Came across this "cold case" house fire/missing kids from 1945. Interesting!

Coonhound

DIS Veteran
Joined
Sep 3, 2012
I don't know if other people would be intersted in this but I was so I thought I'd share. Creepy story.
And very sad that this was so long ago and the parents died without closure. Even their kids are now elderly or dead.

I read a seperate article where the woman says she would cook chicken in her oven and the chicken bones were never hurt by the fire in the oven, and that made her suspicious, because she thought, if the chicken bones are still there, then how come much larger bones (the children's bones) were never found after the fire?

Anyway I coped and pasted this story and the link is at the bottom.


Fayetteville, WV
5 Children Die in Fire That Destroys Home,
Dec 1945

Christmas Eve in 1945, the Sodders and nine of their ten children settled in for the evening.
Maurice, and four of his siblings - Betty, Jennie, Louis and Martha Lee pleaded to be allowed to stay up and play with their new toys.
Mrs. Sodder relented after the children promised to take care of their chores before coming to bed.
Shortly after midnight Mrs. Sodder was awakened by the phone ringing. A female caller asked for a man whose name Mrs. Sodder didn't recognize. The caller gave a weird laugh before hanging up.
Dismissing the call as a prank, Mrs. Sodder went to return back to bed but noticed the lights were still on, the shades weren’t drawn and the doors hadn’t been locked. Believing the children forgot to do these things before going to bed, she went back to sleep.
She was awakened again by a noise on the roof that sounded "like a rubber ball." About a half-hour later, smoke began pouring into the bedroom.
She yelled for her husband and children.
Once outside, Mr. Sodder noticed that Betty, Jennie, Louis, Martha Lee, and Maurice were nowhere to be found.
He went to grab the ladder, which was kept near the house, to reach the windows of the room where the children slept.
The ladder was missing.
Less than forty-five minutes after the fire started, the house was consumed. Firefighters and state police arrived later that morning and placed the cause of the fire on faulty wiring.
State police later withdrew their statement.
The fire chief and state fire marshal sifted through the ashes and told the Sodders that they couldn’t find any remains.
Another report states that the firefighters found a few bones and pieces of internal organs in the ashes, but the family was never told of these findings.
Some time after the fire, the fire chief informed the Sodders that he had recovered a body part, probably an organ, from the ashes and buried it in a box on the site. The box was dug up, and its contents taken to the funeral home for examination, while a small piece was sent elsewhere for examination.
The piece sent off elsewhere was deemed to be beef liver.
When the detective went back to the funeral home to find the results of their analysis on the contents he left in their care, he was told that they couldn’t be located.
The acting coroner impaneled a jury of six local citizens who returned a verdict that the five children had died due to suffocation and flames.
Within months, the Sodders became convinced that their children did NOT die in that fire.
Information began to surface to support their beliefs.
An investigation revealed that their telephone lines had been cut shortly before or during the fire.
A late-night bus driver reported seeing "balls of fire" being tossed upon the roof of the Sodder home.
An operator of a motel located halfway between Fayetteville and Charleston reported seeing the children Christmas morning.
A Charleston hotel owner reported seeing four of the children in the company of four Italian speaking adults a week later.
Three months after the fire, the youngest child found a hard rubber object that was hollow with a twist-off cap.
It was identified by Army authorities as an incendiary or napalm bomb called a "pine-apple."
It was later discovered that the fire had started on the roof.
During the fire, a man was seen stealing a block and chain from the Sodder's garage.
He admitted to cutting the "electric line" to the Sodder home.
The ladder, always kept in one place, which couldn't be found during the fire, was found thrown down an embankment away from the house.
A couple of years after the tragedy, Mr. Sodder saw a photo of school children in New York and was certain that his daughter Betty was one of the children in the photograph.
He drove to Manhattan to see for himself but was never allowed to see the child.
Sightings of the children came in from all over the country.
Every lead proved fruitless.
In 1952, the Sodders purchased a billboard displaying photos of their missing children and offering a reward for the recovery of any or all of the children.
The publicity fed rumors that the children had been sold to an orphanage or taken to Italy.
The Sodders tried in vain to get their case re-opened, even writing to the FBI.
State police and local authorities wouldn’t reactivate the investigation without any evidence of a kidnapping or murder.
The investigating fire marshal admitted years later that he did not search through the ashes as thoroughly as he would have liked.
Mr. Sodder, initially believing his children had died, bulldozed the site and covered it with four to five feet of dirt, planting flowers in memory of the children.
In 1949, Mr. Sodder decided to excavate the site in order to search for human remains.
The assistant chief of Naval Ordinance in Charleston and a noted pathologist from Washington, D.C. were among those helping.
Four pieces of vertebrae and two small bones that could have come from a child’s hand were located.
The pathologist noted that he was amazed at the scarcity of bones recovered after the thorough search, claiming it was unusual that no skulls or pelvic bones were found in a fire that was quick burning and not so intense as to destroy cloth, flooring and other debris found.
Back in Washington, D.C., the pathologist determined the bones to be human, having come from a person 14 to 15 years of age.
Due to the location where the bones were found within the floor plan of the house, Mr. Sodder didn’t believe the remains to be of his 14-year-old son, Maurice.
Another analysis of the bones conducted years later by the Smithsonian Institute determined that the bones came from someone 16 to 22 years of age.
It was also noted that the bones bore NO evidence of having been subjected to fire.
A letter would arrive on a detective’s desk claiming that the bones had been removed from a nearby cemetery and planted at the scene.
Many believe the children died that night in the fire and the family was never able to accept the loss.
Others believe the children were taken and are still alive somewhere, believing the fire killed their parents and siblings.
Mr. Sodder died in 1969, his wife twenty years later.
The billboard no longer stands.
The youngest of the Sodder children keeps her parents’ quest alive to find out what really happened that night.

http://www3.gendisasters.com/west-v...-die-in-fire-destroys-home-in-fayetteville-wv
 
Oh my gosh that is SO creepy!! That sounds like something out of a horror movie, that poor family. It's so sad that the parents never got closure.
 
wow, how sad. I cannot imagine going thru something like that. They died not ever knowing what happened to their children. :(
 


I don't know if other people would be intersted in this but I was so I thought I'd share. Creepy story.
And very sad that this was so long ago and the parents died without closure. Even their kids are now elderly or dead.

I read a seperate article where the woman says she would cook chicken in her oven and the chicken bones were never hurt by the fire in the oven, and that made her suspicious, because she thought, if the chicken bones are still there, then how come much larger bones (the children's bones) were never found after the fire?

Anyway I coped and pasted this story and the link is at the bottom.

Fayetteville, WV
5 Children Die in Fire That Destroys Home,
Dec 1945

Christmas Eve in 1945, the Sodders and nine of their ten children settled in for the evening.
Maurice, and four of his siblings - Betty, Jennie, Louis and Martha Lee pleaded to be allowed to stay up and play with their new toys.
Mrs. Sodder relented after the children promised to take care of their chores before coming to bed.
Shortly after midnight Mrs. Sodder was awakened by the phone ringing. A female caller asked for a man whose name Mrs. Sodder didn't recognize. The caller gave a weird laugh before hanging up.
Dismissing the call as a prank, Mrs. Sodder went to return back to bed but noticed the lights were still on, the shades weren’t drawn and the doors hadn’t been locked. Believing the children forgot to do these things before going to bed, she went back to sleep.
She was awakened again by a noise on the roof that sounded "like a rubber ball." About a half-hour later, smoke began pouring into the bedroom.
She yelled for her husband and children.
Once outside, Mr. Sodder noticed that Betty, Jennie, Louis, Martha Lee, and Maurice were nowhere to be found.
He went to grab the ladder, which was kept near the house, to reach the windows of the room where the children slept.
The ladder was missing.
Less than forty-five minutes after the fire started, the house was consumed. Firefighters and state police arrived later that morning and placed the cause of the fire on faulty wiring.
State police later withdrew their statement.
The fire chief and state fire marshal sifted through the ashes and told the Sodders that they couldn’t find any remains.
Another report states that the firefighters found a few bones and pieces of internal organs in the ashes, but the family was never told of these findings.
Some time after the fire, the fire chief informed the Sodders that he had recovered a body part, probably an organ, from the ashes and buried it in a box on the site. The box was dug up, and its contents taken to the funeral home for examination, while a small piece was sent elsewhere for examination.
The piece sent off elsewhere was deemed to be beef liver.
When the detective went back to the funeral home to find the results of their analysis on the contents he left in their care, he was told that they couldn’t be located.
The acting coroner impaneled a jury of six local citizens who returned a verdict that the five children had died due to suffocation and flames.
Within months, the Sodders became convinced that their children did NOT die in that fire.
Information began to surface to support their beliefs.
An investigation revealed that their telephone lines had been cut shortly before or during the fire.
A late-night bus driver reported seeing "balls of fire" being tossed upon the roof of the Sodder home.
An operator of a motel located halfway between Fayetteville and Charleston reported seeing the children Christmas morning.
A Charleston hotel owner reported seeing four of the children in the company of four Italian speaking adults a week later.
Three months after the fire, the youngest child found a hard rubber object that was hollow with a twist-off cap.
It was identified by Army authorities as an incendiary or napalm bomb called a "pine-apple."
It was later discovered that the fire had started on the roof.
During the fire, a man was seen stealing a block and chain from the Sodder's garage.
He admitted to cutting the "electric line" to the Sodder home.
The ladder, always kept in one place, which couldn't be found during the fire, was found thrown down an embankment away from the house.
A couple of years after the tragedy, Mr. Sodder saw a photo of school children in New York and was certain that his daughter Betty was one of the children in the photograph.
He drove to Manhattan to see for himself but was never allowed to see the child.
Sightings of the children came in from all over the country.
Every lead proved fruitless.
In 1952, the Sodders purchased a billboard displaying photos of their missing children and offering a reward for the recovery of any or all of the children.
The publicity fed rumors that the children had been sold to an orphanage or taken to Italy.
The Sodders tried in vain to get their case re-opened, even writing to the FBI.
State police and local authorities wouldn’t reactivate the investigation without any evidence of a kidnapping or murder.
The investigating fire marshal admitted years later that he did not search through the ashes as thoroughly as he would have liked.
Mr. Sodder, initially believing his children had died, bulldozed the site and covered it with four to five feet of dirt, planting flowers in memory of the children.
In 1949, Mr. Sodder decided to excavate the site in order to search for human remains.
The assistant chief of Naval Ordinance in Charleston and a noted pathologist from Washington, D.C. were among those helping.
Four pieces of vertebrae and two small bones that could have come from a child’s hand were located.
The pathologist noted that he was amazed at the scarcity of bones recovered after the thorough search, claiming it was unusual that no skulls or pelvic bones were found in a fire that was quick burning and not so intense as to destroy cloth, flooring and other debris found.
Back in Washington, D.C., the pathologist determined the bones to be human, having come from a person 14 to 15 years of age.
Due to the location where the bones were found within the floor plan of the house, Mr. Sodder didn’t believe the remains to be of his 14-year-old son, Maurice.
Another analysis of the bones conducted years later by the Smithsonian Institute determined that the bones came from someone 16 to 22 years of age.
It was also noted that the bones bore NO evidence of having been subjected to fire.
A letter would arrive on a detective’s desk claiming that the bones had been removed from a nearby cemetery and planted at the scene.
Many believe the children died that night in the fire and the family was never able to accept the loss.
Others believe the children were taken and are still alive somewhere, believing the fire killed their parents and siblings.
Mr. Sodder died in 1969, his wife twenty years later.
The billboard no longer stands.
The youngest of the Sodder children keeps her parents’ quest alive to find out what really happened that night.

http://www3.gendisasters.com/west-virginia/10194/5-children-die-in-fire-destroys-home-in-fayetteville-wv

Oh my! So sad, creepy, and intriguing!

Believe it or not, it gets weirder according to this link:
http://unsolvedmysteries.wikia.com/wiki/Sodder_Family
 
I coped and pasted from the above link. Thanks.



Details:
On Christmas Eve, 1945, the Sodder family home burned down.
The cause was traced to defective wiring despite the fact that Christmas tree lights were still on after the fire started.
The oldest two sons and daughter and the youngest daughter survived, but the five middle children were missing and no trace of their remains were found.
Believing that the fire was a cover for the abduction of their children, George and Jennie Sodder spent a fortune on detectives to investigate.

Several pieces of evidence and eyewitnesses backed up George's kidnapping belief.
In 1968, a photo was mailed to the surviving family; on the back was the message: Louis Sodder, I love brother, Frankie. Ilil boys A90132 (or 90135)

Detective C.C. Tinsley was hired to investigate the photo and where it came from, but HE vanished and was never seen again!

A billboard describing the family mystery was erected near the site of their house.

Local law enforcement did not do any investigation into the childrens whereabouts.
The coroner's report declared them legally dead.

George Sodder eventually died in 1969; Jennie in 1988.
The billboard now no longer stands.

Suspects:

None known, but speculation suggests the kids were abducted by an illegal child-selling agency similar to Georgia Tann's,
with help from the local police.
Two months before the fire, the Sodders had an argument with another Fayetteville resident who tried to sell them life insurance.
He warned that their house would burn and the children would vanish!
He was also a member of the coroners jury which ruled the fire accidental!


Other amateur sleuths point out that Mr. Sodder had a coal-trucking business. The coal industry was under constant pressure from the Mafia, which may have been involved in the children's disappearance.
"90132" was a postal code for Palermo, Sicily at the time.
The Sodders themselves were of Italian descent; the original name was Soddu.


Extra Notes: This case has been confused with other "Unsolved Mysteries" cases. It has not been aired in any episode.
 
WOW! So sad and very interesting, I wonder if they will ever know the truth and with the parents gone it is going to be bittersweet even if the now adult kids are found.
 


It sounds like the person who tried selling them insurance knew something. And then it came true. I wonder if they stuck other deceased remains in the fire to cover it up. It is a sad and creepy case.
 
That case might have more to it than meets the eye. I was all ready to believe the parents just didn't want to accept the tragedy of their children's deaths but there are way too many odd things about this case to just dismiss it out of hand.
 
I read about this case awhile back. Iirc, a woman saw 4 out of 5 children matching the description in the company of creepy adults who spoke Italian and didn't allow the children to talk shortly after the fire.
 
It is a very interesting case and I used to post/read about it on Websleuths. One of the family members, a granddaughter, has contributed a bit to the threads there -- check it out.
 

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