Commando, that was some first post, nice job. I always appreciate a well thought out, nicely written post. To the point, intelligent, insightful. Welcome to the boards.
Let me take a second to respond to some points but first a couple of statements.
First, many of the supposed "facts" bandied about on these forums are nothing more than pure conjecture. In fact, one of the most maddening and frustrating aspects of researching these types of cases is when the points directly contradict one another. Who or what do you choose to believe? Do you trust a reporter that wrote a newspaper article the day after it happened? How do we know the reporter was even there? Do we trust a modern website? How do we know where they got their info? Do we trust a reporter for the New York Times that did a very good radio spot for NPR? There are many broadly accepted "facts" that are indeed probably anything but that. It's very, very frustrating when one tries to distill down to the raw truth.
Unfortunately, there is no central repository for the truth. I may be off base here but I would even venture to say even the direct relatives would have a hard time discerning fact from fiction. The stories get handed down through generations and become distorted and warped. I would even venture to say because this story has always seemed to attract a certain amount of "notoriety", the story has become even more twisted and warped. Had it just been "discovered", it might be easier for one to understand the "facts" easier now. It's like walking through a stream. After enough people walk through, the water is so muddy and cloudy you cant see the bottom. While a lot of the theory and conjecture is no doubt intriguing and compelling has to be ignored in the search for the truth. If we cant prove it, it didnt happen.
Having said all that, this is one tough case to (re)solve and even understand. Time makes mortals of us all and the more this case fades, the more it really becomes folklore and legend. But legend or not, a family was devastated that night and that sleepy community was never the same. I try to keep that in mind in my research and my posts here. Ok, enough rambling...
The Sodder's oldest son Joe, was in the military and on his way home (stateside) on the night in question.
Both Sodder parents were born in Italy
George Sodder was rumored to have been an outspoken critic of Mussolini. No way to prove this though. Furthermore, I would imagine most American's of any nationality were "outspoken critics" of his. He was especially unpopular among Italians who thought he wrongly led Italy into WW2 where they were soundly defeated. In fact Mussolini was so unpopular, we has executed and hanged in public by Italians in April of 1945. So even if George was shooting his mouth off about him, I would hardly think this was a hugely controversial stance.
A lady supposedly saw the children in the presence of Italian speaking men. In Florida? Im not sure but I think you are referring to the lady(waitress) who supposedly saw the children in a restaurant in Charleston (45 miles away). I have a hard time believing someone would have that kind of recall. First off, if you look at the newspapers from the time, while there was coverage, there were no pictures of the missing kids (they were assumed to be dead) so how did the waitress conclude they were the Sodder kids? To my knowledge, the waitress had no connection to the family (so how could she even know what they looked like?).
A private detective was sent to look for the kids and disappeared. In fact a string of them did. One small detail though, they disappeared AFTER taking George's money.
Papa Sodder (George) received a black hand letter. Proof?
A shifty salesman threatened the family with ties to the coroner. Again, infinitely difficult to prove. The town that this took place in (Fayetteville) was (and is) a very small town. Everyone knew everyone. There was a lot of relatives doing business with each other and political corruption was (and is) a big part of this small town. Ok, picture this, George and the salesman are sitting in a bar. The guy pitches his insurance idea to George (who in all likelihood couldnt afford it). George says no and the guy jokingly threatened to burn the house down. Furthermore, if that were a reality and George was threatened to that degree, dont you think the police would have gotten to the bottom of that? Also, after the story got bigger than the local police, the FBI was involved. Dont you think THEY would have had a few questions for the local insurance man?
, this is one of the most compelling and interesting aspects of the story...yes, Fire Chief Morris from all accounts probably wasnt the best Chief the town had seen. Politically appointed, it took him hours to get to the secene and offered various reasons for his delay. While he did get ot he scene, his reports were signed off by the state fire marshall so its not as if it was a one man show. There is much more I would like to learn about this guy and Im focusing a lot of research on him.
Its late now but would enjoy writing more later.
Let me take a second to respond to some points but first a couple of statements.
First, many of the supposed "facts" bandied about on these forums are nothing more than pure conjecture. In fact, one of the most maddening and frustrating aspects of researching these types of cases is when the points directly contradict one another. Who or what do you choose to believe? Do you trust a reporter that wrote a newspaper article the day after it happened? How do we know the reporter was even there? Do we trust a modern website? How do we know where they got their info? Do we trust a reporter for the New York Times that did a very good radio spot for NPR? There are many broadly accepted "facts" that are indeed probably anything but that. It's very, very frustrating when one tries to distill down to the raw truth.
Unfortunately, there is no central repository for the truth. I may be off base here but I would even venture to say even the direct relatives would have a hard time discerning fact from fiction. The stories get handed down through generations and become distorted and warped. I would even venture to say because this story has always seemed to attract a certain amount of "notoriety", the story has become even more twisted and warped. Had it just been "discovered", it might be easier for one to understand the "facts" easier now. It's like walking through a stream. After enough people walk through, the water is so muddy and cloudy you cant see the bottom. While a lot of the theory and conjecture is no doubt intriguing and compelling has to be ignored in the search for the truth. If we cant prove it, it didnt happen.
Having said all that, this is one tough case to (re)solve and even understand. Time makes mortals of us all and the more this case fades, the more it really becomes folklore and legend. But legend or not, a family was devastated that night and that sleepy community was never the same. I try to keep that in mind in my research and my posts here. Ok, enough rambling...
The Sodder's oldest son Joe, was in the military and on his way home (stateside) on the night in question.
Both Sodder parents were born in Italy
George Sodder was rumored to have been an outspoken critic of Mussolini. No way to prove this though. Furthermore, I would imagine most American's of any nationality were "outspoken critics" of his. He was especially unpopular among Italians who thought he wrongly led Italy into WW2 where they were soundly defeated. In fact Mussolini was so unpopular, we has executed and hanged in public by Italians in April of 1945. So even if George was shooting his mouth off about him, I would hardly think this was a hugely controversial stance.
A lady supposedly saw the children in the presence of Italian speaking men. In Florida? Im not sure but I think you are referring to the lady(waitress) who supposedly saw the children in a restaurant in Charleston (45 miles away). I have a hard time believing someone would have that kind of recall. First off, if you look at the newspapers from the time, while there was coverage, there were no pictures of the missing kids (they were assumed to be dead) so how did the waitress conclude they were the Sodder kids? To my knowledge, the waitress had no connection to the family (so how could she even know what they looked like?).
A private detective was sent to look for the kids and disappeared. In fact a string of them did. One small detail though, they disappeared AFTER taking George's money.
Papa Sodder (George) received a black hand letter. Proof?
A shifty salesman threatened the family with ties to the coroner. Again, infinitely difficult to prove. The town that this took place in (Fayetteville) was (and is) a very small town. Everyone knew everyone. There was a lot of relatives doing business with each other and political corruption was (and is) a big part of this small town. Ok, picture this, George and the salesman are sitting in a bar. The guy pitches his insurance idea to George (who in all likelihood couldnt afford it). George says no and the guy jokingly threatened to burn the house down. Furthermore, if that were a reality and George was threatened to that degree, dont you think the police would have gotten to the bottom of that? Also, after the story got bigger than the local police, the FBI was involved. Dont you think THEY would have had a few questions for the local insurance man?
, this is one of the most compelling and interesting aspects of the story...yes, Fire Chief Morris from all accounts probably wasnt the best Chief the town had seen. Politically appointed, it took him hours to get to the secene and offered various reasons for his delay. While he did get ot he scene, his reports were signed off by the state fire marshall so its not as if it was a one man show. There is much more I would like to learn about this guy and Im focusing a lot of research on him.
Its late now but would enjoy writing more later.