UK UK - Nellie Herriot, 96, alzheimers, Brighton, 23 April 2012

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She was last seen getting off a bus in an area of Bristol (I'm guessing they mean she was travelling to somewhere rather than travelling home. But then they found her bus pass at home. So not sure if she did make it home and something happened.

Her family have created a website for her - she sounds like a fascinating woman to talk to:


http://www.georgeholland.webs.com/auntienell.htm

It's the great nephew who has created the site and who has been talking to the media. No idea if there is closer family or not.
 
I hope she's found, that's so sad. Every video i tried to watch of her, on multiple places didn't work:tantrum:
 
03 May 2012 Concern grows for missing lady


_59939380_new_photo_of_nellie.jpg


1987032674.jpg


A MISSING 96-year-old Brighton lady could have travelled to Eastbourne on the bus.

Police say there is increasing concern for Nellie Herriott, who lives on her own in central Brighton.

Nellie was seen leaving the cafe at the BHS store in Churchill Square, Brighton, at about 2.25pm on April 23 and someone who knows her has now come forward to say they saw her on a bus in London Road, Brighton, going towards the city centre, at about 12.30pm on April 24.

She is described as white, thin, 4ft 9in tall, with short curly hair.

She was wearing a blue coat, a black hat with pale coloured trousers and shoes and was carrying a beige coloured handbag. It is not known whether she had any money. Her bus pass has now been found in her flat.

The two new images are from BHS shop CCTV, showing Nellie in the BHS cafe on April 21, two days before she was last seen but they do show the clothing she was wearing when last seen.

Concern grows for missing lady
 
Click on image to enlarge

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George Holland Online - A Tribute to Auntie Nell

During the First World War, Nellie and her older sister were sent to an orphanage run by nuns. They experienced an unkind and brutal regime. Consequently Nellie resisted ever being institutionalised again, right up to the day of her disappearance. Could Nellie have simply feared being institutionalised again and taken a walk somewhere quiet as she had the early onset of Alzheimer's and may have feared the possibility of moving to a nursing home.
 
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One theory someone put forward is that Nellie could have been a victim of an RTA incident. The person may have panicked and buried Nellie near to her home. This is a map of the area near where she lived. There is also the Brighton racecourse.
upload_2021-9-4_13-43-14.png
 
She was last seen getting off a bus in an area of Bristol (I'm guessing they mean she was travelling to somewhere rather than travelling home. But then they found her bus pass at home. So not sure if she did make it home and something happened.

Her family have created a website for her - she sounds like a fascinating woman to talk to:


George Holland Online - A Tribute to Auntie Nell

It's the great nephew who has created the site and who has been talking to the media. No idea if there is closer family or not.
It is really sad that she was never found or that no-one ever came forward if her disappearance was not intentional.
 

From the BBC this April​


Missing woman's family wait years for court ruling​




The family of a 96-year-old who went missing in Brighton 12 years ago has been waiting several years for a court to declare her death.
Nellie Herriot, who was believed to be suffering from dementia, was last seen getting off a bus in the Whitehawk area of the city on 23 April 2012 and a police investigation was inconclusive.
Ms Herriot's great-nephew, George Holland, said he had "no hope of her being found alive" and wanted to give his aunt the "dignity of a formal closure on her life".
The Judicial Office was contacted for comment on her family's claim for the declaration of her presumed death, which was made four years ago.
Such claims are sought when someone has been missing for at least seven years and there is no evidence to suggest they are still alive.
Mr Holland, 45, said Ms Herriot, who would now be 108, was a "very vivacious, very feisty" woman who was "like a grandmother figure to me and my sisters".
Sussex Police scaled search efforts down in June 2012.
Mr Holland submitted the claim to the High Court's family division in 2020.
Lesley Hogg, Ms Herriot's niece, with her son George Holland
IMAGE SOURCE,TRACEY MILLER/BBC
Image caption,
Lesley Hogg said Ms Herriot had "enriched our lives" and her disappearance had brought the family "great sorrow"
"As it is, we're in limbo and she's in limbo," Mr Holland told BBC South East.
Documents show Ms Herriot, who was not a homeowner, left a small amount of money in her will.
A hearing was held in March 2020, but adjourned indefinitely to allow time for members of the public to respond to a local newspaper advert inviting expressions of interest in the case.
Mr Holland said the court had not informed him that any members of the public had come forward in response.
He was also required to write a statement explaining the case, which was submitted in October 2020.
Ms Herriot with Mr Holland and his sister Alexandra in the 1990s
IMAGE SOURCE,FAMILY HANDOUT
Image caption,
Ms Herriot was close to her great-nephew and great-nieces
Mr Holland said his family were still waiting for an update.
BBC South East approached the Judicial Office for comment, which said the High Court's Family Division had no record of the hearing. The High Court did not respond to a direct request for comment.
But emails seen by the BBC show a clerk acknowledging the case as late as July 2023, when the matter was still being considered by the judge.
Mr Holland described the situation as "staggering".
"It's doubly upsetting - of course losing a relation in this way - but not even being able to have formal closure," he said.
Nellie Herriot on Brighton beach
IMAGE SOURCE,FAMILY HANDOUT
Image caption,
Ms Herriot was born in 1915 and worked in factories and as a bus conductor in Brighton
His mother, Lesley Hogg, 85, who was Ms Herriot's niece, said the "lack of care" shown to their case had left her "speechless".
"She enriched our lives and [helped us] make sense of a lot of the things that go on in the world," she added. "She was always there for us".
Ms Herriot was said to be frail and only 4t 9in (1.4m) tall, and was receiving support in her home at the time of her disappearance.
The last sighting of her was CCTV footage of her alighting from a Brighton and Hove bus.
Police said it was not known whether she had any money with her, but her bus pass had been found in her flat.
CCTV of Nellie Herriot on the day of her disappearance
IMAGE SOURCE,FAMILY HANDOUT
Image caption,
A high-profile campaign to find Ms Herriot was launched in 2012
As part of a high-profile investigation, officers probed over 70 reported sightings and used specialist search teams in an attempt to locate her.
Mr Holland said a court order would allow his family to finally hold a memorial for his great-aunt, who had lived in Brighton all her life.
In a statement, Sussex Police said its "thoughts continue to be with the family and friends of Nellie Herriot".
"Sadly, despite an intensive investigation, it remains unknown what happened to her," it added.
"The case is kept under review and any new lines of enquiry will be investigated."
Follow BBC Sussex on Facebook, external, on X, external, and on Instagram, external. Send your story ideas to southeasttoday@bbc.co.uk, external or WhatsApp us on 08081 002250.
 
AUG 4, 2024
[...]

A hearing for the application submitted by Ms Herriot's great-nephew Mr Holland, 46, was held in March 2020 and adjourned indefinitely.

HMCTS confirmed the court had misplaced documents relating to the case, and had asked Mr Holland to resend them to its administration team this week.

[...]

Mr Holland's mother, Lesley Hogg, who was 85, was Ms Heriot's niece. In April, she said the "lack of care" shown to her aunt's case had left her "speechless".

Following her death, Mr Holland said: "My mum was one of the people named on the application for my great aunt's presumption of death and she's not lived to see that granted."

He added that the family was "entitled to have closure", and that he hoped the case would now be "resolved as quickly as possible".
 

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