form of communication in the ad (ie. 334-2176). There are similar ads placed to a phone number or mailbox number "ED 3-8581."

The Tom Jones that is mentioned was, I think, the owner of a legitimate and successful studio called "Jones & Presnell Studio's." I think their address was 433 Lawton Road, Charlotte, North Carolina 28216. I'm wondering if Charles Wegman or Charles Dennison was employed with that company but it's a tenuous connection because I don't even know that this was the ad Betty Marie replied to: it just seems to match-up. This is something Websleuths or amateurs could investigate if they have a brainwave on how to do it. I do know his Social Security Number.

Is the Ad a Red Flag?

The advertisement does strike me as the phony kind. I think this advertisement targets someone who is gullible. $360 pay is about $3200 by modern standards per month. That's pretty good pay for someone with "No experience necessary." Also, "Paid vacations" sounds a little too good to be true but maybe they just meant you get paid time off every year.

This ad targeted women as it was placed in a column designated "FEMALE HELP." I'm not sure why women were needed to be photographers over men. However, this position seemingly was working with children and the 1950s was a time when women were seen as better suited for such work. Perhaps some still feel that way. Other ads with strikingly similar wording that appeared in the area said that they needed a Child Photographer as a large-print headline instead of "Want A Change."

Conclusion: What Happened to Betty Marie Roberts?

My read on this overall situation is not a great one when it comes to finding evidence that Betty Marie Roberts survived much longer after she left with the man named Charles. Firstly, I defer to Louise's efforts to find evidence of her based on her identification which suggests that 1959 was a terminal year in Betty Marie's life.

Family Dynamics and Disappearance

The animosity that Louise communicated toward her sister is a small clue. It doesn't point to Louise but rather, I think, it references Betty Marie's discretion in leaving her children behind to go off with a strange man. Betty Marie was dropping everything and leaving and that speaks to a breakdown of sorts.

The Danger of Charles Wegman/Dennison

The situation seems particularly dangerous because she was running off with a man who an FBI agent seemingly recognized only from a photograph. If that's the case, then that's interesting in and of itself: what kind of man is the kind that an FBI agent recognizes from a photograph alone? That kind of person is likely to be one with a rap sheet -- and not just for jaywalking or going five over in a 50 zone.

So what do we have? A woman who's breaking down is running off with a man who's on the FBI's radar. That doesn't sound like a situation that's going to lead to harmony.

Final Thoughts and Next Steps

Her credentials have not entered the documentary record since. In my opinion, the balance of the conjecture, in this case, would support the notion that Betty Marie is long dead. On that matter, the graves of the people associated with this case might start showing up on Findagrave.com. More and more memorials from the past are being digitalized.

The work on this case has to do with connecting Charles Wegman to Charles Dennison in a convincing way and then tracing his location between 1959 and 1983. Also, remember that if you come across a Jane Doe with dentures, especially one with a date-of-death assumed to be in the ballpark of 1959 near Charlotte or Baltimore or even points in between, that she's a candidate for a rule out. It wouldn't hurt to search for "dentures" in NamUs from time to time and list your Jane Does that match in the comments.

Beverly Sharpman Newspaper Clippings and Classified Ads-- Missing Since 1947

Author: Shane Lambert
Original Time of Writing: December 22nd, 2020

Beverly Sharpman has been missing since 1947. This is a case that I wrote about a few years earlier and my opinion on her disappearance has not changed.

I think there was some kind of a rift in her family life that she wasn't compatible with at all, that she married, and then she left her original family situation, never to look back.

Of course, with many disappearances, there is plenty of room for doubt and counter-conjecture. The point of this article is not to get into that but to post the classified ads that Beverly's mother and other family members posted in newspaper outlets over the years.

Beverly Sharpman
Beverly Sharpman Tue, Aug 19, 1952 – Page 31 · The Philadelphia Inquirer (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) · Newspapers.com
Beverly sharpman
Beverly sharpman Sun, Sep 23, 1956 – Page 7 · The Philadelphia Inquirer (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) · Newspapers.com

The ads didn't generate many leads. However, if you read them all, then you'll see that they did generate some communication from someone. One reason that these advertisements may have had a limited impact on the case is that Beverly Sharpman, according to her last communication, got married. 1947 wasn't really a time when women kept their maiden names. If Beverly Sharpman got married and left her original life for a new one, then anyone that met her after her disappearance would know her only by her married name.

Beverly Sharpman missing
Beverly Sharpman missing Mon, Nov 10, 1947 – Page 32 · The Philadelphia Inquirer (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) · Newspapers.com

Beverly Sharpman J B
Beverly Sharpman J B Wed, Jun 16, 1948 – Page 45 · The Philadelphia Inquirer (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) · Newspapers.com
Beverly Sharpman
Beverly Sharpman Sat, Sep 10, 1949 – Page 1 · The Philadelphia Inquirer (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) · Newspapers.com
Beverly Sharpman
Beverly Sharpman Sun, Aug 31, 1952 – Page 61 · The Philadelphia Inquirer (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) · Newspapers.com
Beverly Sharpman
Beverly Sharpman Sun, Aug 24, 1952 – Page 93 · The Philadelphia Inquirer (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) · Newspapers.com
Beverly Sharpman
Beverly Sharpman Tue, Aug 19, 1952 – Page 31 · The Philadelphia Inquirer (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) · Newspapers.com
Beverly Sharpman
Beverly Sharpman Mon, Mar 12, 1951 – Page 29 · The Philadelphia Inquirer (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) · Newspapers.com
Beverly Sharpman
Beverly Sharpman Sun, Mar 11, 1951 – Page 111 · The Philadelphia Inquirer (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) · Newspapers.com

Beverly Sharpman
Beverly Sharpman Sun, Aug 19, 1956 – Page 93 · The Philadelphia Inquirer (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) · Newspapers.com
Sharpman
Sharpman Sat, Nov 12, 1949 – 14 · The Evening Sun (Baltimore, Maryland) · Newspapers.com

Ricky Jean Bryant (NamUs MP #5890) - Very Likely Dead in Fire

Author: Shane Lambert

I read about the missing-person case of Ricky Jean Bryant tonight and did some research on it using online newspaper databases. I thought, for a short time, maybe she was kidnapped and alive somewhere. However, after researching this case, I think Ricky Jean Bryant simply died in a house fire that occurred the day she went missing. Furthermore, I think it's futile for websleuths or amateur investigators to work on this case any further.



Ricky Jean Bryant, the missing person, disappeared at the age of four in December of 1949 in Wisconsin as the house on her family's farm burned down. As described at Doenetwork.com, the case sounds as though a "tall blonde lady in a new car" kidnapped 'Jeannie' as flames leveled the house.
Jeannie and two of her siblings were home with their grandparents, who also lived on the farm. Ricky's brother, who was 5 years old at the time, remembers leaving Jeannie and their younger sister outside, when a tall blonde lady in a new car, drove up and told him to run to a neighbor's house for help. He said the woman sent him to a home further away and told him the phone wasn't working at the nearby house. When he came back with a neighbor, Jeannie was gone, and the lady and the car were nowhere to be found. The neighbor said she put the children in the family car and then went inside to look for Jeannie. She found the grandmother in the kitchen collecting canned goods, and she said that Jeannie was gone. As the house continued to burn, the neighbor kept searching for Jeannie. Finally, the grandmother told her to stop worrying about Jeannie because she was with relatives.
After the fire, Jeannie's father had the local authorities, state police and the FBI searching the ruins of the fire for any possible human remains. No remains were found during the search and her father searched the property three additional times by himself. Each time he found nothing. He never believed that Jeannie perished in the fire.
The description above leaves a lot to be desired. For starters, the timing seems a little strange.

Ricky's brother, whose name is Forrest, supposedly runs to a neighbor's house to get help, and when he returns the grandmother is in the house collecting canned goods. Seems to me that the house would be burning this entire time and wouldn't be safe enough to enter. I do find the story details strange and I find it strange that the grandmother, who is one Mrs. Casper Halverson, would advise stopping looking for Jeannie as though canned goods were more important.

One major fact that I did not ignore during my research was that, according to the original journalist back in 1949, Jeannie was considered dead in the fire. The Daily Tribune out of Wisconsin Rapids on December 21st, 1949 calls Jean Bryant "the little girl who lost her life as fire destroyed the Bryant farm dwelling" (no author listed).

Mrs. Casper Halverson, the grandmother, reportedly got the children out of the house and then climbed a ladder to rescue her husband, "an invalid," from "an upstairs bedroom." If there was a time frame where Mrs. Halverson was preoccupied with getting that ladder, setting it, climbing it, and getting her husband out of the house while Forrest went for help then that leaves the two-year-old child and Jeannie unsupervised. For those playing the entire scenario out, be sure to include a scene in your mind where the invalid grandfather suffers burns to his body: his rescue was a narrow one and certainly would have had Mrs. Halverson's undivided attention.

Could be that the four-year-old Ricky Jean Bryant wandered back into the house while unsupervised. Why wouldn't she? If the grandmother felt that it was safe enough to retrieve canned goods then a part of the house might have looked safe to a four-year-old. Then maybe Mrs. Halverson just assumed that Jeannie was in safe hands when she was able to face the issue.

A big part of this missing-person case is that the Doenetwork says no human remains were found in the fire. The Daily Tribune article might contradict that: it says that "bone particles" that were found "were sent to the state crime laboratory" for testing and that the fire was hot enough to melt metal.

As for the father not believing that his daughter had died in the fire, it's not something to criticize him for. The death of a child is hard to accept. You might settle on remote possibilities instead. In fact, I have a great deal of experience talking with people and/or reading reports that include opinions of loved ones in regard to their missing relatives. Sometimes people think that someone is alive in lieu of much-much more likely scenarios. It seems that the death of a loved one is just unfaceable for some.

NamUs MP #5890

My guess is that the fire cremated Ricky Jean Bryant. I'm aware that skeletons usually survive house fires but I wonder if that's the case for such young victims, victims who might not have completely developed bones of adult volume. The elephant in the room, in this case, is that firefighters heard screams that originated from inside the house, ones that were attributed to a little "tyke."

Take it or leave it, but I think this missing person will be missing for all time and that those researching this mystery should focus their efforts elsewhere. That Ricky Jean Bryant died in a fire and that her parents had trouble accepting that is, in my opinion, much more likely than a tall-blonde woman of mystery kidnapping the girl as the house burned down. That would be one on-the-spot child abductor operating in a hurry with witnesses both already present on the scene and converging on the scene.

This is not a good case for Websleuths or amateurs to be working on at all. Make sure you aren't being too imaginative or fanciful when trying to think of leads. You could spend loads of time with basically a 0% chance of producing any kind of results.

NamUs MP #5890
NamUs MP #5890 · Wed, Dec 21, 1949 – Page 1 · The Daily Tribune (Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin) · Newspapers.com


NamUs MP #5890NamUs MP #5890 · Wed, Dec 21, 1949 – Page 1 · Green Bay Press-Gazette (Green Bay, Wisconsin) · Newspapers.com

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