Shamrocker99
Member
- Joined
- Apr 12, 2010
- Messages
- 154
- Reaction score
- 46
What an interesting story!! Did you ever cOmplete and publish your book Marilyn?? I would love to read it!!!
What an interesting story!! Did you ever cOmplete and publish your book Marilyn?? I would love to read it!!!
Thanks, and sorry for the delay in replying. I've been out of commission for a few months due to health reasons and am just now getting back "up to speed". Hopefully everything will take place this year!
I found this case very interesting and it left me wanting to know more. Looking forward to your book and more posting about this case. Hope you feel better soon!
Thanks so much, I'm feeling better and getting back to work on Alice's story. It seems like there is always just one more thing to research, one more fact to check. I need to cut it off at some point, or I'll never finish!
When I researched this case at the National Archives, everything was kept under Anna Kuprianova's name, even though most of the documents refrred to Alice Parsons and/or William Parons. There were eight boxes, and I found out some very "juicy" stuff about Anna and William Parsons, as well as information about Anna's ex-husband who just happened to live a few miles away from the Parsons home at the time Alice disappeared.
More to come.....
Marilyn - I was so happy to see you post here. Can't wait for more. As a fellow writer, I KNOW what you mean about the "just a bit more research" issue. I am working through that right now on my own work in progress.
<Sigh>
Thanks so much, I'm feeling better and getting back to work on Alice's story. It seems like there is always just one more thing to research, one more fact to check. I need to cut it off at some point, or I'll never finish!
When I researched this case at the National Archives, everything was kept under Anna Kuprianova's name, even though most of the documents refrred to Alice Parsons and/or William Parons. There were eight boxes, and I found out some very "juicy" stuff about Anna and William Parsons, as well as information about Anna's ex-husband who just happened to live a few miles away from the Parsons home at the time Alice disappeared.
More to come.....
Sorry for not reading the whole thing, this might have already be mentioned, but what about this:
http://www.doenetwork.org/cases/244ufny.html
It says 20-25 years but then in the description it says the bones had been there for "several decades"
Regarding Roy, I have not had any luck tracking him down. I don't know if he kept the name Parsons as he got older, or if he's going by Kuprianova, or Cooper (another name Anna used).
Just a tip -- if he went back to the Russian name, then he would likely have called himself Kuprianov, rather than Kuprianova. Russian surnames have gender: a feminine ending is added to a surname when it is used by a woman, but not by a man. (Hence Anna Karenina is married to Alexei Karenin, while Count Vronsky's mother is Countess Vronskaya).
:rose: Alice is our featured cold case from 12/17/2012 to 12/23/2012 :rose:
Yay... I'm so happy this is the featured case. I would love to read more more.
I wish Roy's wife was willing to give up a little more information.
.
I have not done any research on William Parsons, Anna Kuprianova-Parsons or Roy Parsons and their lives after they moved to California. That is my next project, to begin this weekend.
I believe the adoption went through, but will need to confirm it.
Roy Kupryanova-Parsons, born in 1926 in Kent (just outside London) England, in 1926. With a birthname of Soni? Died in Dallas, Texas.
http://search.ancestry.co.uk/cgi-bin/sse.dll?gl=42&gsln=Soni&gsln_x=XO
English census records should reveal exactly who lived in the household at the time.
ETA: I know the age is totally wrong, but this is such a coincidence I had to post it.
ETA: No, the age isn't wrong. This child would have been 5 in 1931. I'm leaving before I humiliate myself anymore!