Dateline: Missing In America - Are You Elizabeth Ann Gill?
Episode Date: June 13, 2023On June, 13, 1965, 2-year-old Elizabeth Ann Gill, known as “Beth,” vanished while playing in her yard in Cape Girardeau, Missouri – just a few blocks from the Mississippi River. Dateline’s Jos...h Mankiewicz speaks with two of her nine siblings, Martha Gill Hamilton and Jeannie Gill Hinck, and Bobby Newton of the Cape Girardeau Police Department. Both police and the family believe Beth may have been abducted and raised by another family, and could still be alive. They are hopeful DNA and ancestry websites will lead them to Beth, who likely would not remember being abducted. Beth would be 60 years old today. If you have any information about her case, or you believe you might be Beth, call the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children at 1-800-THE-LOST. More photos and information can be found at DatelineMissingInAmerica.com
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Her name was Elizabeth Ann.
I've known not so sweet of Ann.
Her name was Elizabeth Ann.
And to her family, she was a child of beauty and grace.
Oh, where have you gone, little messenger of love? beauty and grace.
Jeannie Gill Hink wrote and recorded this song called Messenger of Love. It both honors and calls out to someone she loves dearly
to this day. Even though it's been nearly 60 years
since they last saw one another.
I wanted to pass down the heritage or the story of Beth.
You don't want people to forget Beth?
No, I don't.
And I don't want people to forget that it only takes an instant for your entire world to
change.
That song and those lyrics tell how her world changed
and of her sister, Elizabeth Ann Gill,
who make all Beth.
We had no premonition or clue
that the days with her were numbered so few.
Beth Gill disappeared when she was just two years old.
I'm Josh Mangowitz and this is Missing in America, a podcast from Dateline.
This case began in the 1960s and it's a unique one.
It's the story of a family's tireless, dedicated search for that little girl,
who would now be a 60-year-old woman.
Over the decades since Beth's disappearance, police have chased leads, sought-out suspects,
conducted searches.
They've had sightings, a confession,
and the most promising, at least a dozen women have come forward believing they are
Beth. Well, they aren't. But at the end of the day, that is what her family is hoping
for, after decades of searching. that Beth finds them. So listen carefully, Beth might very well be alive.
You might know her. You might even be her. I won't stop looking for her. If she's out there and I
believe she is, we have to be where she can find us.
To tell Beth's story, we need to take you back almost six decades.
To Sunday, June 13, 1965.
We begin in the town of Cape Gerardo, Missouri, in a home on South Lorimer Street, just a few
blocks from the Mississippi River.
We lived in a house that my dad had actually grown up in.
That's Martha Gill Hamilton, another of Beth's sisters.
Many of the neighbors at that time had lived there for years and years.
In fact, they were all considered somewhat like family.
We all kind of looked out for each other.
There were 10 children in the Gill family, ranging an age from 2 to 19.
Back then Martha was 15. Jeannie was 13.
On that June afternoon, eight of the kids, including Beth, were at home and
enjoying the summer day.
It was a Sunday. It was a Sunday.
It was a beautiful day.
All of us kids were playing outside.
4.15 PM, time for church.
The older children were getting dressed and gathering
the younger ones.
As they were all getting ready,
Jeannie remembers catching a glimpse of Beth.
She was in the backyard when I saw her
sometimes she would play with the cats or the animals in the yard. Then 15 minutes later.
I call the kids and we were looking for Beth and that's when we realized that she was not with us.
They started calling out for her,
searching inside the house and the yard,
then everywhere.
No one could find Beth.
We went to the neighbor's homes
to see if they had seen her.
We just started calling for her.
And no response.
No.
And now suddenly they were frightened.
The search turned frantic.
Beth's brothers and sisters scoured the neighborhood
with anyone they could get to help them, shouting her name
and looking under every bush, behind every tree,
and at every shadow on every street.
I'm finally accepted that she just wasn't anywhere.
She should have been.
And so I called my sister to Laura,
and Laura said, call the police.
In that moment of Beth's disappearance,
her parents weren't around.
Her dad Harry was in St. Louis where he worked as
an electrician. Her mom and Noah, 15-year-old Martha, and another sister were all traveling home
from Illinois. So just the older, gill children were watching the younger ones. Martha says that as
they approached their neighborhood, they spotted the chaos and the keep Gerardo
cops.
We saw a lot of police activity and we were like, oh, wow, something's going on.
Mom jumped out of the car and ran to the steps and my aunt said, no, we can't find
Beth.
You'd never had a problem like this before, if Beth not turning up or wandering away or anything like that.
Oh no, not at all.
My first thought was, well, she's around here.
It hasn't been very long.
She's off playing with somebody else and she'll turn up.
Right.
How long until you realize that was not happening?
It was probably the next day.
And I think, strangely enough, my parents thought, well, something
strange has happened, but she'll be home. It was wishful thinking. Beth did not
come home. And so what lingers, six decades later, is the girl they knew. We were
all like a mother to her. She was tiny and her hair was either light brown or some people would call her blonde
and she had the most beautiful blue eyes.
Beth was the last child born into this big family.
Just a house full of kids, kind of chaotic.
My dad worked, my mother stayed home and took care of the kids.
1965 was a more innocent time when little girls didn't just disappear into thin air.
Laura Mercier Street wasn't easy street, but it was their street. And it was safe. Or maybe it
just felt that way for most of their childhood.
It was an entirely different mindset back then.
The attitudes were different because society was different.
We didn't often see people as potential predators.
No.
And in fact, episodes like the one we're talking about
are one of the things that changed people's attitudes.
Yes.
On that hot summer day, police began knocking on every door in the Gill's neighborhood.
The whole department deployed.
Bobby Newton is now the spokesman for the Cape Gerardo Police Department.
When Beth Gill went missing, he wasn't even born.
He did research the case files for us
and says it was all hands on deck
that day at the Gill Home.
I believe at one point there was approximately 300 volunteers
and police officers that were helping search for her.
Newton says one of the things police did
was organize search parties along the Mississippi
River.
They were just a couple blocks from the river and one of the family members did say that
Beth used to go out of the river and play with her siblings.
So they did do an extensive search of the river.
So they looked in the river and they didn't find anything?
Yes.
Newton says in the days after Beth's disappearance, Cape Gerardo police circulated a missing person's flyer.
It showed a black and white photo of Beth
and gave descriptive details.
She had a chicken pox scar on her right elbow
and was last seen wearing a green and white checked blouse.
The flyer also offered a $1,500 reward, urging people to call the police chief
with any leads. As a matter of fact, the officers that were assigned to that case were put on a 24-hour
callback. So basically, if there was any leads that came up during that time period, they were
mandated to come back in. Missing children were handled differently back in 1965,
weren't they?
Unfortunately, there just wasn't the technology
that we have today.
We've got drones, we've got ATVs now,
we've got all sorts of access to things
that can help locate these children faster.
Back then, all the searching police could do did not lead to Beth.
And as the hours, the days, and then the months passed,
it became clear she wasn't coming home.
From that day, June 13, 1965,
you've never heard of or from your sister.
No, nothing.
Do you think she's still alive?
I do, I do.
As investigators searched for any leads or witnesses,
the family was rocking their brains for any sort of clue.
Until their mom remembered something that happened just a week before Beth disappeared.
We were carrying things to the car,
and Beth had been outside sitting on the steps.
Mom walked out and saw Beth talking
to this strange woman and called her back.
She said she was a middle-aged, short-to-older woman and
and a little bit heavy-set and that was about it. Their mom described the car the woman was sitting
in a 1965 Ford Thunderbird. That was an unusual sight in their neighborhood.
That was an unusual sight in their neighborhood. Jeannie and Martha's mom told police about the incident, and through investigation, officers
learned this woman was traveling with three other people, all of which led police and the
gill family to a theory about Beth's disappearance.
Our feelings have always been that she was taken by someone who wanted a baby.
So, who was that woman in the Thunderbird?
And while she wondered how to play, someone stowly nips the Beth away. Kid Gerardo was a comfortable small town back in 1965, home to this big family, which
included young Beth. It sounds like it
was a pretty safe place. It was very safe. We were in a residential neighborhood. There
were kids. We just went where we wanted to without thought of being harassed or hurt in
any way. Kids played in their yards and in everyone else's too.
Never worrying about the dangers that might be lurking.
That was true at least until a new motel
called the Downtowner, set up shop around 1964.
It landed essentially right in the gills back yard.
And then everything was, well, different.
You were a little more cautious because what we called strangers were around a little more.
The motel house guests who stayed for days and weeks at a time, all within feet of the
Gill's home. The Gill's immediately thought the mysterious woman their mom saw in that fourth thunderbird might be from that motel.
And it turned out their instincts were right.
The cops armed with that description found somebody who looked like that with that kind
of car who was living at the motel behind your house.
A husband and a wife and then his older daughter and her husband.
Police interviewed a local car dealer
who'd encountered the two couples.
The dealer said they were traveling
in two separate vehicles, the Thunderbird and a Chevy truck.
And he provided another helpful bit of information.
They had gone into the car dealership
and ordered a part for their truck.
And the dealer told them, well, the park won't be in for another week and they said, no
problem, we're going to be around for a couple of weeks.
So they left the number for the motel to be reached through.
And Monday the park came in, he called the motel and they said, oh, we're sorry, they checked
out yesterday and left.
According to Keep Gerardo Police, the two couples checked out of the motel on the very
day Beth went missing.
That's what made the police suspicious that something was odd going on.
A block or so away, there was a gas station and they asked Kim have you seen these people he goes oh yeah
and he said I thought they were kind of strange so I wrote down the license plate number
and then a few days later they went back to the station and he wrote down the license plate
number again and it was a different plate. This is the Thunderbird no question it's the same car
but now it's got a different plate.
Yes.
The same Thunderbird Martha's mother saw with the woman talking to Beth before she went
missing.
The puzzle pieces were slowly revealing a picture.
Same people.
Same car.
Same motel.
But it ended up they had three different license plates on the same vehicle.
What picture emerged of those people who owned that car and were staying in the motel?
Who were they and what were they really doing in town?
Well they were in town selling purses door to door.
They were referred to generally as travelers.
Travelers are a nomadic group who usually trace their ancestry to Ireland or Scotland.
Selling purses was not illegal, but switching plates on their car made those travelers
law enforcement's best lead.
Armed with information about the two couples, police released an internal memo telling
officers to be on the lookout for them.
You can read the detailed memo on our website at datelinemissinginamerica.com
And on Beth's Missing Persons poster, police noted she was believed to be carried away from front of her own by nomadic type persons.
from front of her own by nomadic type persons.
Police later tracked the VIN numbers on those vehicles and learned they'd been purchased in Michigan.
So the Gills mom took matters into her own hands
and made the drive to Michigan
to speak with the car dealer herself.
And he said, yeah, I know who you're talking about.
I know those people.
He said, they buy cars from me every two or three years,
so they had bought several from him.
But he said, I haven't seen him.
And yes, I will get in touch with the police
if they come back.
And evidently, they never showed back up.
Police believed then and still do believe
that these travelers knew something.
A lot of things point back to these individuals.
They were not suspected of any other crime
while they were in town.
No.
But on the other hand, they were doing
some suspicious things, certainly.
They were definitely suspicious.
Assuming that they weren't in town specifically
to abduct a child, what does that suggest that
they were swapping license plates and using fake names?
I mean, they were up to something.
What was it?
Yeah, they were definitely involved in some sort of criminal activity.
What exactly it was?
I don't know.
But the average person does not swap license plates and use fake names unless they have something they're trying to hide.
However, precisely because of the fake names on the rotation of license plates, police
never zeroed in on those four travelers.
It sounds like police worked pretty hard, but they never identified those four people.
No, they didn't.
They didn't.
Regardless, the police theory back then matched the families.
They believed that she was abducted.
The bad news, investigators couldn't prove it.
Honestly, there was very little evidence to go off of if any.
I mean, she was there one minute and the next she wasn't.
Surprising that this little girl was abducted
and not a single person saw or heard
anything. That's what's amazing to me because it was a Sunday afternoon during the middle of summer,
you know, and there's a lot of people I'm sure that were outside during that time. It doesn't make
sense. As Leeds dried up the month since Beth's disappearance became a year and the absence of Beth's tiny presence took a giant toll on the Gill family.
We talked to each other about it. We didn't talk to our parents about it because it was too hard for them. One of my younger sisters was staying with grandma and she said, I would come home, I would
walk home and I would look in the window and if daddy was sitting at the tape crying,
I wouldn't come in.
That story is still hard for you to tell.
Yeah, that part is.
Today, Martha and Jeannie say their mom pushed down her pain and carried on.
After all, she still had nine other children to take care of.
She just, she couldn't let it put her down because she had too many other responsibilities.
But I know it was hard for her. And I know that she was hurting.
My dad as well.
It had been more than a year since Beth's disappearance.
And her dad decided he had to do something.
So he pulled out a pen and a piece of paper.
Harry Gill was on a mission.
On Christmas Day 1966,
he penned a letter
to President Lyndon Johnson pleading for help.
He wrote about the travelers in part.
If these persons could be found, I
feel certain our little girl will be found,
or at least we can learn what happened to her.
He closed his letter with a reminder
to the president of his family's service to
the country."
Quote,
My three brothers and I all volunteered to serve our country in World War II. I served from
January 1941 to December 1945. Now I'm asking through you that my country served my family's
needs."
And about a month later, Harry opened his mailbox to find a letter from the very first
FBI director, J. Edgar Hoover.
It was not the answer Harry was hoping for.
Hoover told the grieving father that the FBI had added Beth to their missing persons files
as of April 1966, but said there was
nothing more his agency could do.
I think that that just took the toll on him.
The family waited and waited as the years passed with no more leads until 1970, when some
big news came in, a convicted killer told police from behind bars
that he knew where Beth was and what had happened to her. The year was 1970, five years after Beth Gill's disappearance.
A man named Philip O'Dell Clark wrote to a local sheriff with a story that peaked the interest
of everyone who knew Beth's case.
Clark was already serving a life sentence in Missouri for murder.
When he told investigators he knew what had happened to Beth five years earlier and that
he could take them to her.
He told authorities he hit Beth with his car one day
and then afraid of being arrested, he buried her body.
It was a horrific story, but if true,
it might give the guild family some answers
to all their questions.
They ended up getting him out of prison
to show officers where the body was,
but they were never able to quietly write any of the information he was providing,
and it ended up being not true. He just basically made it up to get out of prison for a little while.
This is something the families of missing persons frequently experience. The ups and downs new leads can bring. Some are legit,
but don't pan out. Others make families victims of malicious lies.
After that awful hoax, the gills faced even more pain. With the unanswered questions consuming him,
with the unanswered questions consuming him. Harry Gill died from a heart attack in 1970. He was 53 years old. It broke his heart, literally.
By 1975, a decade had passed since Beth's disappearance. The family still held out hope,
and that's when another witness came forward to tell a story, and this
one, unfortunately, rang true.
A woman contacted Martha and Genie's grandmother.
She said she'd been in a general store, about 45 minutes from Cape Gerardo, and she saw a man
and a woman come in with a little girl.
This happened, she said, on the exact day Beth went missing.
And the tantalizing coincidences don't stop there.
Here's Martha.
She was shopping that Sunday afternoon,
and a couple came in with this little girl
who was crying for her mother,
and they were buying her clothes.
And she said when they left, they were driving a thunderbird, a new or thunderbird.
And did she tell police then?
No.
And I was appalled that she hadn't talked to the police.
Clearly this weighed on her conscience.
How long after Beth's abduction, did your grandmother end up hearing that story? It was about 10 years. In fact, I called the local police and I said, well,
I just got this story and they were like, well, we can't do anything with it now.
Unlike today, there was no security video from inside the store or outside in the parking lot or attached to neighboring storefronts or on
homes. There were no cell phone towers to ping locations for those travelers. It was
a different time for investigators. Now this would be a reach even today, but back then,
when a possible eyewitness account arrived a decade too late. It was ancient history and there was no way to
investigate it further and so more years passed, many years. The guild
children grew up, they got married and had families of their own. In a way,
their lives went on, but at the same time they never forgot Beth and they never
stopped looking.
Over the years, when you would travel or when you'd be in a crowd, were you scanning
stranger's faces, thinking, maybe that's her.
Yes.
I think all of us kind of looked for her.
I think Mother did too.
By 2003, Beth's case got a fresh set of eyes.
Keep Gerardo Police Detective Jimmy Smith.
Detective Smith pulled out the dusty case file and contacted the family.
Both the file and the evidence were thin.
Much of it had been lost over the years.
From what Smith could see in the file, the best lead in the case remained those four travelers
in that Thunderbird and Chevy. He believed they had abducted Beth and that she could still
be alive and living under another name. And now in the 21st century investigators had
more tools at their disposal like DNA. In 2010, Detective Smith contacted the National Center for Missing
and Exploited Children and opened a case for Beth. And after obtaining DNA samples from
her mother and two of her sisters, he got Beth's DNA profile entered into the National
Database. The hope was that a match might pop up in the system. That same year,
the FBI joined the investigation and reclassified her case as a kidnapping. If you're counting,
that would be 44 years after Beth's father wrote that letter to President Johnson.
It sure took the FBI a long time to get on this case and start interviewing people.
It did.
Now, back in the day, when Beth was taken,
when she disappeared, there had to be some kind of indication
that she was taken for a reason.
Either there had to be a letter, left a ransom note,
or someone had to have seen her taken before the FBI would ever even investigate.
In 1965, there were no amber alerts buzzing on your phone or digital roadside billboards
highlighting a missing child or an abduction in real time.
There weren't even note cartons displaying missing children's faces
staring back at you while you're eating your cereal. And there were no podcasts like this one.
Until the FBI entered the picture, there was only one local police department on the case,
and one very determined family. Once they started, the FBI took a hard look
at those four travelers who'd been in Cape Gerardo.
We thought we had found one of the women who was in Cape,
but it turned out to be a relative of hers.
And the FBI went and talked to the relative,
but she was in a nursing home and she had Alzheimer's
and had been in that situation for a number
of years, so they couldn't get anything.
She was no help.
No.
In all Martha said, the FBI conducted three interviews with potential relatives of the
travelers.
None of them panned out.
And with that, the guild family decided to up their game. They'd been searching for
bath for more than 40 years. So if they couldn't find bath, they were going to try to get
bath to find them. They started a Facebook group and began using the media to try to
generate leads. In September 2010, the sisters appeared on the Today Show. My gut says she's out there.
She's waiting for us.
Mine too, I believe that she may still be alive and if she is, then we need to do everything
we can to allow her the choice of coming back home.
Seven years after that, Beth's mother died, never knowing what happened to her baby.
The Gill family also reached out to Dateline,
and in 2019, we featured the case on our website.
The Gills did all of that in the hope that Beth
might come forward.
Today, Martha and her siblings believe DNA may hold the final puzzle piece for the Gill family portrait
They've submitted DNA to 23 and me and other ancestry sites and they've had women reach out to them each
Believing that they might be Beth
The first thing I do is I find out their age and ask if they have any pictures of when they were younger.
We talk the circumstances. Why would they think they might be?
Did they have any childhood memories that were odd or unusual?
And if everything checks out,
then I get in touch with law enforcement
and have them arrange DNA done
through the law office near them.
Between Martha and the Cape Gerardo Police Department,
about two dozen women have submitted DNA in this case.
Many of them were adopted or orphaned at an early age
and they're trying to trace their family tree.
The family believes that Beth is still alive,
that she was taken by somebody who wanted to raise her
as their own child.
Is that wishful thinking on their part?
No, I believe that's very possible.
And the reason I say that is because there's no evidence
of any type of foul play.
There's no evidence that anything happened to her other than
she was abducted or she disappeared in some way.
So it is possible that Beth is still alive
and who knows maybe in the audience right now.
Yeah, her DNA is on file.
So if somebody thinks they're Beth,
by all means go to their local police department
and let them know or they can even call us
and let us know, hey, I think I'm Beth
and then we can step them in the right direction
of what to do.
So far none of the women who offered their DNA
has been Beth Gill.
Despite that, some of their stories have a silver lining.
Thanks to Martha.
She recalls when a woman contacted her thinking she might be Beth.
Her DNA was tested.
I met with her because she wasn't that far away.
She wasn't Beth.
But she was very disappointed.
And I said, well, why don't you put your DNA out there
and if your family's looking for you,
they might, you know, it might match up.
I told her how to do it and she did,
and it was four years later that her birth sister put her DNA in, and the match
came up.
And now she's reunited with her sister.
You helped do that, that's great.
I didn't take credit, but...
But you clearly had a lot to do with that.
Well, I helped her.
While searching for Beth, Martha became a volunteer at the National Center for Missing
and Exploited Children.
She was hoping she might help others achieve more reunions like that.
The kind she hasn't experienced herself.
I do volunteer work with families of the missing, just to basically get them through the toughest part
and keep them strong so that when they do reunite,
they're capable of continuing on.
It has been literally a lifelong journey.
I won't stop looking for her, but if she's out there
and I believe she is, we have to be where she can find us.
And that's why I keep the case active.
If she's still alive, Beth Gill will be 61 years old this August.
And the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children has created a series of age progression photos of Beth over
the years.
You can see them on our website at datelinemissinganamerica.com.
It is kind of eerie looking into her face.
To see the adult the family has searched for for years, but never seen with their own
eyes.
And with only those photos at her fingertips these days. Martha thinks about
what Beth might be doing today. I wonder if she's happy, if she has a family. Even though you only
knew her for the first couple of years of her life. Yes, but it doesn't take long for someone to make
an impact on your life. Martha and Jeannie said they have faith their family will finally get an ending to their
story.
After 58 years, you think you're going to see Beth again?
I sure hope so.
I think that the only way we'll see her now is if she was taken to be someone else's
child, that she would have to suspect that and go
looking for her family. Or she might hear a podcast like this and her big
sisters are ready to meet her all over again. I love you Beth. We all love you and
we wish we could reconnect with you. Whoever you are. Beth, we hope that you're happy, but we'd love to meet you.
But we shall be waiting ever more, for the sound of her knock upon the door.
If you have any information about Beth Gill, or believe you might even be her, call the
National Center for Missing and Exploited Children at 1-800-The Lost.
To learn more about other people we've covered in our Missing in America series, and to
view those age-progressed photos of Beth, go to DatelineMissingAnAmerica.com, and there
you'll be able to submit cases you think we should cover in the future.
Thanks for listening. See you Friday's on Dateline on NBC. Missing in America is a production of Date Line and NBC News.
Jessica Knowles, the producer of this episode.
Veronica Mosaic is the audio editor.
Keanu Reed is associate producer.
Bradley Davis is the senior producer.
From NBC News Audio,
Rice and Barnes is Technical Director,
Sound Mixing by Bob Mallory.
Nina Bisbano is Associate Producer.
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