People go missing without a trace every day. Sometimes these people
are found but sometimes they disappear completely. Where they went or
what happened to them remains a mystery yet to be solved. Most of the
times, investigators will piece together evidence they find and then
track the missing person down. If in the unfortunate event these people
are found dead, the friends and family get some form of closure. But
what happens when no traces can lead the investigators to these people
and no one finds them ever? These are some of the most famous and
bizarre disappearance cases in history.
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1. Glenn Miller
Source: www.wikipedia.org
He was an American big band musician, composer, arranger and
bandleader in the swing era. He was known as the best-selling recording
artist from the year 1939 to 1943. On the day of his disappearance,
Miller was flying from the United Kingdom to Paris, France, to play for
soldiers. His plane departed from RAF Twinwood Farm, Clapham and
disappeared while flying over the English Channel. The theory that his
plane was hit by a jettisoned bomb by the Allied planes returning from
an aborted raid in Germany, was discredited by a plane-spotter log that
implied that miller’s plane was headed in a direction that would avoid
the zone where these bombs were jettisoned.(Source)
2. DB Cooper
Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
For more than 40 years, this case has baffled authorities. Dan Cooper
boarded the Northwest Orient Flight 305, in 1971. He got into the plane
and lit a cigarette. Then he passed a note to Florence Schafner, a
flight attendant, written ‘I HAVE A BOMB IN MY BRIEFCASE. I WILL USE IT
IF NECESSARY. I WANT YOU TO SIT NEXT TO ME. YOU ARE BING (sic)
HIJACKED.’
Cooper asked for $200,000 and four parachutes so that he could allow
36 of the passengers to leave the plane when it landed. The FBI agreed
and the plane took off again and under Cooper’s orders, it was to fly to
Mexico at an altitude of under 10,000 feet. Cooper jumped with a
parachute strapped to his back somewhere over the lower Cascade
Mountains found in Southwestern Washington. He has never been found.(source)
3. Ambrose Bierce
Source: www.knowledgenuts.com
Ambrose Bierce was a famous American Writer and social critic. He is
known for The Devils Dictionary and many other numerous short stories on
ghosts and the civil war. He was a famous writer of The San Francisco
Examiner where he got the nickname “Bitter Pierce”, for his relentless
sarcasm and cynical opinions. He decided to go on a tour of South
battlefields in 1913.
He got to Mexico and spent time with Pancho Villa’s army during the
Mexican Revolution. He disappeared somewhere near Chihuahua in Mexico,
either in late 1913 or early 1914. No one ever found him even after
investigations were done. He did leave an oft quoted passage though, in
one of his final letters, reading “Good-bye — if you hear of my being
stood up against a Mexican stone wall and shot to rags please know that I
think that a pretty good way to depart this life. It beats old age,
disease, or falling down the cellar stairs. To be a Gringo in Mexico—ah,
that is euthanasia!” (source)
Image Source: en.wikipedia.org
The 41 year old judge disappeared while on a night out. On August
6th, crater left his office to share a meal with his friend William
Klein and a showgirl, Sally Lou Ritz. They claim they last saw him
walking outside the streets of the restaurant. News of his disappearance
broke out on September 3rd and a manhunt ensued. Rampant speculation on
his disappearance spawned due to the judge’s suspicious behavior days
before he disappeared. His law clerk claimed that the judge had
destroyed some documents on August 6th, moved some portfolios of papers
to his apartment, and arranged for $5,000 to be withdrawn from his
account.
The phrase ‘pulling a carter’ was born as a synonym for going AWOL and he became known as the “missingest man in New York”. (source)
5. Malaysian Plane MH370
Source: www.theweek.co.uk
On Saturday, 8th March 2014, the Malaysian Airlines Flight 370
disappeared while traveling from Kuala Lumpur airport, Malaysia to
Beijing and finally to the People’s Republic of China. What is known of
the flight is that its transponder had manually been switched off and
that it changed paths sharply. Passengers, crew and pilots didn’t send
any distress call and no wreckage was found. The planes black box also
went completely missing and there were many bizarre theories on what happened to the plane. (source)
6. The missing village
Source: www.all-that-is-interesting.com
Reporter Emmett E. Kelleher, wrote the story on the Danville Bee on
November 27, 1930. Kelleher had been regaled by the story of Joe
Labelle, a northern trapper who told of an entire village of Inuit that
went missing. Labelle says that he frequented the village of Inuit, on
the shores of Lake Angikuni and expected a warm welcome as always. As he
approached the village however, he got a creepy feeling. On entering
the village, he found dogs that had starved to death but no one was in
the village. When he entered the huts, he found cooking pots and
utensils with food still in them. He also found a rifle that surprised
him because the Inuit valued rifles and leaving such a tool behind was
unheard of. Authorities were notified but no one was ever found. (source)
7. Amelia Earhart
Source: en.wikipedia.org
Amelia Earhart was a pilot with numerous records in aviation, in the
1920s. She set out in 1937 with her navigator Fred Noonan, for a flight
around the world. This was to be her crowning achievement. Earhart
encountered some weather problems while near the end of her 29,000 mile
journey, in the South Pacific. She could not find the Island she was
meant to refuel at. All contact with her plane was lost around July 2nd
and a search for the two began. It covered 250,000 miles of ocean but
not even the wreckage from Earhart’s Lockheed Electra was found. (source)
8. Louis Aimé Augustin Le Prince
source: www.makimono.es
Le Prince was an inventor. He was the first person to shoot a moving
picture on paper using film and a single lens camera. He was heralded
“the father of cinematography”.
On September 1890, Le Prince was to go to the UK, to patent his new
camera. This was to be followed by a trip to the US to promote the
camera. He decided however to first visit friends and family at home. He
took a train to Paris on 16th September but when the train arrived, he
was not aboard. No luggage or corpse was ever found and no one had
noticed any strange behavior on the Dijon-Paris express. Exhaustive
searches were done but they couldn’t find him.(source)
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