CO CO- Alfred Beilhartz, 4, Rocky Mountain National Park, 2 Jul 1938

aThousandYearsWide

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Alfred is the third child in the front

A missing four year old vanishes without a trace from a National park in 1938

Alfred Beilhartz was last seen at Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado on July 2, 1938. His family (including 10 siblings) were on a fishing trip to celebrate Independence weekend. He was last seen on a trail with his family near Fall River where he fell behind and was never seen again.

It was first believed he fell in the river. After dragging and damming the river they weren't able to locate him. Bloodhounds tracked his scent 500 ft uphill but lost his scent after they lost the trail following a fork in path. Strangely there was no footprints where his scent was tracked and the bloodhounds started acting nervously after the scent was lost.

There was a possible sighting of Alfred the day he went missing by a couple hiking in another part of the park 2,500 to 3,000 ft higher than the area he went missing from. They reported seeing a boy fitting Alfred's description atop a high ridge in Devil's Nest, a treacherous area near the top of Mt. Chaplin. They were brought to his attention after he made a noise atop the ridge then he turned around out of sight. The couple assumed at the time his family must be nearby and didn't contact authorities until they read about his disapearance in the newspaper the next day. When the area was searched after the couple's contacted authorities the boy couldn't be found. Despite a extensive ten-day search he wasn't able to be located.

Questions are:
  • How were there no footprints?
  • How does a four year old end up 6 miles uphill from where he was last seen? And in such a short time frame?
  • Where is he, period?


 
View attachment 128379
Alfred is the third child in the front

A missing four year old vanishes without a trace from a National park in 1938

Alfred Beilhartz was last seen at Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado on July 2, 1938. His family (including 10 siblings) were on a fishing trip to celebrate Independence weekend. He was last seen on a trail with his family near Fall River where he fell behind and was never seen again.

It was first believed he fell in the river. After dragging and damming the river they weren't able to locate him. Bloodhounds tracked his scent 500 ft uphill but lost his scent after they lost the trail following a fork in path. Strangely there was no footprints where his scent was tracked and the bloodhounds started acting nervously after the scent was lost.

There was a possible sighting of Alfred the day he went missing by a couple hiking in another part of the park 2,500 to 3,000 ft higher than the area he went missing from. They reported seeing a boy fitting Alfred's description atop a high ridge in Devil's Nest, a treacherous area near the top of Mt. Chaplin. They were brought to his attention after he made a noise atop the ridge then he turned around out of sight. The couple assumed at the time his family must be nearby and didn't contact authorities until they read about his disapearance in the newspaper the next day. When the area was searched after the couple's contacted authorities the boy couldn't be found. Despite a extensive ten-day search he wasn't able to be located.

Questions are:
  • How were there no footprints?
  • How does a four year old end up 6 miles uphill from where he was last seen? And in such a short time frame?
  • Where is he, period?



Man this is so similar to a case in my area. In the 1960's 4 or 5 year old Bobby Pankin disappeared on a family fishing trip at Deep lake in Northeastern Washington state. He was following his mom and brothers/sisters on a short walk to a small creek. He was left alone by his older brother for just a few minutes and in that time he just vanished. His tracks were followed for a short ways then they too disappeared. A huge search with blood hounds found nothing. Some people thought a Bear or Cougar grabbed him but no blood or drag marks were seen (or screaming heard) Others believed an Eagle swooped down and flew off with him. Every time I'm near that lake i think of him and his family. Poor little guy
 
Man this is so similar to a case in my area. In the 1960's 4 or 5 year old Bobby Pankin disappeared on a family fishing trip at Deep lake in Northeastern Washington state. He was following his mom and brothers/sisters on a short walk to a small creek. He was left alone by his older brother for just a few minutes and in that time he just vanished. His tracks were followed for a short ways then they too disappeared. A huge search with blood hounds found nothing. Some people thought a Bear or Cougar grabbed him but no blood or drag marks were seen (or screaming heard) Others believed an Eagle swooped down and flew off with him. Every time I'm near that lake i think of him and his family. Poor little guy

Wow! Parallel indeed! I've recently gotten into missing persons in National Parks, and It's crazy how many people go missing in seemingly the same way. The only info I could find on Bobby was from newpapers.com which I no longer have a subscription for. I wonder why I can't find him on any missing persons sites. Maybe even start a thread for him. thanks for adding another case to my list! :)

This is all I could find about Bobby's disappearance without a subscription,
Bobby Pankin, a four-year-old Spokane boy, was the object of a widespread search Monday in the rugged countryside near here. Searchers probed the waters of Deep Lake Sunday, searching for the boy who was reported missing Saturday. "There is absolutely no clue to his disappearance," Stevens County Sheriff... source: https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/25389494/
 
Wow! Parallel indeed! I've recently gotten into missing persons in National Parks, and It's crazy how many people go missing in seemingly the same way. The only info I could find on Bobby was from newpapers.com which I no longer have a subscription for. I wonder why I can't find him on any missing persons sites. Maybe even start a thread for him. thanks for adding another case to my list! :)

This is all I could find about Bobby's disappearance without a subscription,

Oops! I spelled his name wrong. It's Bobby Panknin. Search Panknin and there is a lot more information. I'm pretty sure that this happened within the Colville National forest, a lot of weird National forest vanishings.
 
Others believed an Eagle swooped down and flew off with him.

They might believe that to be possible and there's plenty of folklore about eagles carrying off children but in practice an eagle could probably take a newborn but not an older child.

Typically an eagle can lift around its own body weight. A few species can lift up to 160% of their own body weight under optimum circumstances and fly over relatively short distances with it. A bald eagle is around 6kg-7kg. A 4 year old child typically weighs almost 17kg and is around a metre tall.

In fact the Eagle and Child is a fairly common traditional pub name in the UK. The best known is the one in Oxford where the Inklings (J R R Tolkien and friends) used to meet.
 
They might believe that to be possible and there's plenty of folklore about eagles carrying off children but in practice an eagle could probably take a newborn but not an older child.

Typically an eagle can lift around its own body weight. A few species can lift up to 160% of their own body weight under optimum circumstances and fly over relatively short distances with it. A bald eagle is around 6kg-7kg. A 4 year old child typically weighs almost 17kg and is around a metre tall.

In fact the Eagle and Child is a fairly common traditional pub name in the UK. The best known is the one in Oxford where the Inklings (J R R Tolkien and friends) used to meet.
This is burned in my mind:
And I remember that when I visited Atapuerca, they showed us a copy of a skull found in South Africa; it belonged to an Australopithecus toddler who had been killed by an eagle.
So it's not as crazy as you may think to blame an eagle for the disappearance of a child.
I think Alfred may have fallen somewhere and maybe a predator did the rest.

The fact the dogs started to act nerviously after they lost the scent makes me think that maybe there was a big predator around and they didn't feel confortable. Years ago my family and I had an Alaska Malamute, the bravest and most beautiful creature I've ever met; we spent summers at the mountain, in the north of Spain, an area where brown bears, wolves and wild boars live free in the woods and forests; my father went to have a walk with our dog and he was very nervious, looking around and pushing my father, until my dad decided to follow him and they returned home. Five minutes later, we saw the helicopter that tracks bears... the she-bear was near the village with her cubs.
 
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How very sad, only 4-years-old. What a tragedy for his family, never finding him.

Adults have gotten completely lost out in nature, though, and most people of all ages just continue to wander and become more and more lost after they get turned around :(.
 
The strange disappearance of Alfred Beilhartz in Rocky Mountain National Park

November 28, 2020

alfred-beilhartz-missing.jpg


ALFRED EDWIN BEILHARTZ, DISAPPEARED JULY 3, 1938, NEAR ESTES PARK, ROCKY MOUNTAIN NATIONAL PARK, COLORADO.


On July 3, 1938, the Beilhartz family, took advantage of the Independence Day weekend to go camping in Colorado’s Rocky Mountain National Park. Their four-year-old son, Alfred Edwin Beilhartz, was to vanish that day and to this day no sign has turned up.

There were several strange reports of Alfred including on top of a rocky, inaccessible outcrop called Devil’s Nest, near Mount Chapin, 6 miles from where he vanished. He was also reported in the company of a mysterious man on a road in the area.

The family together with their Father William, Harvey, included ten children, lived on 3225 Quebec Street in Denver, Colorado.

The Beilhartz family, as well as some family friends, set up camp roughly a quarter mile west of the Fall River Lodge. It was located just south of the west exit of the current Lawn Lake Trailhead parking lot. The camping party was located near where the Roaring and Fall Rivers met, just below Horseshoe Falls.

The family woke bright and early that morning, William Beilhartz, Alfred’s father, decided to walk to the nearby stream to wash up and Alfred came along. Oran Bronson and Walter Hansen, friends of the Beilhartz family, had also set out to freshen up roughly 500 feet upstream from Alfred and William. William and Alfred finished their wash before Oran and Walter, and William headed back to camp. Alfred walked upstream to follow Oran and Walter once they were finished.

Once Oran and Walter returned to camp, the group noticed Alfred was not with them. He had gone missing between the time William headed back to camp and when Oran and Walter returned.

About Rocky Mountain National Park and Roaring River
Rocky Mountain National Park is an American national park located approximately 76 mi (122 km) northwest of Denver International Airport in north-central Colorado, within the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains. The park is situated between the towns of Estes Park to the east and Grand Lake to the west. The eastern and western slopes of the Continental Divide run directly through the center of the park with the headwaters of the Colorado River located in the park's northwestern region.

The Rocky Mountain National Park Act was signed by President Woodrow Wilson on January 26, 1915, establishing the park boundaries and protecting the area for future generations.

The hike to Lawn Lake in Rocky Mountain National Park begins from the Lawn Lake Trailhead in the Horseshoe Park area, located just west of Estes Park. From the start the trail climbs steadily through a fairly dense mixed pine forest.

At just over a mile from the trailhead hikers will reach the steep banks of the Roaring River where some of the destruction from the infamous Lawn Lake Flood can be seen. In 1903 a 26-foot high earthen dam was built to enhance the natural lake from 16.4 acres to 48 acres in order to help with crop irrigation in the Loveland area. On July 15, 1982, the dam failed and released more than 300 million gallons of water down the Roaring River valley. Some witnesses said the failure created a wall of water 25 to 30 feet high. After killing three campers the water rushed down Elkhorn Avenue in Estes Park before stopping at Lake Estes.

The search for Alfred Edwin Beilhartz
The campers began searching for Alfred immediately. There were over a dozen individuals at the campsite and were convinced that they would find him quickly He couldn’t have gotten far in such a short amount of time. Plus, it would be difficult for Alfred to not hear over a dozen people shouting his name and follow their voices back to safety. But, after scouring the area and not finding Alfred, the family became very anxious as to Alfred’s whereabouts.

When they had no luck they decided to call in the park service for assistance. The Beilhartz family contacted ranger Moomaw at the Fall River Ranger Station. Ranger Moomaw immediately contacted the CCC (Civilian Conservation Corps), a work relief program created as part of Roosevelt’s New deal, to help the search effort. Within 45 minutes over 100 CCC members had arrived to begin searching.

On Monday, July 4th, Independence Day, CCC and other volunteers were still combing the area for any sign of Alfred and Bloodhounds from the Colorado State Prison were brought into the park to help aid the search. But they were unable to find Alfred’s scent.

The rangers were operating under the assumption that Alfred may have fallen into the nearby Roaring River and drowned, so they decided to dam and divert the river on July 5. The search party built a dam with sandbags, rocks, and logs and used grappling hooks and pikes to search the riverbed. Despite their efforts, nothing was found in the diverted riverbed, so they erected a wire net near the Fall River in the hopes of “catching” any evidence. When this returned no results, they gave up searching the river.

His parents told the rangers that they were certain that he must have been abducted. They knew that their son wouldn't just leave his family and they were sceptical that he had just fallen into the water.

By Wednesday, July 6th, the search of the river had ended, leaving searchers frustrated and confused. They continued to search the land, and by Thursday, 200 searchers told news reporters they were convinced he had never drowned and had either gotten lost in the forest or was kidnapped.

The searchers were convinced that if the boy had fallen into the Roaring River his body could not have passed all five of the beaver dams and reached the Fall River. Even if it had, they said, it could not have passed a wire net set up near the fall river by workers for the public service company of Colorado.

Rangers called in some sniffer dogs from the nearby Colorado State Penitentiary. A human scent was detected, but the hounds came to a halt near the river. Another set of dogs hit on a scent some way higher in elevation from the camp but led nowhere.

The search was eventually called off after 10 days.

The Devil's Nest sighting, Bandage and the Mystery Man
On Sunday, July 3rd, William J. Eells, a radio appliance employee from Denver, and his wife were also hiking in the Rocky Mountains National Park.

They had made it quite far up the Old Fall River road when they got tired and decided to stop for a rest. While resting at around 1 pm, they decided to look up to Mount Chapin and were shocked to apparently see a young boy sat on a rock in a section of the mountainside known as the Devil's Nest. This was around six miles west of where Alfred Beilhartz had disappeared from.

The child was said to have made a “shrill noise'“ walked out to look over the ledge and then either left or was pulled from the ledge.

They decided to hike to the point where they saw him in order to make sure the child was safe. But when they reached the boulder he was perched upon they found nothing. The pair decided they had to alert someone about a child roaming around on the Devil’s Nest.

The Eells got back to their parked car and heard the news of the missing boy on the radio. Upon returning home, the couple checked the newspaper and confirmed that the photograph of Alfred Beilhartz within it matched the child they had seen in the Devil's Nest. They promptly drove back to the park and contacted rangers.

However, the rangers were skeptical, believing it would have been impossible for Alfred to have made his way up to the slope to Devil’s Nest. They did eventually send a group of over 150 men to search the area, but they came back empty-handed.

On July 8th, the FBI announced that it was performing forensic tests on a piece of '“soiled” bandage that had been found in an abandoned cabin in the park. The disclosure of this finding was prompted by the insistence of the boy's parents that their son must have been abducted. Apparently, Alfred had a blister on his foot at the time he had vanished, and his mother had bandaged it using similar material.

On this same day, a woman by the name of Mrs. CA Linch who lived in Big Spring, Nebraska, allegedly saw Alfred and a mysterious man walking along a highway together as she and her husband were driving from Big Spring to Ogallala.

She didn’t know until the next morning how important her sighting was when she was reading the newspaper and saw the photo of Alfred. She claimed the boy she saw on the highway was the same boy, and she was adamant it was him.

She told her brother-in-law, WB Linch (of Lincoln, Nebraska), about her sighting, and he then went to speak to a Denver detective sergeant by the name of Fred Renovati two days later on behalf of his sister-in-law. He said that she was positive the boy was the one whose picture she saw.

Ransom demand for Alfred Beilhartz
On Sunday, November 27th, 1938, when Alfred Beilhartz had been missing for five months, his father was sent a ransom note.

The message said “Sorry for your son. We went west. Out of money. The boy doesn’t take to us. We will return your son if you will leave $500 in a can one block from your house and the note. We will return your son within 24 hours.”

However, by November 29th, the police were fairly certain that this was a hoax, and the next day they issued a statement to confirm they had investigated two possible suspects. They were not named and were apparently not formally charged. The line of inquiry quickly ended for reasons unknown.

What happened to Alfred Beilhartz?
  • Drowned in the river - The Roaring and Fall Rivers were well searched. Perhaps he was missed?

  • Abducted - The family always believed that Alfred was taken. Was the ransom demand genuine? If so, was the sighting on Devil’s Nest on Sunday, July 3rd, by William J. Eells and his wife, mistaken? Did they hear and see an animal instead of a boy? How could a 4-year-old hike thousands of feet in only a few hours?

  • Foul play - Was the boy accidentally killed by the family and the evidence covered up? Was Alfred killed by an unknown predator?
The strange disappearance of Alfred Beilhartz in Rocky Mountain National Park — StrangeOutdoors.com
 

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