Showing posts with label train station. Show all posts
Showing posts with label train station. Show all posts

Vickie Annette Smock - Missing in Utah Since 1986

Paraphrased details from government source**: Vickie was last seen in Salt Lake City, Utah in 1985. Her father, a man named Shonnie Smock, dropped her off at the Greyhound Bus Station. She was with a male companion that has not yet been identified. She planned to go to Wendover, Nevada to work as a cocktail waitress at The Red Garter Hotel & Casino. It's not clear if she boarded the bus. She hasn't been seen since her father dropped her off. Vickie's family states that it is very unusual for her to leave and not be in contact.


Missing Person: Vickie Annette Smock
Could be referred to as: Last names: Robinson, Davis, Mismash, Thrisa
Last-contact date: April 12th, 1985
The area where the MP was last seen: Salt Lake City, Utah
Link to government source: NamUs MP#34617

VITAL DETAILS

Ethnicity: White/Caucasian
Sex: Female
Age at time of disappearance: 25 years old
Birthdate: April 11th or 12th, 1960
Hair: Natural medium brown, dyed blond
Eyes: Hazel
Scar: None
Height/weight: 5-foot-7 to 5-foot-8 and 125 to 145 pounds
BMI*: Vickie Annette Smock was in the normal range for BMI.
Tattoos: Vickie Annette Smock did not have any tattoos associated with her profiles.

Vickie Annette Smock was last heard from on January 1st, 1986 when she was 25 years of age. That date is according to her NamUs profile, however, she may have gone missing in 1985. The news telecast below uses 1985 as the year she went missing and, in the video, you can see a missing person poster at one point that says she went missing in 1985. This individual has now been missing for about 36 years as of the original publication date of this blog post.

I did not find any original news coverage associated with this disappearance using Newspapers.com. However, if you have a membership it may be worth looking at from time to time as they continually add new publications.

There was a news piece published on Youtube by mainstream media in mid-2021 in two parts. I have embedded those below for my readers.





A Facebook group dedicated to finding this missing person had the following description as of time of publication:

"My biological mother disappeared over 30 years ago (1985) from Salt Lake City, Utah. Her name is Vickie Annette Smock (maiden name) her birthday is April 12, 1960. I really don't have much identifying information about her. She was born in California and her father's Name is Shonnie Smock. Her Last known whereabouts were at the greyhound bus station in Salt Lake. She was dropped off by my grandfather with an unknown man. She was supposed to go to Wendover Nevada to work as a cocktail waitress at The Red Guarder and hasn't been seen since. It was very unusual for her to leave and never came back. My sister and I both lived with our fathers at the time of her disappearance. I am not sure if she is dead or alive. I have tried everything that I can think of to try to find her and have had no luck.
Her mother: Arlene Huff
Her Father: Shonnie Smock
Vickie married Rueben Earl Robinson in Nevada Feb. 11/84
She was not married long before she went missing.
She may have used the name Robinson."

Please, take a moment to share this blog post on social media using hashtags relevant to the missing person's area. Also, please include the website hashtag #MPCSL.

Author: Shane Lambert (Vancouver, Canada)
All articles are subject to editing after the original posting.
Shane Lambert (Vancouver, Canada) is not a Private Investigator, however, he is currently studying to be one as of April 2021.
If you like this blog, then you can join the affiliated Facebook group: MPC Facebook Group
Website hashtag: #MPCSL

*For BMI values, I use the UPPER or HIGHER ranges that are given for height and weight.
**Might not be the exact meaning that NamUs or Canada's Missing conveys. I improve upon their descriptions with my research.
Disclaimer: Whenever possible, government sources are preferred for getting the details of a missing persons case. However, any source that the article writer deems reputable may be used.

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Phyllis Marie Corbin -- Missing Since November 1963

Paraphrased details from government source**: Phyllis was placed at the House of Good Shepherd. This was located at 3800 Gravois Ave., St. Louis, Missouri. While she was there at the beginning of November of 1963, she met another young lady and they ran away together. She was given a ride to the bus station where reportedly they were heading to New Orleans. The home supposedly reported her missing but Phyllis' family hasn't been able to confirm that. It was originally believed the other girl may have returned three weeks later but that too is not proven.

The photo shows the missing person at the age of 14.

Missing Person: Phyllis Marie Corbin
Last-contact date: November 1963
The area where the MP was last seen: St. Louis, Missouri. There was a Greyhound Bus Station at 709 North Broadway in 1963 but perhaps there was more than one.
Link to government source: NamUs MP#50556 

VITAL DETAILS

Ethnicity: Caucasian
Sex: Female
Age at time of disappearance: 16 years old
Birthdate: Phyllis Marie Corbin was born between November 2nd, 1946, and November 1st, 1947 based on her reported age at the last date of reported contact. I found a Phyllis Marie Corbin that was born in Missouri on September 6th, 1947 at Ancestry. 
Hair: Reddish-brown, short and wavy
Eyes: blue
Scar: none reported
Height/weight: 65 to 68 inches and 100 to 155 pounds
BMI*: Phyllis Marie Corbin was in the normal range for BMI if you use the upper values.
Tattoos: Phyllis Marie Corbin did not have any tattoos associated with her profiles.

Phyllis Marie Corbin was last heard from in November of 1963 when she was 16 years of age. This individual has now been missing for about 58 years as of the original publication date of this blog post.

There is little to go on with the case, except for the NamUs description. I did not find any media coverage with this individual. Furthermore, this individual was not in the files of Ancestry very much. However, I think I found her birthdate of September 6th, 1947.  Ancestry updates their files regularly, so one thing you could do is look in that database for this individual and see if she shows up anywhere after his last-seen date of November 1963.



When I looked at Google Maps for the address of the House of Good Shepherd, I thought that the building currently standing might have been the same one in 1963. However, Google Maps only went back to 2007 for the area.

Some research I did on the House of Good Shepherd suggested to me that these were kind-of halfway houses for at-risk youth. It seemed that this was a place that someone would want to "escape" from. The following article pertains to the House of Good Shepherd from 1967. It's clear from the article that this isn't a place that anyone would want to be. It suggests that Phyllis was an at-risk youth in a problematic environment. Perhaps she sought to escape the House of Good Shepherd at all costs.

07 May 1967, Sun St. Louis Post-Dispatch (St. Louis, Missouri) Newspapers.com

Thank you for reading. If have any information about this case, consider contacting the authorities.

Author: @UncoolNegated on Twitter
All articles are subject to editing after the original posting.
@UncoolNegated on Twitter is not a Private Investigator, however, he is currently studying to be one as of April 2021.
If you like this blog, then you can join the affiliated Facebook group: MPC Facebook Group
Website hashtag: #MPCSL

*For BMI values, I use the UPPER or HIGHER ranges that are given for height and weight.
**Might not be the exact meaning that NamUs or Canada's Missing conveys. I improve upon their descriptions with my research.
Disclaimer: Non-opinionated information at this site generally comes from government sources or police reports. Other sources may be used.

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Rahway County Jane Doe (Attempt to Match) - Was Her Name Annie Primroe?

By: Shane Lambert
Original Time of Writing: December 19th, 2021

I researched the case of the Rahway County Jane Doe almost five years ago, as of the original time of writing this article. If you are not familiar with the case, then, in a nutshell, in March 1887, a woman was found murdered in the town of Rahway, New Jersey. The details of her case became a bit of a media circus. Perhaps this is just like more modern murder mysteries, like the case of JonBenet Ramsey.

The Rahway County Jane Doe was thought to have been a passenger who had recently alighted a train before being murdered. That she was supposed to be a traveler made the case difficult to solve back in the late 1800s because it suggested that the woman was not a local. Accordingly, missing persons from anywhere in the world were -- and still are -- actually in play with this case.

Searching the Classifieds to Research the Case

Back in February 2017, I attempted to find a classified advertisement where someone was looking for a missing woman who was last seen in 1887. It used to be that if you lost touch with someone, then you might take to the newspaper classifieds to find the person.

Newspaper classifieds have been featured in other missing person cases that I have worked on. The case of Beverly Sharpman, last seen in Philadelphia, comes to mind as does the case of The Lady in the Well who was discovered in Saskatoon in modern times but thought to have been dead since the 1920s.

When I originally looked for someone back in early 2017 who might have been searching for the Rahway County Jane Doe, I failed in that effort. It could have been that the exact newspaper I needed was not in the databases I used at the time. I made a second attempt in December 2021, one that was successful in finding a lead that I can only call tenuous at this time.

Please read the classified advertisement below, which appeared in a Buffalo-area publication in 1902.
20 Jun 1902, Fri Buffalo Evening News (Buffalo, New York) Newspapers.com

Could Annie Primroe be the Rahway County Jane Doe?

Is Annie Primroe the Rahway County Jane Doe? This is something I want to prove or disprove.

Firstly, the year of disappearance matches up to the year that the Rahway County Jane Doe was murdered. The person who placed the classified advertisement, one "J.J.T.", says Annie had been "missing since 1887."

Secondly, there is a question as to whether Annie Primroe may have changed locations: in the final statement, J.J.T. seems to acknowledge that Annie may no longer be in the Buffalo area, the city where this classified advertisement was placed.

Furthermore, I do know that the train line that served Rahway, New Jersey, served New York state. I read a story in The Morning Call newspaper from February 26th, 1886, that attested to this (Page 8). The first clues, in this case, are very tenuous, but there's nothing to contradict a match between Annie Primroe and the Rahway County Jane Doe.

To better understand the potential connection, the following table cross-references key details between Annie Primroe and the Rahway County Jane Doe:

AttributeAnnie PrimroeRahway County Jane DoeNotes/Observations
Year of DisappearanceMissing since 1887 (per 1902 classified ad by J.J.T.)Murdered in March 1887Timelines match exactly, supporting a potential connection.
Location ConnectionFrom Buffalo, New York; last known location per ad.Found in Rahway, New Jersey; believed to be a traveler, possibly via train.Train lines connected Buffalo and Rahway in 1887, making travel between them plausible.
Marital StatusLikely unmarried in 1887 (ad suggests her name might have changed later, possibly due to marriage).Presumed unmarried; autopsy indicated she was a virgin, ruling out prostitution.Both appear to be unmarried in 1887, a point of corroboration.
Travel ContextJ.J.T. acknowledges Annie may have left Buffalo, suggesting she traveled.Believed to have alighted a train shortly before her murder.Both cases involve potential travel, aligning with the transient nature of the Jane Doe.

The family tree information can't be discounted. Annie is the cousin of J.J.T., she is the sister of Hattie Lesher, and, very importantly, Primroe appears to be a maiden name. This is actually a small clue that corroborates with the Rahway County Jane Doe.

J.J.T., in the classified advertisement, says "Her name was...Annie Primroe," in 1887, but the statement tacitly acknowledges that her name may have changed in the 15 years after that time. The most likely reason for a woman's name to change is through marriage. Thus, we can assume that Annie Primroe was not married at the time of her last contact with J.J.T. in 1887. The Rahway County Jane Doe, coincidentally enough, was actually thought to not be married.

On that matter, there was some discussion in a newspaper article I read that the Jane Doe, in some circles of gossip, was thought to have been a prostitute. However, during her post-mortem, I inferred they inspected her vagina and concluded that the Rahway County Jane Doe was a virgin. This discounted the notion that the Rahway County Jane Doe was a prostitute, and it strongly implies that she was not married. There seems to be some corroboration with Annie Primroe that is, admittedly, tenuous, but I felt intrigued enough to look at this lead deeper.

Research Angles and Challenges - Find a Record for Annie Primroe

For me, this is a work in progress that I invite others to look at. If you are interested in researching whether Annie Primroe might have been the Rahway County Jane Doe, then remember one important point: the primary goal is to try and disprove it. If you can't do that, then you can look at proving it.

One way to disprove that Annie Primroe was the Rahway County Jane Doe is to find her death record that proves she lived past 1887. She can't be declared dead in absentia or anything like that: in fact, dead in absentia might mean she was the Jane Doe. However, if you can prove that Annie Primroe lived past 1887, then it would mean she wasn't the Rahway County Jane Doe.

I have done some introductory work on this subject with Ancestry records. However, the name Primroe is not very common. I've wondered if it is meant to be "Primrose," however, as soon as you start working on angles like that, you are often going on futile tangents.

But finding Annie Primroe in Ancestry would be a great first step. The challenge is that her first name is the kind that has a lot of derivations, like Anne, Ann, or Anna. If you find someone who might be her, then keep in mind the family tree connections in trying to identify her. She has a sister named Hattie Lesher, with Lesher probably being a married name. "Hattie" can stand alone or it can mean Henrietta or Harriette. Hattie Lesher should be dead by June 18th, 1902. Also, Annie should have a cousin with the initials "J.J.T" who should be alive as of June 18th, 1902.

Any connections to Buffalo and Rahway County, New Jersey, would be very interesting, of course. If you build off of this article, please just be sure to properly cite me and link back.

Summary: Annie Primroe vs Rahway County Jane Doe

  • Annie Primroe went missing 1887, the year that the Rahway County Jane Doe was found deceased.
  • Primroe was from Buffalo, which has train connections to Rahway
  • Primroe was not married and the Rahway County Jane Doe was not married, presumptively, because she was a virgin

3 Decades Old Cold Cases That Perplex Me

By: Shane Lambert
Original time of writing: August 30th, 2021

While working on this website, I have generally gravitated toward cases that are forty years old or less believing that they are the ones that are still most likely to be solved. However, from time to time I have not been able to help but look at older and colder cases. These are three old and cold cases that stand out in my memory.


Paula Jean Welden Missing for Nearly 80 Years

Something happened to Paula Jean Welden on December 1st, 1946 that, at the time of writing, has not yet been traced. The then 18-year old student at Bennington College in Vermont left her home after telling her roommate, a young woman named Elizabeth Johnson, that she was going to hike a trail known as The Long Trail. Many others besides Elizabeth would see Welden that day but no one has seen her since December 1st, 1946. At the original time of writing, the 75th anniversary of her disappearance was on the horizon. As of January 2025, she has now been missing closer to 80 years.

My guess on what happened to Paul Jean Welden is that got lost while hiking. A plausible enough competing guess might hold that she was abducted. After all, she was known to have been hitchhiking that day, although she was spotted after exiting her driver's vehicle. There is a question as to whether she hitchhiked on her return route.

But Paula Jean Welden, according to my research, was lost from the get-go. According to witnesses that saw her on December 1st, 1946, she was reliant on directions just to find the trail that was interested in. 

When I examined this case in 2020, I found that she was still receiving directions to The Long Trail even as dusk quickly approached. My thoughts on her disappearance are that she got lost and in the resulting panic that night, she only went further and further into the forest due to disorientation. I think she would have tried to find a spot that felt safe, even off-trail, and that she then perished in the cold December night in what would have been a little bit of a hiding spot from the cold wind. It's this, her desire to escape the cold (which may have resulted in going off trail) and the fact that it snowed soon after she went missing, that made her hard to find after she died, in my opinion.

Beverly Sharpman Missing for More Than 85 Years

Beverly Sharpman's case is one that has grabbed my attention on plenty of nights. This high school student disappeared and was last seen in Philadelphia on September 11th, 1947. The 74th anniversary of her disappearance, at the original time of writing, was nearing.

Sharpman's case details included a telegram that was sent from a train station. It read "Got married. Leaving town. Will not be back." If you don't question the authenticity of that telegram, then it seems like she meant business with the last sentence.

Questions with this case are aplenty. Firstly, why did Beverly Sharpman register for her senior year of high school the morning of September 11th, 1947 if she was running away that night? My suggestion is that she didn't want anything to seem amiss but that's just speculation.

Another question is what did she want to tell her mother the evening before she disappeared? Beverly appeared to have something to say to her mother, perhaps something difficult, but Beverly decided to keep quiet about what she had to say. You would think that would have to do with pregnancy or maybe just a relationship with someone who might be inappropriate from her mother's perspective.

The question of the ages with this case is one that could crack it wide open. The telegram said she "Got married." Assuming she was telling the truth, then where is Beverly Sharpman's marriage certificate? I know I've spent hours combing through the records that you find at Ancestry looking for it but it has been to no avail.

My efforts lead me to believe that it was not straightforward for a 17-year old (ie. a minor) to get married in Pennsylvania in 1947. I remember seeing other married records involving minors where parental consent was required.

This, in itself, brings a lot of questions into play. What options were there for a 17-year old to get married in 1947 without parental consent? How easy was it to assume a false identity? Did she not really get married?

With Sharpman's case, I've always thought that she really did leave town on her own volition. I think she married into a new name and was then able to live a life under a different identity. Under this new identity, no one ever connected her to the Beverly Sharpman missing person case precisely because she married into a new name -- somehow. There were a lot of classified ads placed by the mother asking for information on where Beverly Sharpman was but no one in her new circles would know her maiden name, from this perspective.

The Rahway County Jane Doe Unnamed Since 1887

Picture this scenario. Late one evening in March 1887, a young woman alights a train in Rahway, New Jersey. A short time later, she is murdered, a dog nearby in the darkness of night seems to be aware of the drama, and then four brothers find her the next morning. The resulting 'whodunit' and "Who is she?" stories are a coast-to-coast media hit and the details of the Rahway County Jane Doe story gets plenty of coverage. However, to this day she remains unnamed.

I looked at this case back in 2017. One angle I took that I hoped would lead to her identity was to search newspaper classifieds for someone that was looking for a missing person. Newspapers used to have a section where you could post information on someone you were trying to reconnect with. In fact, Beverly Sharpman's mother used such classfieds. 

What I hoped with the Rahway County Jane Doe was to find a classified advertisement where someone was looking for their friend, daughter, or wife who was last known to be traveling via train to New Jersey in March 1887 and has not been heard from since. I failed at that but this is a process that could be done over and over again as time goes by. That's because newspaper databases are constantly expanding.

I've always felt that the best chance for this case to be solved is just for a television network to take an interest in her case for nothing more than TV ratings. It would be a captivating hour-long television program to name a Jane Doe from the late 1800s using modern forensics, I think.

The Mystery of Beverly Sharpman's Disappearance: The 1947 Philadelphia Missing Person Case

By: Shane Lambert
Original time of writing: February 18th, 2018

Tonight I looked at the mysterious case of Beverly Sharpman, an individual who was last seen on September 11th, 1947 in Philadelphia. NamUs has her listed as 16 years old at the time of her disappearance. However, all the newspaper articles I looked at indicated that she was 17 years old at the time. Generally, she is reported as 17 years old, which has always meant that she is a missing child.

Exploring the Enigma of Beverly Sharpman’s Disappearance

The case stands out to me because of the huge effort that individuals in Beverly's family made, especially her mother Nettie, in attempting to find her. Furthermore, I'm not convinced that Beverly Sharpman died at a time close to her disappearance.

Lastly, I'm not convinced that the love that Beverly's family felt for her was entirely reciprocal. My opinion in this cloudy case is that Beverly disappeared voluntarily.

Have a look at the photograph below. The face from this photograph is commonly used as the missing-person's photograph of Beverly. I think there might be a clue in the entire photo, a matter that I will return to.

"Got married. Leaving town. Will not be back. Don't worry. Babe."

For now, let's review the details of the case.

On September 11th, 1947, Beverly Sharpman enrolled for her senior year of high school (Overbrook High School). Later that day, her parents received a telegram. The telegram said: "Got married. Leaving town. Will not be back. Don't worry. Babe" (Babe is her nickname).

Unveiling the Truth Behind Beverly Sharpman’s Mysterious Telegram and Last Known Location

The message may seem cold in the sense that it appears to lack sensitivity for the questions that might arise from such an announcement. However, the message is inherently thoughtful as well. The simple fact that it was sent indicates that Beverly cared enough about those that she was leaving the company of to not leave them completely in the dark as to her plans.

She did not disappear into thin air and her last sighting, according to Doenetwork, was the train station above where she was spotted with luggage. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Station in Philadelphia no longer exists; it closed in 1960 and was demolished thereafter. But if the train station sighting is accurate, then it would be her last known location (modern Google Maps).

However, if you read the snippet above very carefully, one I took from the April 28th, 1948 issue of The Philadelphia Inquirer (Page 29), it doesn't say that Beverly was seen there. What it says was that she was "last heard from" (emphasis added) at the station.

Did Beverly Sharpman Send the Telegram, or Was It a Diversion Tactic by an Abductor?

In my opinion, it's not 100% clear that she actually sent the telegram herself. They were typed messages back then, and it may be possible that the telegram was sent by someone who abducted her to mislead an investigation. Sending a telegram from a train station might be like the trick some abductors use, where they park the missing person's car at an airport.

That possibility acknowledged that scenario is not the one I believe in. I will also state that in much of the journalism, it's taken for granted that she sent the message herself.

One article that I read at the time around her disappearance stated she had withdrawn $150 from her bank account. The interesting point is that she had to give one week's notice in order to make such a withdrawal. That suggested advanced planning of her disappearance to me.

The Philadelphia Inquirer, March 13th 1949, Page 114

High school enrollment a red herring?

One question that could be raised is why did she enroll in high school in the morning if she was skipping town and not coming back in the evening? That does seem odd but then it could be that she didn't want to tip off that anything was amiss.

It could be that she behaved as normally as possible until she was ready to leave: not registering for high school might have raised some eyebrows. Schools get their funding from enrollment size, so if she isn't there, then maybe someone calls her home to find out why she wasn't.

Furthermore, it just might be that she wasn't 100% committed to leaving or that she wasn't sure how long she'd be gone with certainty. Enrolling in high school so that she could attend if she decided to return in the months ahead might have been a scenario in her mind.

Decoding the Tense of Beverly Sharpman’s Telegram: Was She Already Married When She Disappeared?

But something that should not be overlooked is the changing tense of her short message. I found one somewhat-modern article on the case that stated that Beverly Sharpman was eloping.

Philadelphia Daily News, February 29th 2008, by Dana DiFilippo

Those researching this case should be aware of the tense of her statements.

  1. "Got married." Past tense.
  2. "Leaving town." Present tense.
  3. "Will not be back." Future tense.

If we take the telegram message at face value, then she was not "leaving home to marry" or "running away to get married" but was already married when she left. That is a point that can't be overlooked: at the time of her disappearance this girl was married.

The Missing Marriage Certificate: Could It Be the Smoking Gun in Beverly Sharpman’s Disappearance?

The matter is an enormous one in this case, for reasons that I will get back to. However, what is gigantic about this case is simply that her marriage certificate has eluded everyone -- and lots of people have looked for it.

Even in the modern age of Internet searching and searchable databases like Ancestry.com -- where name searches scour countless records in less than a minute -- no one has ever been able to find her marriage certificate. If you can find it, then it would be a massive feather in your cap.

Yet, one oddity with her getting married is that it is hard to picture how she could have done it without parental consent. She was 17 years old at the time of her disappearance. In my review of marriage certificates in Philadelphia from the summer of 1947, I found that there were cases where 18-year-olds (legal adults) still needed parental consent for marriage.

However, the fact remains that Beverly Sharpman's note says she "Got married." That is past tense, meaning she was married the moment she boarded the train. I think if she was married the moment she left town, then she might have done it under a fake name -- somehow.

Mother Placed Numerous Classified Ads

The mother, as part of a fierce effort to find her daughter, placed numerous classified ads under the "Missing Persons" columns of newspapers. These messages at first were directed toward her daughter directly.

Later, they were directed towards anyone with information on her location. At another time, they communicated forgiveness. In one peculiar ad, the mother said that she needed a sample of Beverly's handwriting.

The request for a card in her handwriting comes after Nettie received a card that may have been from Beverly, a break in the case that didn't yield any further clues that I found. But the fact of the matter is that the classified ads appealed to Beverly Sharpman directly or to anyone that knew of her. I would like the reader to consider the following.

Why Classified Ads Failed to Find Beverly Sharpman: The Critical Challenge of Her Married Name Change

If someone put your name, the reader's (imagine this personally), into a classified ad then what chance is there that you would read it? Surely, we've all looked through the classifieds but, unless it's your hobby, many days might pass by between your glances at these pages in the paper.

What's more likely: that you discover for yourself that someone is looking for you using the classifieds or that someone else who knows you reads your name and directs your attention to such an ad?

I think the latter is more likely and therein lies the problem with finding Beverly Sharpman using classified ads to appeal to her: anyone that knows her after she left home will probably know her by her new married name, not Beverly Sharpman.

Where is "Beverly (nee Sharpman)," new last name unknown?

On that matter, I made an attempt to search keywords using "Beverly (nee Sharpman)" and its variants such as just "(nee Sharpman)" or "B. (nee Sharpman)" in hopes of finding anyone, in 1947 or thereafter, described as such. The term "nee" for those that don't know refers to birth names. After Beverly got married and moved on to a new life, no one would know that she was Beverly Sharpman.

The classifieds do contain some case clues. The promise to keep information confidential is interesting: it recognizes that Beverly may have had some secrets. It's known that Beverly wanted to talk to her mother about something shortly before she, Beverly, disappeared. However, ultimately, she was not able to open up.

At the DoeNetwork page for this case the following statements are made: "On September 10, 1947 Beverly told her mother she had something to tell her. Beverly seemed troubled, her mother later told police. Nettie Sharpman went to make tea and did not pressure her daughter to reveal her secret. And Beverly, apparently reconsidering, later went to bed without confiding her concerns."

What it sounds like to me is that Beverly married someone that her parents wouldn't approve of, maybe she was pregnant by him, and she couldn't bring herself to tell them.

Maybe she married a man who was a member of a race that her parents or circles wouldn't approve of. Society was a lot less open in 1947 then it is today.

Maybe she married a man who was 30 years her senior. Maybe she married a man who was a member of the communist party. Maybe she married a man who was the 'wrong' race, that was 30 years her senior, and a member of the communist party. Again, maybe she was pregnant and pregnant as a minor by an older man.

Classified Ads Could Have Deepened Beverly Sharpman’s Family Rift

The one classified ad that jumps out to me is the following one:

If you read that message from a loved one, then how would you feel? Reassured that you could re-enter a relationship knowing that bygones were bygones?

Well, what if you didn't think you'd done a thing wrong in the first place? Forgiveness over a matter where you felt you shouldn't be blamed might just reaffirm some kind of gap between yourself and the person or persons you had interpersonal troubles with.

My inclination is that Beverly left in good health and on her own volition. That she planned to depart is clear based on the combination of the telegram attesting to that and the bank withdrawal that had to be planned in advance. That withdrawal is not something someone else could have done for her.

After September 11th, 1947, she had a different name than Beverly Sharpman, whether legally or just one that she lived under. I think those working on this case should focus on someone named Beverly with a maiden name of Sharpman. But it's possible that she had an entire assumed name and that's all.

Furthermore, I think that focusing on Jane Does may prove fruitless. They have a DNA sample of Beverly, according to NamUs. If she is a Jane Doe then the computer matching systems for DNA profiles will do that work.

Looking back at the photo

When I look at the photo that was posted at the top, I have many questions. I think anyone working on this case should try to find information on the photo.

Focusing only on her face, it is the one used to disseminate information about her likeness to the general public. For that purpose, family and authorities would want a recent photo to be used. For that reason, we can be sure that the photo below was one of the last-known photos of her.

Note: she was 17 years old at time of disappearance.

Specifically, who was the cordial man that lent his jacket to keep her warm? Did she lean to the left to get close to him or was she just not sure about the edge of the camera's scope? Do I see an abnormality in the right ring finger? I wonder if she is wearing a ring in the picture and what for. When I focus only on the hands and use enhancements, the abnormality is much clearer. Why does her NamUs profile say she wore no jewelry when it looks to me that she did wear a ring?

I spoke to my grandma, who was born in 1923 and remembers the 1940s vividly, about where women wore wedding rings or promise rings or engagement rings. She insisted that they were worn on the left hand. However, she did say that it depended on which country you were from with some European cultures wearing them on the right hand. Maybe she married a European man and wearing a ring on her right hand was his culture, a practice that would also hide their relationship in North America. Perhaps related, one 'Lee Davis' of Fairless Hills or Levittown was named as an author of a letter in 1954. The letter urged the police to contact foreign police regarding this case.

In conclusion, "Beverly (nee Sharpman) [last name after marriage unknown]" may be dead now. But I do think she lived after September 11th, 1947. The problem is that everyone looking for Beverly Sharpman could be on a wild-goose chase: if she "got married," as her message said, then who knows what her last name actually is.

I'll continue to look for someone named Beverly or Bev or Babe with a maiden name of Sharpman. When it comes to keyword searching in newspaper databases to see if the keywords appear anywhere in the United States after her disappearance date, that brings about dozens of possible permutations that I can think of - so any help would be appreciated.

I also don't have access to tons of search engines for newspapers, so anyone else that does could help: don't look for "Beverly Sharpman" but look for someone named Beverly with an association to a maiden name of Sharpman. Also, don't hesitate to look outside of the USA, just in case that is an engagement ring on her right hand under European customs.

This is a case that is ice cold. However, it also made the mainstream news on many occasions over the decades. She was among a host of missing people for an article that focused on Pennsylvania's missing children. But that goes back to 2016 now.

Weird Communication From a Reader at My Blog, Missing Persons Commentary

I always thought that this communication was weird:

People who post online under random usernames aren't credible. However, it's food for thought. I don't like it when people do such things, especially since she ghosted my response.

Possible communication in 1954

This letter had the name "Lee Davis" associated to it. I found no follow-up articles on the matter.

The Rahway Jane Doe from March 25, 1887 (New Jersey)

By: Shane Lambert
Original time of writing: February 6th, 2017
Updated: February 16th, 2021

The Rahway Jane Doe is an individual who was murdered in the town of Rahway, New Jersey, on March 25th, 1887. The mystery of the murder victim's identity stands out because, at the original time of writing back in 2017, it was the oldest unsolved mystery listed at DoeNetwork.org.

I researched this mystery using online newspaper databases for a good two hours on February 5th, 2017. At the time, I thought that there was very little chance of conclusively solving this mystery, even with modern technology that wasn't available in 1887 (online newspaper databases). The "clews" in this case (that's the 1887 spelling of "clues") are 99% red herrings if you ask me. Perhaps the best chance of identifying her is through DNA and the family-tree method.

Note: I think I generated a lead for investigation with a second look at this topic in 2021. Please visit my other article, suggesting that she might be a missing person named Annie Primroe, last seen in 1887.



Why Investigate the Rahway County Jane Doe Case?


If you are interested in this case, then it's not so much about justice or helping surviving relatives learn where a loved one went, is it? After all, the perpetrator can only be dead at this point and the same could be true of any kid sibling the victim may have had, right?

The matter is a curiosity for many and, for me, a matter of testing out online newspaper databases as a modern technology for finding "clews" in historical crimes. In this case, I wanted to see if anyone nationwide in the United States searched for a missing woman in the years that followed 1887 who was last known to be heading to New Jersey, something that might be revealed in archived newspapers, including in classified advertisements and/or in news pieces.

It may prove a viable way of looking into solving this murder or other murders, or at least generating a lead. In fact, I successfully used this method in the Saskatoon case of the Lady in the Well and managed to generate a tip for the police. But on the night that I devoted to the matter of the Rahway County Jane Doe, I certainly failed. Yet, that doesn't mean I didn't find out a lot of details involving this case.

Discovery by Four Brothers and a Dog’s Role


Four brothers named Frank, Irving, Thomas, and Alfred Worth found the mystery woman dead at 6:30am on Saturday, March 26th, 1887. She may have been a rail passenger the night before, as a woman like her got off the train at about 10pm on the 25th.

According to one J.H. Brunt, an individual who lived near where the deceased was found, his dog named Pete, was behaving strangely between 11pm and midnight on the 25th. Reportedly, his dog would bark to try and get the owner's attention and then run in the direction of where the body was eventually found the next morning. If we draw an inference from this behaviour, then the woman was murdered in the very late hours of the 25th, and perhaps the dog was aware of the commotion or heard her calls for help.



Incidentally, that description of how Pete acted reminded me of dog behavior associated with another unidentified person's case (NamUs UP 7582). I think dogs know when someone is in trouble, and they instinctively try to summon attention from nearby humanoids (see the relevant excerpt from the article immediately below).

Boston Daily GlobeThursday, March 31, 1887, Boston, Massachusetts

Loads of names are associated with this case, but whether they should be is a legitimate question. It stands to reason that only one of them could shed light on the woman's identity, unless she had some aliases.

The woman's throat was slashed, and she was probably robbed (one article I read said one of her pockets had been inspected by a bloody hand). She had no money when found, but the rings that were on her fingers weren't taken. That could be taken as evidence that robbery wasn't the motive. However, it could also be taken to mean it was just a bad and rushed plan.

Whoever killed her may have been a destitute opportunist who only happened upon her by chance. He may have made a haphazard decision to murder her and simply didn't do a complete robbery in panic. If Pete was barking in the distance, this could have scared the fellow into not doing a thorough job, especially if the woman was able to let out a scream.

But one "clew" in this case is that the woman's pocket was inspected with a bloody hand. Knife-wielding criminals often cut themselves when they stab or slash. That can be due to the momentum of the knife coming to a stop when it strikes someone, while the momentum of the hand that holds the knife continues to travel up the blade. Many knife-wielders have been identified or cast into suspicion because of wounds to their hands. The man who looked in the Jane Doe's pockets with bloody hands might have cut himself.

Handkerchief Clue in the Rahway Jane Doe Mystery


Blood was found smeared on a railing 600 yards from the victim after she was found. Near this point, a handkerchief was found with a name that resembled K.M. Noorz, writing that could not be made out clearly. A rubber stamp of some sort was also found with the name Timothy Byrne in the print.

Identifying blood, like the smear on the rail, in 1887 wasn't like it is in modern times. Something 600 yards away from ground zero (think 6 American football fields) cannot be tied to an event conclusively without a serologist. I found nothing on this matter that satisfactorily answered how the secondary scene could be tied to the first with certainty.

"Noorz," which was on the handkerchief, has been suggested to be a Danish name of "Noorse." Other victim names associated with this case are "Mary Cregan," "Mary Craney," "Mary Malthey" (or Maithey), "Kate Jennie Neary," "Mina Noorse," and "Kate M. Noony." None of the names were fruitful for me in terms of finding them in the newspaper databases I searched in hopes of finding missing people with those names. A 'eureka' moment would be if an article appeared anytime and anywhere in the world of newspapers after March 25th, 1887 about a mother, father, or brother looking for a "Kate M. Noony," for example, but no such moment happened in this case.

Did the Reward Lead to False Tips?


The authorities offered a $500 reward, part for finding the murderer and part for finding the woman's name, to anyone who provided a good lead. I actually wonder if the 'leads' and 'tips' in this case are run amok because of the reward. That is, were all the attempts to name her just attempts to make some money? That is a sad thought to think that people would falsely name a dead woman just to try to make money without due concern for justice and preventing the murderer from claiming more victims. However, that seemed to be the case based on how many people tried to name her.

For instance, one postal clerk claimed that he knew of a Timothy Byrne in the company of the so-called Kate M. Noony. The clerk claimed she received general delivery mail at the clerk's place of employment. Seems to me that would be a fantastic lead if true. Seems to me that her mail would keep coming from people far away that would not have known of her death. I wondered if the clerk just got the names from the newspapers, which covered this murder from coast to coast, and then just tried his luck at making a buck with his tip.

July 15th, 1887 - Lebanon Daily News (click to make bigger)

Rahway Jane Doe: Not a Prostitute


Something to note is that in my research I found a report that claimed that the Mayor of Rahway, one Mayor Daly, claimed that the "medical examination" of this Jane Doe "proved beyond all doubt" that she had "never been married." I'm taking that to mean that they inspected her vagina and figured she was a virgin.

The deceased was buried in a grave that called her "An Unknown Woman" according to the picture at DoeNetwork. I read one article that grotesquely misquoted what was actually written on her grave. Furthermore, her grave is actually wrong in reporting that she was found dead on March 25th, which was the day she was murdered according to Pete the dog (she was found the next day).

Apparently, she was buried far away from the deceased snooties of 1887 Rahway out of fear that she wasn't a decent enough woman to merit burial near them. As a late-night murder victim, she was believed to be a possible prostitute. Her virginity, however, attests to the fact that she wasn't one.


Lastly, I found an interesting article somewhere that said there was a picture of her post-mortem in the March 30th, 1887 edition of "New York World." If anyone has access to that I would be interested in the picture. Lastly, please make one comment just so I know someone is out there that also bothers with 130-year-old Jane-Doe mysteries.

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