Showing posts with label famous infants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label famous infants. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 2, 2022

Famous Infants in History: Charles Lindbergh Jr.

Blogger: Amber Schamel

Charles and Anne Lindbergh
Public Domain

Charles Lindbergh is best known as the first pilot to complete a solo transatlantic flight, but his fame made him the victim of what the media called the "Crime of the Century" in 1932.
 
Charles had married Anne Morrow on May 27, 1929 and settled in New Jersey. They soon became pregnant, and had their first born son on June 22, 1930. They named the curly blonde boy Charles Lindbergh Jr., after his father. However, tragedy would strike this happy, young family before the boy turned two. 

March 1, 1932 was a regular day for the Lindbergh family. It was about 10pm, and Anne was just getting out of the bath, when her son's nurse asked if 20 month old Charles was with her. When the nurse discovered the baby was not with her, she became alarmed. They called Mr. Lindbergh, and the three of them returned to the nursery. Charlie was gone. Abducted from his own crib and carried out the window, down a cleverly made ladder. A ransom note in poor English was left on the window sill. 

Mr. Lindbergh grabbed his gun and headed outside. At the bottom of the ladder, they found Charlie's baby blanket, dropped during his abduction, but they found no other sign of the babe. 

Lindbergh Baby Poster
Public Domain


The family called the police, and upon reading the ransom note, authorities concluded that the kidnapper must be of German origin, with not too much time in the U.S. since there were hints of German in the note, such as the use of "gut" instead of "good." 

The search for little Charlie began. Interviews, inspectors checking the premises, scouring every hint or clue that could be found. They took samples from the ladder and made detailed analysis of the wood and construction. Still, not enough clues to piece together anything conclusive. 

The First Ransom Note
FBI Website - Public Domain


The initial ransom note indicated that future contact would be made to instruct them on how to give the kidnapper the demanded fifty thousand dollars. Future notes did indeed come, but usually delivered by cab drivers who had been given notes anonymously. 

John F. Condon, a retired school teacher and prominent citizen of the Bronx area, volunteered to act as the go-between for the Lindbergh family and the kidnapper, since the kidnapper had made known in one of the ransom notes that the Lindbergh's attorney was not an acceptable intermediary for him. The kidnapper increased the demanded ransom multiple times, finally arriving at $100,000, which was a tremendous sum during the midst of the Depression.

Mr. Condon met with a man who called himself "John" a couple of times, and was able to describe the man to authorities. The cab drivers who were lassoed into delivering ransom notes also described the man they interacted with, and artists created a sketch of the supposed kidnapper. 

On April 2, 1932, Mr. Condon met with "John" to exchange $50,000 for a receipt, and the thirteenth ransom note which would tell the location of the baby. "John" accepted the lesser amount, and gave him the note which said Charlie could be found aboard a ship called "Nellie" near Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts.

The following day, a search was made near Martha's Vineyard for the child, however it was unsuccessful. Charlie was still nowhere to be found. There were several law enforcement agencies involved in the investigation, including the FBI. They tracked the serial numbers of the gold certificates given to the kidnapper, but still they were not able to find the perpetrator of the crime. 

Artist's sketch, and actual photo of Bruno Hauptmann
FBI Website - Public Domain


On May 12, more than two months after the kidnapping of baby Charlie, and a month after the ransom money was handed over, the infant's body was found. Charlie's remains were partially buried, badly decomposed and only about four and a half miles from the Lindbergh's home. According to the FBI's website, "The head was crushed, there was a hole in the skull and some of the body members were missing...The Coroner’s examination showed that the child had been dead for about two months and that death was caused by a blow on the head." These facts led to the conclusion that baby Charlie was murdered shortly after his abduction on March 1st, possibly even the same night.

As the Lindbergh family grappled with the horror and grief of losing their baby in such an awful manner, their troubles were compounded by the amount of attention the case received across the country. Although many people were well-meaning, crowds converged on their estate, destroying any last bit of evidence that may have remained. The public can be very harsh, and many demonized Mr. Condon and blamed him for the kidnapping and murder of the child. Because of all the pressure and scrutiny, the Lindbergh family ended up moving to Europe for a time. 

For years, the FBI and other law enforcement agencies followed lead after lead. Many of them were scams, or false alarms, but great care was taken to fully verify any clue. The tool that seemed to be most promising was the tracking of the ransom money. While this effort proved fruitless for the first couple of years, they were finally able to locate some of the Gold Certificates that had been issued to the kidnapper. The organization and cooperation it takes to pull something like that off is unbelievable. Grocery stores, gas stations, banks, basically every type of entity that takes in cash was put on alert with a list of serial numbers for the bills. 

On September 18, 1934, a bank in New York identified one of the bills on the list. The manager immediately called authorities, and they were able to conclude that the bill had come from a gas station. The attendant was put on alert, and when another bill on the list came in, he was able to identify the vehicle and license plate number. That lead brought them to Bruno Richard Hauptmann, a man of German origin, who matched the description of "John" furnished by Mr. Condon and the cab driver. 

Hauptmann was quickly apprehended, and a trial date set. 

Sketch of baby Charlie on a Time Magazine
Public Domain

"The case against him was based on circumstantial evidence. Tool marks on the ladder matched tools owned by Hauptmann. Wood in the ladder was found to match wood used as flooring in his attic. Dr. Condon’s telephone number and address were found scrawled on a door frame inside a closet. Handwriting on the ransom notes matched samples of Hauptmann’s handwriting."
-FBI Website Records

Hauptmann was found guilty of extortion and murder. He was sentenced to the electric chair, which was carried out on April 3, 1936, about 4 years after he committed the crime. 

As for the curly-headed Charlie, he rests with the angels, remembered here on earth as one of the most infamous victims of kidnapping. 


*****

Two-time winner of the Christian Indie Award for historical fiction, Amber Schamel writes riveting stories that bring HIStory to life. She has a passion for travel, history, books and her Savior. This combination results in what her readers call "historical fiction at its finest".  

She lives in Colorado Springs near her favorite mountain, in a small “castle” with her prince charming. Between enjoying life as a new mom, and spinning stories out of soap bubbles, Amber loves to connect with readers and hang out on Goodreads with other bookish peoples.

Amber is a proud member of the American Christian Fiction Writers Association. Visit her online at www.AmberSchamel.com/ and download a FREE story by subscribing to her Newsletter!

Saturday, October 2, 2021

Famous Infants in History: The First "Test Tube" Baby

Blogger: Amber Schamel


Happy Autumn, everyone! I'm so glad to be back with you during this beautiful October. We are continuing our series on famous infants in history with a look at a revolutionary achievement in a science that is close to the heart: infertility.

It is estimated that about 15% of couples struggle with infertility. I personally know several couples who have gone through that valley, and it is a very difficult one. The WHO organization estimates that 1 in 4 couples in developing countries will struggle to have a child after one year of trying. Scientists have done so much work in trying to discover what contributing factors are, how they affect the individual, and how to overcome it. And they have made a lot of progress. Today we are going to talk about one milestone in this field, the In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) process.

IVF is a delicate process that involves taking a mature egg from the female subject, and mixing it with sperm from the male subject in a laboratory "tube", then implant the fertilized embryo into the uterus of the female subject after a few days. This is where the term "test tube baby" originates.


Today, IVF is considered mainstream treatment for couples with fertility issues, however in 1977, when Lesley Brown agreed to this experimental treatment, it was unheard of, and it took a lot of steps to even reach the possibility of attempting such a procedure with humans.

The research in this area had begun more than a eighty years before with the IVF of animals. Walter Heape, a physician and professor at Cambridge University in the United Kingdom was the first to successfully transfer the embryo of a mammal in 1891, but it wasn't until 1958 that a study by Anne Mclaren and John Biggers proved that eggs could be fertilized outside of the female's reproductive system and create a healthy embryo. A year later, Min Chueh Chang from the Worcester Foundation in Massachusetts proved that IVF could proceed to the birth of a live baby in their trial with rabbits. This discovery lit the way for experimentation with human fertilization.
Photo: PXFuel CC



There are a handful of reports prior to 1977 of failed IVF pregnancies. However, doctors Patrick Steptoe, Robert Edwards and Jean Purdy had been collaborating for about 10 years, attempting to find a successful way to complete the IVF procedure.

Lesley Brown was born and bred in Bristol, England. When she was 16, she entered a relationship with John, a single father of two daughters whose first wife had left him for another. While Lesley adopted both girls upon her marriage to John, and the two girls considered her a mother to them, she still longed for one of her own. However, even after almost a decade of trying, she could not conceive. Medical consultations concluded that it was due to blocked Fallopian tubes. But Lesley was willing to try anything to have a baby of her own. She was then referred to Dr. Patrick Steptoe.

John and Lesley traveled 180 miles to Oldham in order to participate in the experimental procedure of In Vitro Fertilization. Lesley was able to successfully hold the pregnancy upon the first attempt. However, once the news of the pregnancy reached the public, a tidal wave of scrutiny and ethical questions bombarded the Brown family and all involved. Some critics even went so far as to deem the unborn child "Frankenstein."


 

On July 25, 1978, at just thirteen minutes until midnight, Louise Joy Brown was born via cesarean section as the first live and healthy baby conceived through IVF. Newspapers across the globe packed the story, and ethical debates escalated.


One of the main concerns regarding babies born via the IVF procedure, was if they would be able to conceive children naturally themselves. This question was answered when Louise and her little sister both conceived and gave birth to children naturally.

While her fame may be somewhat controversial, simply because of the manner in which she was born, Louise remains one of the most famous infants in world history.

*****



Two-time winner of the Christian Indie Award for historical fiction, Amber Schamel writes riveting stories that bring HIStory to life. She has a passion for travel, history, books and her Savior. This combination results in what her readers call "historical fiction at its finest".

She lives in Colorado Springs near her favorite mountain, in a small “castle” with her prince charming. Between enjoying life as a new mom, and spinning stories out of soap bubbles, Amber loves to connect with readers and hang out on Goodreads with other bookish peoples.

Amber is a proud member of the American Christian Fiction Writers Association. Visit her online at www.AmberSchamel.com/ and download a FREE story by subscribing to her Newsletter!

Check out Amber's newest release, a KJV Scripture memory curriculum for kids ages 9-12!


Thursday, September 2, 2021

Famous Infants in History: The Unknown Child of the Titanic

 

Blogger: Amber Schamel
 

Happy September! I am a little overly excited to say that since Fall is my favorite season...I am done with upper 90's temps...but mostly because my baby is turning ONE this month! I can't believe it. How do they grow up so fast?

R.M.S. Titanic - Public Domain

Anyway, in honor of his birthday, I've started a series exploring the most famous infants in history. Last month, we talked about the Gerber Baby, but this month we move to the Titanic and uncover a heart-wrenching story of the Unknown Child.



April 15th, 1912, the RMS Titanic struck an iceberg and sank in less than three hours. It was a worldwide tragedy, claiming the lives of over fifteen hundred men, women and children.

Yes, that's right. I said men, women AND children. While Titanic is known for the chivalrous call for "women and children first", that, unfortunately, did not save all of them. Four hundred twelve women and one hundred twelve children perished beneath the icy waves.

In the aftermath of the wreck, vessels searched the waters for survivors, and attempted to recover and identify the bodies of the victims. One of the vessels was a Canadian morgue ship carrying embalmer John Snow Jr. who described the recovery of the body of a young boy. "He came floating toward us with a little upturned face." As the sailors pulled the body from the sea and attempted to identify him, they were distraught. In this baby's frozen face, was the epitome of the Titanic tragedy. They wrote a description of the corpse.

No. 4 - Male. Estimated age: 2 - Hair: fair. - Clothing: Grey coat with fur on collar and cuffs; brown surge frock; petticoat; flannel garment; pink woolen singlet; brown shoes and stockings. - No marks whatever. -Probably third class.

The grave of the Unknown Child
I took this photo while visiting Fairview Cemetery in Halifax

Despite all attempts to identify the boy, they were unable to find out who he was. But none could bear to see the boy buried at sea, so the sailors came together and funded a funeral and grave stone for him in the Fairview Cemetery in Halifax. The sailors buried him on May 4th, placing a copper pendent on his coffin with the inscription, "our babe". Here, the baby boy rested for decades, his identity unknown.

"The Tomb of the Unknown Child" as his grave became known, stood as a monument for thousands of parents and loved ones who had lost a child, but for whatever reason had no body to recover.

Sydney Goodwin
Public Domain



In 2002, over 90 years after the child's death, the body was reexamined. DNA testing was now widely available, and investigators with the PBS television show, Secrets of the Dead believed they could now identify the body. They took a weathered bone and a couple teeth found in the grave and traced the DNA to a Finnish family, identifying the child as Eino Viljami Panula, a thirteen-month-old passenger of the Titanic. The mystery was finally solved, thanks to modern science. Or so they thought.

A couple of years later, the mystery took a turn when a Canadian family came forward with a donation for the Halifax Maritime Museum. In 1912, Sergent Clarence Northover of the Halifax Police Department was assigned to guard the bodies recovered from the Titanic. He had taken a pair of shoes as a reminder of the tragedy and kept them in the desk drawer of his desk at the station until he retired. He had written on the bottom of the shoe, "Shoes of the only baby found. S.S. Titanic 1912."

This new discovery sent researchers back to square one in regards to the baby's identity, because the shoes were too large for a thirteen-month-old baby, and testing confirmed that the shoes had been made in England, not Scandinavia. So the child was likely older and from England, and therefore could not be Eino Viliami Panula from Finland.

Sydney's Family - All perished in the sinking.
Public Domain



The complication was that two of the young victims from the sinking seemed to share very similar DNA. After more detailed DNA testing at the US Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory in Maryland, the correct identity was found. The body was that of Sydney Leslie Goodwin, a nineteen-month-old from England. Sydney was the youngest of six children in the family of Frederick and Augusta Goodwin, who were bound for America to begin a new life. Originally, they were to sail on the S.S. New York, leaving behind their sixteen-year-old. However when it became possible for them to sail on the Titanic instead with the whole family together, they exchanged their second-class tickets for the S.S,. New York and boarded the Titanic as one happy family in third class. By the time the family received word of the wreck, the lifeboats had already deployed, so the entire family perished in the icy sea. Sydney's body was the only one recovered.

It is a heart-wrenching history, but a silver lining remains in the eventual identification of Sydney's remains, and the memorial that stands as a tribute to him, and the many children that were lost in the sinking of the Titanic.


*****

Two-time winner of the Christian Indie Award for historical fiction, Amber Schamel writes riveting stories that bring HIStory to life. She has a passion for travel, history, books and her Savior. This combination results in what her readers call "historical fiction at its finest".  

She lives in Colorado Springs near her favorite mountain, in a small “castle” with her prince charming. Between enjoying life as a new mom, and spinning stories out of soap bubbles, Amber loves to connect with readers and hang out on Goodreads with other bookish peoples.

Amber is a proud member of the American Christian Fiction Writers Association. Visit her online at www.AmberSchamel.com/ and download a FREE story by subscribing to her Newsletter!