Stuff You Should Know - Selects: The Unsolved Mystery Disappearance of the Sodder Children
Episode Date: April 10, 2021In 1945 a house fire took the lives of five children - except that their bodies were never found. In this classic episode, dive into the longstanding mystery of the odd circumstances surrounding the d...isappearance of the Sodder children. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
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Hey everyone, it's me, Josh, your old friend. And for this week's SYS Case Selects, I've chosen
our episode from 2016, The Unsolved Mystery Disappearance of the Sotter Children. It's a story,
a very tragic and sad one, but also incredibly enthralling, about five children who disappeared
after a house fire on Christmas back in 1945. It's one of my all-time favorite episodes,
which is why I'm choosing it as a select and I hope you enjoy it as well.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart Radio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark and there's Charles W. Chuck Bryant,
Jerry's over there. So this is Stuff You Should Know.
Unsolved Mysteries Edition. Yeah, really? Are you cool with this? No. No. I'm leaving.
Yeah, I think it's great, man. I love me a good Unsolved Mystery. Yeah. And this is super sad,
so it's not like I love it and I think it's hysterical. Right? I just like Unsolved Mysteries.
What's an hysterical Unsolved Mystery?
Um, like I got pantsed in the second grade and I don't know who did it.
That's an hysterical Unsolved Mystery. Yep. I was just in line,
pants around the ankles, turned around and like everyone was like,
did you just go with it and you were like, check it out. Check me out, I'm in second grade.
Yep. Good for you buddy. That never happened. I made it up. Oh really? Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. It's called improv, buddy. It's a craft. So end scene? End scene. End scene.
Have we ever established which one it is? Yeah, a few times. And? Nope. It is. Chuck,
we are talking about a family called the Sodders. Uh-huh. Not the Soldiers.
Right. Not the welding technique. No, the Sodders. They were a family out of Fayetteville,
West Virginia of Italian extraction, as we'll see. Yes. And very much so. Like you said,
this is an Unsolved Mystery. They, their family, just going along totally normally,
has turned into one of the stranger Unsolved Mysteries in American history.
Yeah. And certainly in West Virginia history. Oh, definitely. And I should say I texted
our friend Justin McElroy of the McElroy triplets. Right. Well, they're not triplets.
They're, they're. They're brothers. Oh yeah. Of my brother, my brother and me podcast,
because they are from West Virginia. And as you'll see here, there's a very famous billboard
that we're going to talk about, about this case. Right. And I was like, hey dude, do you ever,
do you remember where, you know, seeing this thing? How far are you from Fayetteville?
Right. He said, just a couple hours. He said, but I've never heard of that.
Huh. And I was like, really? This seemed like the kind of cautionary tale that would be whispered
about all over West Virginia. I could see that. But, um, he said he never heard of it. And then
he looked it up and said, oh, wow. And I said, I bet your dad knows about it. And then he,
he said, he didn't respond. No, you didn't text him back. Answer me. No. That's right.
I am Facebook friends with his dad though. I should just ask. Yeah, ask him. Yeah.
Go, go to the source. That's right. So, well, let's go back to the beginning, Chuck.
Okay. Back to 1895. That's right. That's when Giorgio Sodo,
who had become George Sotter, uh, was born in Sardinia in 1895 and came to the U S and
1908 as a young lad of 13 years old. Yeah. And he was a go getter. He really was. So his,
he had an older brother who traveled with him from Sardinia to New York. Um,
I guess he was like, yeah, I don't want to do this. And right when they made it through Ellis
Island, he turned right back around and went back to Italy. Yeah. He's, I don't know, man,
go get a cup of coffee and think it over is what I say. After you made that ship's voyage,
just mull it over for a day or two. Yeah. Cause what if like you're halfway back, you're like,
actually I should have stayed. Yeah. You might meet a pretty lady from Brooklyn. Do you see that
movie? Uh, Brooklyn? No. Great. Really? Yeah. Yeah. Okay. I mean, it was, I'll check it out.
You said it's surprised. I was a little surprised. Yeah. It was nominated for many awards. Yeah,
that doesn't always mean it usually means it's pretty good. No, it depends. Okay. Brooklyn
highly recommended about a young Italian man who falls in love with an Irish immigrant. Oh,
well, this is nothing to do with this thing. No, not at all. Cause this man falls in love with
an Italian immigrant. That's right. Right. So, um, George, like you said, he was a bit of a go getter.
He's 13. He's on his own, literally without any, any other family in America. Yeah. It's kind of
mind blowing, but then you think back to the 1895, they're, they didn't really understand what childhood
was at that point. So he was probably like of working age and had been for years. Yeah. But
it seems really weird to us now. Sure. He might have been retiring at 13. He was smoking cigars
already. So he, like I said, was a go getter. He started working at the, uh, on the Pennsylvania
Railroad and then moved to, uh, West Virginia to Smithers, Smithers, West Virginia, and worked as a
truck driver and then said, you know what, this is America, darn it. I didn't come here to drive a
truck for someone. I'm going to own my own trucking business. And the Statue of Liberty went, ah,
yep. Nice going kid. So he started his own trucking business. Um, and he's in West Virginia.
So in short order, he starts hauling coal. Yeah. Coal and dirt. And it wasn't like the hugest
business. I think he did okay for himself. He did okay for himself. He was a solidly middle class.
Yeah. He didn't become like wealthy or anything. And as a matter of fact, later on, um, a local, uh,
local government official would say that the solders were, um, one of the, uh, best middle class
families in Fayetteville. Yeah. And they had a small Italian population in Fayetteville,
which I think is why he ended up there. Right. In his community. Yeah. And he moved there with his
wife, uh, Jenny, right? Yeah. Jenny Cipriani, who, uh, he met, um, she came over from Italy when
she was three. Right. He met her at a store called the Music Box and they got married. And like Italian
families do, they had, uh, 10 kids. 10 kids in 20 years. Yeah. Yeah. That's a lot of kids.
Yep. Pumping them out with great regularity. And like you said, when they moved to Fayetteville,
the reason they moved to Fayetteville had no idea that West Virginia even had Italian people in it.
Sure. Let alone strong Italian communities. Yeah. But they moved to Fayetteville and they
were part of the Italian community. And George was well known. Again, they were a respected
middle class family there. He did pretty good for himself. Um, and he was also well known for his
opinions on everything, including politics. And, um, during the 40s, the United States was at war
with Italy and not all of the Italian Americans were, um, feeling it on the American side.
There were a lot of disagreements over Mussolini and the government that he was creating, um,
among Italian Americans, including in Fayetteville, West Virginia. Sure. And George in particular
hated Mussolini and very frequently spoke out about him and would get in arguments with some of
the locals who, who felt differently about Mussolini. Yeah. And, uh, I guess there were some
hard feelings here there, but he doesn't seem to have taken them seriously very much. No. And we
mentioned that, um, if it sounds like we're setting something up for later, we indeed are. Yeah. So
just tuck that little fact away. Um, and then can we fast forward in time? Yeah. To, uh, Christmas Eve?
Christmas Eve, 1945. That's right. So, um, here's what happens. It's Christmas Eve. Um, as is tradition
in some households, you can open up a few gifts on Christmas Eve. Yeah. So this is what happened.
They opened up some presents, comes time for Betty by and, uh, five of the children, uh, Maurice,
14, Martha, 12, Lewis or Louie, 10, Jeannie or Jenny is that was a little confusing because
that's the mom's name. Eight years old and Betty said, can we please stay up late and play with
these new toys? Yeah. Their older sister, Marion, had, she worked at a five and diamond town. Yeah.
Two miles down the road and she had surprised her younger brothers and sisters with some toys
that they had not been expecting. That's right. And they were very happy. So they asked mom if
they could stay up. Yeah. And the older, the elder, Jenny said, yeah, I guess you can stay up. Uh,
turn out the lights, lock the doors before you go to bed. Uh, I'm going to hit the rack with your dad
and our, uh, two year old daughter, Sylvia, uh, 23 year old John and 16 year old George Jr.
were, I guess they were just ready for bed too. Right. And then if you're thinking there's one
missing child, he is a way in the military, the eldest. Yeah. Fighting either, uh, Mussolini or
Hitler or Tojo. Right. One of those guys. Right. So he's away. Uh, and I could not for the life of
me find that guy's name, the eldest son. I couldn't either actually. So, um, the mom goes to bed,
Jenny goes to bed and, uh, the dad, George and his two next oldest sons who had been working
with them that day, they'd all gone to bed about 10. Um, what time did the mom go to bed? 11?
Something like that? Yeah. But she leaves those five youngest children. Um, and Marion, their older
sister, who I think was 17 at the time downstairs when she goes to bed. Yes. Um, and then at about
1230 on Christmas morning, because remember that was Christmas Eve, about 1230 at night, the phone
rings. And, um, this is not an era where, and this kind of to me goes to show these people were
doing all right. They had a phone in 1945 in West Virginia. They may have been the only people in
West Virginia with a phone in 1945. They had phones in 1945? I'm just saying. I don't think everybody
had a phone in West Virginia in 1945. Okay. So they certainly didn't have one at their bedside.
So Jenny, the mom has to get up to answer the phone. And on the other line, she hears a woman
asking for somebody she doesn't know or recognize. And in the background, there's obviously a party
going on. There's laughter. There's clinking of glasses. And, uh, Jenny says, I don't know who
you're talking about. You have the wrong number. And the woman laughs weirdly and hangs up. Yeah.
I'm going to go ahead and come out and say, I think this is, means nothing. And it's total
coincidence. So supposedly they tracked that woman down. Okay. And she said, uh, it was just a wrong
number. Yeah. Total coincidence. That's what I think. But think about that though. Yeah. Like,
had that not happened, a lot of other stuff would have gone unnoticed, right? True. It's a big deal.
So before she goes back to bed, she noticed the lights are on downstairs. Yeah. She said, you
know, turn the lights off, lock the door before you go to bed. So one of her kids is on the couch
asleep. She's like, wait a minute, the doors unlocked, the lights are on. Um, they shouldn't
have done that. So let me lock the doors and turn off the lights. And she leaves the, the one
that's asleep on the couch asleep. It was the one that got her. Sure. And sisters toys. Sleepy time
on the couch. That's fine. But those five younger ones who've been playing with their toys, they
were in order to be found. So mom just assumed they went upstairs to bed. Right. So she goes back to
bed. Yes. And then like an hour later, she's awoken by like a thump on the roof. Yeah. Yeah.
And she falls back asleep again. Well, it sounded like a heavy thump and a sliding down
of the roof. Right. Rolling or something. Something heavy had landed on it and then slid off. Right.
And she just went back to sleep. Very important matter. She probably figured it was a reindeer
or something like that at being Christmas. You never know. The next time she woke up,
she woke up to panic and chaos because her house was on fire. And Chuck, we'll talk about the fire
right after this.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance Bass,
the hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough,
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and to be honest, I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment I was born, it's been a part of
my life. In India, it's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're going to get second hand
astrology. And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running
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Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father. And my whole view on astrology,
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Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right, dude. The house is on fire. That's right. So Sylvia, a little two-year-old Sylvia,
is in their room with her, the parent. So they get her out, obviously, with them,
because she's in the crib. And then 17-year-old Marion and 23-year-old John and 16-year-old George
Jr. are all outside and safe at this point. So everyone is out except for these five other kids.
Right. And they were on the top floor of the house, I believe, in two different rooms. And the only
way down is this one single staircase. And George tried to go back into the house. He broke through
a window, cut his arm quite badly, getting in through the window or opening the door,
and runs inside. And the entire downstairs floor is totally engulfed in flame and smoke. He can't
see anything, but he can see that there's no way he can go up the staircase or anyone can make
it down the staircase. So he runs back outside of the house to try to figure out another way
to get up to those kids on the top floor. Yeah. And here's an interesting point.
Right. One of the relatives of, I think it was the guy who ended up marrying the youngest daughter
later in life, Sylvia, said they did a lot of research on this. And he said the original
police report said that the very first statement said that the two sons, John and George, who got
out, said they actually ran into the other kids' rooms and physically shook them awake.
Right. And then later on in interviews, they said, no, they just called out to them
and assumed they heard, but it still is a mystery as to whether or not that really happened.
Police will say the first statement is usually the accurate one, but that's just speculation.
So from what I understand, the family rationalized that later on by saying that the two boys
probably felt very guilty, and they said that they did what they wished they had or felt that
they should have done. That makes sense. And that their revisions later on were actually the factual
ones, that they tried to rouse their siblings by just shouting up the stairs. I can buy that.
So Papa tries to get in, cuts himself really bad. Yeah. Then he says, wait a minute, I have this
ladder that leans up against the house always. Always. Let me go grab that. Ladder's not there.
Very weird. It is very weird. It would be found in a ditch like 75 feet from the house later on.
And later on, witnesses supposedly saw a dude stealing it from the garage,
but there's so many things that people say about this case that it's hard to know what's
true and what was invented. That is true. Did they saw a guy? A dude. Well, they report that they
saw a guy. Well, that guy, the guy actually was found and was arrested and charged for stealing
and never questioned about the actual fire. The guy that stole the ladder? Yeah. Okay. So they,
he says, the dad says, let me get my trucks, my big coal hauling trucks. Yeah. Because those are
tall. Let me pull that next to the house, climb up on that. Neither one of the trucks start.
Even though they've been using them to work earlier that day. Yeah. So the thinking by the cops and
everyone else pretty much is in the panic. He and his son flooded the engines, trying to get them
started and that they wouldn't start. Yeah. But it became yet another like fishy detail that made
this family suspect like something really weird happened here. Yeah. And then later there was a
totally don't understand the whole engine removal theory. So it doesn't make any sense. That guy
who stole the ladder was caught stealing a block and tackle that you would use to remove engines.
Yeah. That doesn't make any sense. But it doesn't mean like he messed with their car or used that
block and tackle to do anything to the engines. No. They probably just flooded them. That one,
I'm in agreement on. So this family, they're watching helplessly as the house is going up in
flames. The house burned to the ground in about 45 minutes, ostensibly with the children trapped
inside. Yeah. And if you think why didn't the fire, the fire trucks come, the Fayetteville Fire
Department, you know, it was 1945. It was Fayetteville, West Virginia. It was Christmas. Yeah. It was
Christmas night or morning, I guess at this point. You know, one of the daughters went to a neighbor's
house called the fire department. No operators on duty even. Right. And another neighbor who saw
this didn't have a phone at their house. So they went to the local tavern and they called the operator
to report the fire too. And they couldn't get the operator either. Operator was probably at home
sleeping for Christmas. That's right. So eventually someone drives and literally physically tracks
down fire chief F.J. Morris who does not come out smelling well in this. Well, he doesn't. He said,
no, I can't drive the fire truck as the fire chief. Right. And the way that they, they don't even have
a siren, the way that they alerted the fire department was, it's called a phone tree. They
just start calling one another, then they call the next person. Which made it in the less sense.
Because again, the solders were the only people in West Virginia with a phone in their
house. That's not true. So eventually it's seven hours later at 8 a.m., the fire truck arrives
to find a smoldering pile of ash. And a lot of people are like, well, clearly the fire department
was paid off or told to halt from what I gather. It was sheer ineptitude. And also the sense,
I think the fire marshal or fire chief defended himself later saying, yeah, he said I couldn't
drive the fire truck. So I had to wait for somebody who could. Yeah. And also that house went up so
fast. There was no, there wasn't any need for us to get there in any kind of hurry. Well, I mean,
that's probably true. He also said it burned in like between 30 and 45 minutes. Yeah. If you're a
fire chief, that's not what you want to say. No. You know, like who cares when we get there.
Also, one of the firemen who showed up was Jenny Sodder's brother. Yeah. So it's not like there
was this conspiracy to, among the fire department necessarily, although that is a common belief
in people who pay attention to this case. It is. So what they find at 8 a.m. is a house burnt to
the ground. What they don't find are any remnants of those five children. Yeah. And herein is where
the mystery really kicks in. Yeah. The family starts like paying attention to little weird
details. At first, they just assumed that the kids have, they're just totally gone. They were
totally burned up. Well, that's what the fire chief said. He was like, there's no remains
whatsoever because it burned them to nothing. They did like a cursory examination of the
rubble. They did find some other stuff. Like they found appliances that were recognizable.
They found a couple other things, but they never found any of the kids. And they took the fire
chief's word at face value and said, okay, well, our kids are in there. We can't bear to
the site of this any longer. So George went and got a bunch of dirt and buried the site in about
five feet of field dirt and decided to plant a memorial garden there on the site of the house fire.
Yeah. This is on January 2nd. So he wasn't supposed to do this. No. They were supposed to leave it
open to continue to investigate. The state police inspector said it was faulty wiring.
It's now covered in dirt. And so now the family is just left alone saying, what happened to our
children? Were they in there? Right. So when they buried the place in dirt, they assumed that the
children were still in there. And this is their grave now. They were never going to be found.
But then, like you said, they started thinking about weird details that emerged, right? One of the
first ones was the idea that it was faulty wiring. George basically knew for a fact that it wasn't
faulty wiring. He'd recently had an electric stove installed. And just to make sure, again,
he was doing pretty well, just to make sure that the house didn't burn down with this new
fangled electric stove. He had the wiring in the house redone. And then he had it inspected by the
power company who sent out an inspector and said, they did a good job. The wiring's fine. So he
basically knew almost for a fact that it wasn't faulty wiring in the house. Yeah. Not only that,
after the fire started, when they were outside, there were still lights on in the house. Right.
So remember, Jenny came down and turned out the lights. She left the Christmas tree lights on.
And while the house was burning, the Christmas tree was still, the Christmas tree lights were
on, which must have been like a really ghastly thing to see, you know? Sure. Speaking of the
wiring, there was a point a few months earlier, and this is definitely a strange thing. When this
guy showed up, he was a stranger. No one knew him. And he asked about working as a driver,
and he didn't have any work for him. But he was sort of just, I guess they had the conversation
outdoors, wandered around to the back of his house and said, you know what? Your wiring here at
your fuse box is going to cause a fire someday. And George thought, well, that's a really weird
thing to say, because not only did I have it just inspected and it's fine, it's just a strange
thing for you to say. Yeah. Mr. Stranger. Get off my property. Pretty much. But take the cannoli.
Very nice. But weird and disconcerting after the fact, obviously. Sure. He didn't think anything
of it at the time. Right. Other than that's a weird thing to say. Yeah. Another fishy thing that
happened that really kind of stuck out in retrospect was the life insurance salesman, right? Yeah.
A life insurance salesman came through and tried to sell George some life insurance policies for
his children, and George didn't bite. Yeah. And the guy got irate, and his quote was kind of weird
actually. Yeah. He said, your house is going to go up and smoke. Your GD house. Yeah. Your children
are going to be destroyed. Yeah. And then here's where it really gets weird. He says, you will be
repaid for the dirty things you've been saying about Mussolini. Yeah. And George just went like,
get off my property. Yeah. Just the usual. Yeah. So remember we said that he was outspoken about
Mussolini and his politics. Clearly this got around to this dude, and it's just a weird disconcerting
thing to say, especially after these kids look like they may have perished in this fire. Yeah.
Especially if he didn't make a big deal out of it at the time. Was this like a normal business
attempt in 1945, West Virginia, among the Italian community? Like your kids are going to die. You'll
be repaid for what you've been saying about Mussolini. Good day to you. I don't know. I'm sure
that's not in the handbook. What's even fishier though, Chuck, is that same guy served on the
coroner's inquest jury that ruled that the fire was the result of faulty wiring. Yeah. It all
gets a little weird. Yeah. And then one other, well, not one other, quite a few other weird
things. One of the older sons said that, you know what? Right before Christmas, there was a dude
parked right across from our house watching the school bus and watching the younger kids
get off the school bus and come to the house. And it was clear that he was sitting there watching
this and it was strange. Yeah. He was in a van. Yeah. Was he really? No. I bet he was.
He would have been if it were like the 70s all that. Yeah, that's true. Sickos in the 70s.
So Chuck, let's take another break because the mystery is about to deepen even more.
The plot thickens, et cetera.
and my favorite boy bands. Give me in this situation. If you do, you've come to the right
place because I'm here to help this. I promise you. Oh god. Seriously, I swear. And you won't
have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh man. And so my husband, Michael. Um, hey,
that's me. Yeah. We know that Michael and a different hot sexy teen crush, boy band are each
week to guide you through life step by step. Not another one. Kids relationships life in general
can get messy. You may be thinking, this is the story of my
life. Just stop now. If so, tell everybody everybody about my
new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never ever have
to say bye bye bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on
the iHeart Radio App, Apple Podcast or wherever you listen
to podcasts.
I'm Mangesh Atikular and to be honest, I don't believe in
astrology. But from the moment I was born, it's been a part of
my life. In India, it's like smoking. You might not smoke,
but you're gonna get second hand astrology. And lately, I've
been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to
stop running and pay attention. Because maybe there is magic
in the stars, if you're willing to look for it. So I rounded
up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you, it got
weird fast. Tantric curses, Major League Baseball teams,
canceled marriages, K-pop. But just when I thought I had to handle
on this sweet and curious show about astrology, my whole world
can crash down.
Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father.
And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're
a skeptic or a believer, I think your ideas are going to
change too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart Radio
map, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Alright, so things are getting a little weird. And all of a
sudden now, Jenny and George, the solder parents, start
thinking like, wait a minute, are our kids actually dead? Who
is the last person to see them alive? If John and George
Jr. to be believed, they were the last ones to see them alive
because they went and shook them awake. But they may not have
actually done that.
Well, and they changed your story to say that they didn't.
Right. So then technically, Marion, the 17-year-old older
sister who brought the toys and was downstairs with the kids
while they were playing with them, would have been the last
to see them alive. But I could never find anybody pressing
her for what her story was. So the assumption that I'm going
on is that she just fell asleep on the couch and when she
fell asleep, the kids were still downstairs. But the
solders are starting to wonder, like, wait a minute, were
those kids even in the house when the house went down? And
they're backed up by the idea that no remains were found.
Yeah, that's the one that really is bothering them. They're
like, something should have been found.
Yeah. And all of a sudden, this story is starting to get
national attention in the press. And the solders later on
would say, George would say, if they were burned in the house,
if they died in that house fire, I want to be convinced.
And if they weren't, I want to know what happened to them.
Sure. And this kind of kicked off like a lifelong quest
for George and Jenny. And in 1949, to try to literally get
the bottom of it, they hired a guy to come in and investigate
to basically excavate the memorial site and look for the
remains of the children. And he didn't find it.
Well, yeah. And previous to that, they did their own
experiments with burning things, burning animal bones and
just sort of self experimentation to see what would
remain. And there was always bones, of course.
Yeah, they could never get them to just to turn into ash.
They went to a crematorium even and said, you know, we're
probably just not even getting this thing hot enough.
And they said, well, actually at 2000 degrees, it would take
two hours to completely burn a body up. Your house didn't
get nearly that hot. Right. And it only burned for 30 to 45
minutes. Right. So there should definitely be human remains
like all over the place.
Jenny kind of really turned into like this citizen scientist
actually, she taught herself forensics as far as burning
of remains goes. She looked into other fires. There was
another fire that happened around the same time that
killed seven people and the remains of all seven people
were found in the in the burned out house as well.
So she's like getting more and more convinced and so is
George that their kids are still alive. So in 1949, they
had a forensic investigator of some sort come and do an
investigation and an excavation of the site and he turned up
some stuff. He found some coins, found a dictionary that
had belonged to the kids and he did actually find some
vertebra and he had the vertebra sent off to the
Smithsonian Institution actually and they investigated
this and an issue to report about the bones.
Yes, they did. They said the human bones consist of four
lumbar vertebrae belonging to one individual. The
transverse recess of fused. So the age of this individual
death should have been 16 or 17 top limit 22. And on this
basis, the bones show greater skeletal maturation than
what I would expect from a 14 year old who's the oldest
missing child. Right. So basically it was either placed
there by someone. It was not charred. It was not a part
of the fire had been exposed to fire. It wasn't one of the
kids and it was either placed there by someone or brought
it happened to be in that dirt. Can you imagine that? Like
think about that. George went and got a bunch of filled
dirt to come and fill in this memorial site and ended up
disturbing a grave, like maybe an unmarked grave
somewhere. That didn't find. I didn't think that was
remarkable. That's crazy. If you went and got filled
dirt and you found a bones, human bones. Yeah, I wouldn't
can you tell by the pitch of my voice that that is crazy?
I can. The other weird thing that they found was a this
green rubber casing that later they found out it was a
part of some kind of bomb, an incendiary device and some
people think that that's a weird thing to have on your
property. Yeah. House of just burn and they think this
could have been the sound that Jeannie heard in the middle
of the night when something hit the roof and rolled off.
Right. Who knows? But she didn't hear a big boom. Seemed
like if it was a bomb, that would have been pretty
obvious. Yeah, but I mean, if it was like a napalm bomb,
it doesn't necessarily explode. It just ignites spreads.
Yeah. So they don't make noise. I don't know. We'll go
experiment with one. So that objection, speculation.
Right. That Smithsonian report actually said it's really
curious that that the bodies weren't recovered or found
in this pretty good excavation that you guys hired this
dude to do. And it actually set off a larger investigation
in West Virginia. The governor and the I think the state
police superintendent both said, what you guys are doing
is hopeless. The case is closed. Your kids died in that
fire, the case closed. Yeah. And the solders were like,
no, we're going to go hire a private detective. And they
did hire a private detective. And he started sniffing
around town and heard a weird rumor that the police, that
the fire chief had said that he actually found a heart and
had put it in a box and buried it at the site, which is a
weird thing to do. It is. And he went to the guy and was
like, you got to show me where this thing's buried. He does
actually dig it up. And they find a sort of, I wouldn't
say fresh beef liver fresh ish, but not burned. And then he
admits, you know, I put this there, hoping that someone
would find this and just think it was a body part of one of
their kids. We can close the case. Right. Very hamfisted
way of closing a case guys jerk. Yeah. And it's just, I
don't know why he thought that would work. I don't want to
say he's dumb, but it was a pretty dumb thing to do beef
liver. So previous to this, all sorts of weird claims had
started to fly in. Reportings of sightings all over the
country. One woman was operating a tour stop about 50 miles
west and she said, no, I saw them the morning after the
fire served him breakfast. They got into a car with Florida
license plates. And trust me, it was your kids. Yeah. So
that freaks them out for sure. Of course. Then there was a
hotel not too far in Charleston. And apparently late at
night, the I think four kids had checked in a company by
some adults, two women and two men, all Italian. And she
said, I tried to talk to the kids and try to be nice. And
the dudes freaked out and started talking Italian and like
shuffled the kids out of there real quick. Yeah. And they
left early the next morning. Super, super sketchy. Some
ladies said that she saw the kids looking out of a car that
was driving by as the house was on fire. Yeah. And then
there were even more tips that kind of poured in over the
years. Including one that said that they were actually
being held by a distant relative of Jenny's. Yeah. Someone
said that Martha was in a convent out west, I believe.
Yep. In 1967, they got a letter from a lady in Houston said
that the oldest boy or one of the boys Lewis had lived in
that town, got drunk one night and basically told everyone
who he was. They actually went and in fact, George Sotter
and sometimes Jenny, he would go all over the country
tracking down these leads and always sadly comes back empty
handed. When he went to Texas, he got down there, met with
the guy and it wasn't his son obviously, but you know, had to
go back and tell his wife like another zero on this one.
Yeah. And like it's really sad when you step back and look
at it from the perspective of the parents. Like they were
not convinced that their kids died in this fire. They were
open to the possibility, but they weren't convinced and
they wanted to know for the rest of their lives. So yeah,
he would go all over the country chasing down leads and the
reason he would do this Chuck is because he got no help
whatsoever from the local authorities. The Sotters actually
wrote to the FBI and got a reply from J. Edgar Hoover
himself that said, I'd love to help, but this is out of our
jurisdiction. If your local cops will invite us to help, we'd
be happy to help investigate and the local cops said, thanks
anyway and turn the FBI down. I can't imagine how frustrating
that must have been for the Sotters to see that. Oh yeah.
To see J. Edgar Hoover say, well, help out, but these guys
have to invite us and get turned down for that, you know?
Oh yeah. So that, I mean, it was kind of their life's obsession.
An obsession is a really good, good way to put it. There's
a story of George seeing a picture in a paper of a ballet
class in Manhattan and he became convinced that one of the
girls in the picture was his daughter Betty and he drove to
Manhattan and demanded to see his daughter and the parents
or the school was like, you need to get out of here, dude.
You've lost your mind. Yeah. This is our kid. No, you can't
see our kid. So he had to go back home after that. So in 1968,
it gets super weird. Jenny comes home, gets a mail and sees
a letter addressed to her, not to the family or to her and
her husband. The Jenny Sotter opens it up, postmarked in
Kentucky, no return address and there was a photo of an Italian
man. Well, it looked to be Italian in his mid 20s. So the age
fits and on the back of it, it said in handwriting, Lewis
Sotter, I love brother Frankie. I L I L boys, a little boys.
No idea. A 90132 or 35. No idea. The most weird, mysterious
thing you could imagine. And I looked at a picture. They were
like, this very well could be our son. It looks a lot like
him. It looks more like him than I do. I didn't think it was
him. I was like, the eyebrows didn't match to me. The nose
didn't match. But you can never tell a kid from nine to 25.
Yeah, this is like 20, like almost 20 years. He might have
looked like, you know, it could be true. He might have looked
different enough. Yeah. But yeah, that mystery just was never
ever solved. And so back in the 50s, like after they started
getting shut down by the local cops and the state cops and
everybody, they, you know, they started to take matters in
their own hands. And one of the things they did was erect that
billboard that you asked Justin McElroy about. Yeah. It
became kind of famous. Aside from the McElroy's, everybody
in West Virginia knew about it. And it was a billboard on the
Sotter's property with pictures, big pictures of the five
children with their name and age and then basically a rundown
of what the family thought may have happened to them. Yeah.
And it would, at first they offered a $5,000 reward and
then up to the $10,000. Yeah, and they owned it. So it was
there for, I mean, until the 80s. Until, so George died in
1968 and then Jenny died in 1989 and after Jenny died, they
took the billboard down. That's right. What other reports
came in? One, a bus driver said he claimed he saw someone
throwing quote, fireballs onto the house. Some of this stuff
reeks. It's like I was pretty wasted at the time. Yeah. Some
of this stuff reeks of like that after the fact stuff that
people kind of invent. Right. Like wait a minute, I saw a guy
throwing fireballs. Right. But there was verified after the
fact weirdness. Oh yeah, for sure. You know, that keeps this
this case alive. Like one thing we didn't mention, their
telephone line was cut. Yeah. And some people say it was a guy
that stole the ladder, climbed up, cut the phone lines so they
couldn't reach anyone. But I mean, you said they found the guy
did he, did they ask him about that? From what I understand,
they didn't ask him anything. They just find him for theft.
Ladder theft. Yeah. And block and tackle theft. Oh, the other
weird thing is they hired another private investigator at one
point to track down where that letter came from. Yeah, that
was a picture of Lewis. And this guy just disappears. Yeah.
He may have just been like a seedy gum shoe, you know. Maybe
and just took their money quite possibly. Or maybe he was
murdered because he found out the truth. I don't know, but
they said that he literally vanished like they couldn't
ever reach him again. I think it's likely he was a seedy
gum shoe. He just took some desperate family's money. And
hopefully he's burning in hell. Did the mafia rub him out
because that became one of the leading theories is that George
was approached by the mafia, rebuffed their advances. And
that was it. They took the kids. Well, yeah. And supposedly
it's not just a total flight of fancy. Apparently the mafia
was really big in the coal business and the trucking
business in the area at that time. So it is entirely possible
he was approached by the mafia. And he does sound like the
kind of guy who'd tell him to like go stick it. Yeah. You
know, he also may have made some enemies with the Mussolini
cracks. Sure. What else was there? Well, one thing that
was lost to time was that vertebrae even though it's
almost 100% that it was not one of the kids. At least a
least if they still had that, they could DNA test it now.
Yeah. But of course they can't. Yeah. And so little, little
baby Sylvia who is two, maybe three at the time, I think
two is what I've seen most is the last surviving soldered
child. Yeah. And she said like, these are her earliest
memories are of that night of the fire and seeing her father
like losing his mind trying to get in this house and
bleeding. And she promised her parents that she would keep
the story alive. So she talks about it a lot. Yeah. She
goes on to the online like online sleuth websites that
talk about the case and like kind of feeds information
to people and tries to keep the story alive. It's just
crazy, man. You go to bed, you wake up with a fire and five
of your five of your children are just vanished. Yeah. And
there's no way they burned up to nothing. That's just
impossible. So I read this blog post like a MPR person
named Stacy Horn did a piece on it. Yeah, I saw that years
back and she wrote this really long blog post about stuff
that had been cut from the, from the piece. Yeah. And I got
the impression they were trying to play up the mystery and
she said that she personally came to believe that the
children did die in the fire and that there was plenty of
evidence that supports that idea, but that the media tends
to play up the other side of it. Huh. But she also said
that there's enough weird stuff surrounding it that if she
learned that they were still alive, she wouldn't be shocked.
Well, yeah. And the fact that they never got in touch
because you, you know, it's not like these kids were
estranged from their parents or I mean, they were a tight-knit
family by all accounts. Right. And the family rationalized
that by saying that their family was in danger and they
were trying to protect their parents by never getting
in touch with them. Right. Which would kind of align with
the mafia. Yeah. Theory. Yeah. Just terrible, man. You lose
half your family. Yeah. Without a trace. Yeah. If you
want to know more about this, there's plenty of sites on
the internet that have stuff, but we found this really
great article that we based this on by Karen Abbott. It
was called The Children Who Went Up in Smoke. Yeah, the
NPR one's good and Stacey Horne's thing is pretty cool
too. Yeah. You know, it's weird as I have a good friend
named Stacey Horne. Is not the same one? No, but when I
clicked, I was like, oh, interesting. And I clicked
on her thing and it said Stacey Horne like cat, like
she's a cat person. My friend Stacey is a noted cat
person. And it's not the same person. Nope. And I was like
weird. Doppelganger. Yeah. No. No. Maybe. The name
Doppelganger. Yeah. I'd have to see her face. I think I
said something. Well, how about this search bar? Since I
said search bar, it's time for listener mail, Chuck. Handy
dandy search bar? Sure. People said that they miss it.
Used to say that. The handy search bar. Yeah. I don't think
I said handy dandy, did I? No, maybe. Jerry said yes. That's
back when she listened. So I would take that at a word. Hey
guys, huge fan of the show. Two exclamation points. Yeah,
I've been listening to your show for about a year now and
turn my wife and kids onto the program. They're all hooked.
We had a stuff you should know marathon even in our car
ride back to Chicago from Athens, Georgia. We look forward to
your new episodes and are burning through them quickly to
pick up the pace. You guys made reference to lead paints being
on roadside signs. That is highly unlikely, says Sean. Those
signs are changed quite frequently in our base
predominantly. And then he goes on to name like eight different
types of pigment chemistries, which I won't read out. And
other mixtures of iron oxides. He said lead chromates can still
be found, however, in road markings like yellow and
white lines on the street. Any new road markings are now
done with the chemistries I mentioned previously. But there
are many states across the country that still haven't
gotten around to replacing removing the lead chromate
based paints on the street. Not trying to nitpick. It's common
misconception to people outside the color industry and based
on my nerding out with the chemistry name dropping. I bet
you can't guess what industry I'm in. Here's a hint. I don't
dance.
He's saying he's a chemistry nerd.
What does that have to do with dancing?
Chemistry nerds don't dance.
I think if that may be a reference to something we said
that I'm not picking up on maybe. Okay.
Maybe Sean can clear it up.
Yeah, we need to follow up listener mail.
All right, that's from Sean Mueller.
Oh, it was German.
He didn't he dropped the umlau.
Oh, okay. So, Mueller, he didn't want that association.
Well, thanks Sean. We appreciate that.
Let us know about the dancing thing. I think we're not the
only ones who are curious, right?
Yeah, I'm not sure what that means.
If you know what Sean's talking about, you can tweet to us
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