CANADA Canada - Kathleen Johnston, 26, Saskatoon, SK, 20 Oct 1953

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Kathleen Johnston

kj.jpg

Case Classification: Missing
Missing Since: October 20, 1953
Last Known Location: Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada

Description:
Date of Birth: December 23, 1927
Age: 26 years
Race: White/Caucasian
Gender: Female
Height: 162 cm (5'4")
Weight: Unknown
Hair Color: Auburn
Eye Color: Brown
Nickname/Alias: Grace Johnston
Distinguishing Marks/Features: Unknown
Clothing & Personal Items: Dark green suit with pinstripes, white nylon blouse, pea green coat with corded stripe, red oxford shoes, and a red purse.
Identifiers: Unknown

Circumstances of Disappearance:
Johnston disappeared from downtown Saskatoon, SK on the afternoon of October 20, 1953. She had visited her mother and then left for her job at the Gem Café. She exited a city transit bus in the downtown area and has never been seen since. Johnston's whereabouts remain unknown.

Investigators:
  1. Saskatoon Police Service: 306-975-8214
    policeservice@saskatoon.ca
    Case Number: 1953-378 / Reference Case#: 2005-134215

  2. Crime Stoppers: 1-800-222-TIPS(8477) or online at Canadian Crime Stoppers Association

  3. Send email to the National Centre for Missing Persons and Unidentified Remains at: canadasmissing-disparuscanada@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
The Doe Network: Case File 1852DFSK
SACP | Missing Persons Database
Canada's Missing | Case details
 
Last edited:
2021
1654898673701.png
Kathleen (Grace) Johnston. Photo appeared in the Oct. 26, 1953 edition of the StarPhoenix.
Name: Kathleen (Grace) Johnston, 26
Date missing: Oct. 20, 1953
What we know: The StarPhoenix reported in 1953 that Johnson had caught a “trolley bus” on Broadway to go to work at a downtown café. She had been working in Saskatoon for six weeks and was visiting her mother in Nutana. She did not arrive at work and has not been seen since.
 
The interior of the Gem Cafe, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. Sorry, I couldn't figure out how to add text to the images. Unknown date for the postcard, but it was prior to July 1, 1963, when zip codes began to be used in the USA.
 
Above is an original Saskatoon Municipal Railway street car at the Saskatchewan Railway Museum, copied from a Wikipedia entry about Saskatoon Transit.
 
I'm assuming her mother was the person who provided details of what Kathleen was wearing when she left her home. Depending on which website you visit, there seems to be conflicting reports of whether she was last seen exiting or entering the "trolley bus". If someone witnessed her enter the bus, it was either a family member, a neighbor or someone acquainted with her. It seems a little odd that someone would take note of Kathleen exiting the bus, assuming it did not stop in front of the Gem Café, unless it was the bus driver. I wonder what the walking distance was between her stop and the café. It seems a bit ominous that she was seen exiting the bus, and never made it to work. I wonder what the possibility is that she walked away from her life? She had been working for six weeks at the café. Could she have met a "handsome stranger" and was lured away? She disappeared on a busy street in the middle of the afternoon. If the sidewalks were jammed with people, I suppose someone could've threatened her with a weapon and forced her to go somewhere without crying out. Odd that there's nothing provided about her background, her history. She was dressed very smartly to go to work at a café, so I'm also assuming she kept her uniform at work. Matching coat and jacket, with a matching bag and shoes, was common for the time, but it says she cared about how she looked outside of work. No mention of jewelry or her hat. She would've been wearing something on her head, as covering your head in the fifties was de rigueur.

So few details to go on, other than what she was wearing, and where she was alleged to be going.
 
My apologies for my random, rambling posts today. I've been working overtime for the last four days, i.e. 12 hour work days. That's my excuse, LOL.

I hope Kathleen found someone to love, and walked away from her life, and had a long, happy life. That, rather than being the victim of crime. Perhaps it was a person her family didn't approve of. When I searched the LDS genealogy website, I came across a lot of Kathleen Johnstons, but none that were her I believe. Many were emigrants from and to Ireland. I wonder if Kathleen was Irish and Catholic or Irish and Protestant. Perhaps she found someone who was Protestant? Catholic? Or another religious affiliation that her family disapproved of? Or even the "wrong" gender or the "wrong" race? It's all speculation of course.

I posted the photo of the trolley bus because I noted how open the windows are. Anyone could have seen her from the bus and merely followed it until she got off. She may have been the victim of an opportunist, or someone who noticed her coming and going to work. Six weeks is long enough to notice someone and learn their schedule.

Her glamour shot is very well done. She looks gorgeous, like a Hollywood starlet. The photo in the newspaper is more down to earth and Girl Next Door. I would guess that's mostly how she looked in her daily life.
 
The Gem Café is no longer in existence (?) However, the Gem Café LTD is. I haven't been able to find it's original location as of yet, so I'm guessing. Kathleen's mother's house was reportedly on the 700 block of Melrose Avenue.

700 Melrose Ave to Downtown Saskatoon

Just a guess, but the trolley bus ride would've taken about 13, 14 minutes. Still working on where she got off the bus, and where the café was.
 
Call me paranoid, but I note the route crosses the South Saskatchewan River. I don't believe trolley cars had glass on their windows? Not that I think she fell or jumped, because someone would've surely seen and would've reported it. Still makes me wonder. Mainly because of how many missing people seem to end up in water, and for no apparent reason.

I made an error as to the route. The trolley bus would've taken the Victoria or the Traffic Bridge, not the Broadway Avenue Bridge. An early photo, but I think I see where the trolley lines would've connected to the bridge.
File:Victoria Bridge in Nutana, Saskatoon.jpg - Wikimedia Commons
 
An obvious question would be, who saw Kathleen get off the trolley bus? Was it the trolley bus driver? Was he interviewed the day after her family realized she was missing? Or did he come forward after reading the paper five days after her disappearance? How sure could he have been that he saw her get off on the day she disappeared, and not the day before, or the week before? October 20th, 1953 was a Tuesday. Could he have seen her on Monday and been mistaken as to the days? And of course, why would anyone else have noticed her getting off the bus? As I said previously, unless the trolley bus stopped in front of the café, who would've known her to have taken notice of her? Perhaps some of the shopkeepers? A co-worker? If it was a co-worker, how could they have lost her in the crowd? Was it someone who regularly rode the trolley bus and remembered her? Just speculative ramblings.
 
Above is the Victoria Bridge, from 1907. I thought it was a cute picture with the trolley cars going over it. I tried to upload a photo of the same bridge from the 1940s, but I was unsuccessful.
 

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