MISSING CHILDREN  FROM LONG AGO
Our Listings for June 2009

The Case of John Fleutz
Oct. 21, 1883
The Case of Willie Whitla
Mar. 20 1909

The Case of Charley and Walter Ross 
July 1, 1874

A MISSING BOY'S BODY FOUND.

October 21, 1883, Wednesday

BRIDGEPORT, Conn., Oct. 20.--The body of John Fleutz, a 9-year-old lad, who has been missing since a week ago to-day, was found this morning in Berkshire mill-pond, about a mile north of this city. It is supposed that while fishing on the bank of the pond the boy fell in and was drowned.

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Ironwood DailyGlobe
Dec. 5, 1930


KIDNAPPER SUSPECT HELD IN CLEVELAND; Police Get Clue to Willie Whitla's Whereabouts, but Midnight Search for Him Fails. WOMAN MAY BE ACCOMPLICE Frank Buhl, Wealthy Uncle, Ready to Spend $100,000 to Recover Boy -- Letters from Kidnappers.

Special to The New York Times.

March 20, 1909, Saturday

CLEVELAND, Ohio, March 19. -- An arrest made here late to-night may lead to the recovery of Willie Whitla, kidnapped son of Attorney James P. Whitla of Sharon, Penn. The police said the man arrested answers descriptions of the kidnapper.

On July 1, 1874 two little boys were abducted in front of their family's mansion. It was the first kidnapping for ransom in the history of the United States. And it would be the major event of its kind until the Lindbergh baby kidnapping.

The boys were named Charley and Walter Ross; they were 4 and 6 years old. The two men who kidnapped them had given the boys candy on previous occasions. That day, however, the men told the boys to climb into their buggy and promised to buy them firecrackers. The boys boarded and they drove off into the city. Charley would never be seen again.

As they drove farther away, Charley wanted to go home and began to cry. The men stopped in front of a store and gave Walter 25 cents. He entered the store and started choosing firecrackers, while the men drove away with Charley.


Today the Cliveden Presbyterian Church stands on the site of the kidnapping. The Ross mansion was torn down in 1926.

The boys' father, Christian K. Ross, thought the boys were playing in a neighbor's yard. But soon a neighbor told him that she saw the boys traveling in a buggy. The father began the search for his son that he would continue until his death in 1897. He didn't tell his wife at first, who was recovering from an illness in Atlantic City. Two days later, however, she found out when he began advertising in the newspapers for his sons' return. A stranger found Walter and returned him to his father. Walter related the tale.

Two days after that, the father received a crude note, saying that Charley would be released for a sum of money. On July 7, came another note demanding $20,000 and instructing the boy's father how to go about paying the kidnappers. The father tried to follow the instructions as best he could but never contacted the kidnappers.

Later that year, police were investigating the kidnapping of a Vanderbilt child and found a ransom note in that case that matched closely the one for Charley Ross. They identified the handwriting as fugitive convict William Mosher's. Mosher was killed during a burglary in Brooklyn, but his partner Joseph Douglas identified Mosher as the kidnapper of Charley Ross. Douglas died insisting that only Mosher had known where Charley was being held. Douglas also said that Charley would be returned safely in a few days. He never was, and the father spent $60,000 in his futile search. Imposters came forward in the years afterward claiming to be the missing boy. Each was disproved. Charley's father died in 1897, his mother in 1912. Walter Ross died in 1943. The Ross mansion was torn down in 1926. The Cliveden Presbyterian Church now stands on the site of the kidnapping.

http://www.ushistory.org/germantown/upper/charley.htm

Ironwood Daily Globe Aug. 15, 1934




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